\ . Briefs Thr p rty Chic 0 There i ne p rty in Chicago. the Harold Wa hington Party. The party i named after the city' fir t Black mayor. The party selected former lIlinoi appeals Judge Eugene Pincham a their candidate for the April 2 mayor I election. Pincham will run against the Democratic p rty' pick, Rich rd Daley. al Only! The Detroit School Board approved the launching of an all-male academy next rail for K-8th grad to address academic problems mong city youths. In Dettoit. have a higher dropout r te hen fem le ur. n come from ingle r mily si tuations wi th no rather and mo t male youths tend to be bigger di ciplinary problems. school officials ay. Philadelphia has tried and has b�en satisfied with this single ex situation. Philadelphia h s ex­ perienced fewer di cipline problems nd higher achievement levels in these chools. NNPA Correspond�nt . Let no-one be c joled to believe th t President F.W. d Klerk i bout to' dis­ mr nt Ie . p r t he id nd in­ stitute non-r cial democr tic n tion in outh Afric. All the oc lied "reform" that de Klerk is tryin to m k e in South Afric today are gimmicks to help him gain time for white domination of II South Africans, of II races. President de Klerk h s re le a ed Mandela and other Ie ad ing BI ack poli tical prisoners; unbanned ANC nd other r e st r ict e d Black political org nization repealed some dis- criminatory apartheid legis­ lation, and promises to proceed to dismantle the " . r pH-l rt. The removal of these set- s d m D ._.l� __ ._' cial discrimination and "Afrikaner" domination are ending. Far from it! People are inclined to consider the marathon apartheid legislation of 1948 to 1988 as the be-all and end-all of South Africa's ra­ cial animosity and segrega­ tion. Far from it! We forget that the evil of apartheid and "Afrikaner domination" of South Africa goes way back in history to the mid-seven­ teenth century, over 330 years ago. The problem began at that time. The "pil­ lars" of South African racial segregation' began with the planting of a hedgerow at the Cape of Good Hope, around the Castle that the first Dutch immigrants raised to shut out Blacks. . Another .de ert crl The World Food Pro­ gram increased its estimate of the number of people at risk of starvation in the Horn of Africa from 16 mil­ lio to 21 mi Ilion people. This other desert crisis has been ovorlooked as the world focused on the Gulf War. In Ethiopia, more than 5 million people are affected by civilwars and famine, the report states. In Sudan. an estimated 9 to 11 mmion people are in danger of death from war and famiM. In Somalia. 7 million people are affected. Like Ir q, the people of these countries suffer from o ive leaders, known for their cruelty. Unlike Iraq, no one is payina atten­ tion. Ic - T not u d to playing Nicety Rapper Ice-T might eem an unlikely chotce to play a cop in the movie New Jack City. The former 1..0 Angeles gang member says "I dOll't' like the police, but at the same time, I wanted to be an actor," he added "Talk about having to stretch for a role." BUT T�E FREQUENTLY changing "eastern frontiers" that the settlers proclaimed between Blacks and whites were other forms of "pillars" of racial segregation and animosity that came as precursors' and aftermaths of the sanguine "Nine I'p/ir Wars" that raged between the Xhosa tribes and European immigrants. But apartheid's. most sinister precursor was the policy of the Dutch im­ migrants of the Great Trek in their "republics" of Transvalia, Natalia and Oranje-vrystaat. There, the most brutality against the Blacks reached its highest watermark. The Voortrekker's policy of "No equality between White an d Black ill Church or State:" had its root in those "republics", and entrenched racial animosity, discrimina­ tion and segregation. Thi racist policy ha been per­ petrated in the minds of all "Afrik ners" by their secret or anization, Broederbon d, ·0 which President de Klerk is a staunch member! With all this sinister back­ ground, how can anyone be cajoled to believe that de Klerk is the man to change South Africa into a new, non-racial democratic na- not the only con­ ve h d n imp ct hion. 0 c r de d mocr tiz c­ "Third f ion HI the ------------------------------------------ . . q Ii 1 J J f'tIoIo FUP SCHlllI.1 o " VCR 0 OD Americ n haute couture i b sed purely on Americ n style," she ex pi in. "Such chauvinism seem h me." According to a poke per- on from New Yor' F hion Institute of Tech­ nology, a design school that b rtured such talents s C 1- vin Klein and the I te Perry Ellis, moderately priced ready-to-wear collection continue to borrow freely from Third World influen­ ces. American comp nies such as Pier 1 Imports, recently honored by CARE, have brought ethnicity to the average American hopper­ - and made it chic. After these influence re trans­ lated into rather unlikely trends such as Israeli-based Gottex's African-ispired swimwear from a few eason ago -, "There is also a growing market for hand-knitted sweaters from the Andean regions of Latin American," says Susan Kaufman, co­ owner of New York-based import shop, B ck From Guatemala. "The Bolivians are u '�TA 't 'SY WA' . 'TaJFR ED VOTE FOR SA CTIONS "This is the task to which we are called by the suffering in South Africa; and our response should be swift and unstinting ... Urge your government to support economic sanctions. n Martin Luther King, Jr., 1963 , , Nelson Rohilala Mandela, 1990 I I I I I I I I I I ' nil' h.III11' � III • dthvered to Conare 10 aid 1M push for contin�d lion,. I I f( .1'1 M' TO: VOTE CAMPAIGN. 1'heAfricl Fund. 198 BrolChN v. NY. NY IOO3K (212.962,1210), I L_� �� � "Twenty-seven years ago when I went to jail I had no vote. I have come out and I still have no vote ... To lift sanction now would be to run the risk of aborting the proces of the complete eradication of apartheid." "-0: lOAF CAST YOUR VOTE NOW! JOIN THE MARCH TO FREEDOM SANCTIONS 10 L.J I vote for maintaining sanctions until there is democracy for all South Africans. . tion? De Klerk's immediate predecssor, P.W. Borha, h d it right when he said, "Apar­ theid" is outdated". De 'Klerk isn't the "outdated" ap rtheid monster in newer guises. Pre i d e n t de Klerk's "reforms" of nibbling at apartheid, bit by bit, shows only one thing - his reluc­ tance to demolish apartheid altogether. Daily, in his speeches, de Klerk reveals his true colors. For in­ stance, he abhors "majority rule" and "one-man-one­ vote" and "Black domina­ tion." De Klerk also vows to "protect" the rights of white minorities, peaceful not "protect" all deprived and disenfranchised South Africans of all races. .Signature City State