H HER Due 0 ILTO: HIGHER EDUCA no continu to be .anAfrican centered and multi: cultural column de igned to di logue ith college and orld re e . Unli e orne, e ve t- mpled to periodically ta and 1e our po itio on i - in order to openly how c nge and/or in me , incorrect analya . One uch topic that we , have annuall y revisited Ince 1989' the notion of multi­ culturali m. We lso continue to ek input and feedback from tho e with imilar or dif­ fering opinio . We were probably not the first, but we are till proud to be Ii ted among the leading education sources to que tion the concept of "minority" as label for "Black, Red, Brown, nd Yellow" people. o TEN YFARS ago, while working at a university in New York Town, I recom­ mended - and it was ap­ proved - that its Office of Mioority Student Services be changed to Multi-Cultural Student Affairs. Two years ago, the As­ sociation of College Unions­ International (ACU-I), a very important tudent activities body in higher education, changed the name of one of its largest ub-committee be­ cause of our annual column on "Multi-Culturalism. " ACU-I changed the name nd focus of its Committee on Minority Programs (COMP) e . m lti-culturalism rather than "minority." Today, "multi-cultural ism" has come to be synonymous with an emerging academic curriculum and nation. This is a good and just movement. At the same time, unfortunately, it has become a very "political- ly" charged one. . The concept and definition varies, depending on whom is leading the charge. Any way that one looks at it, it still should be viewed positively, except for those who continue to believe that there is only one mainstream and many minorities. THE TERM as we originally used it meant to identify those people who have come to be referred to as minorities. We also, aw it as being a transitional term. It was and is not intended to replace the growing "Africentric or Afrocentric" movement. Nor was it meant to drive the Euro-American way into the sea. Although there are some who view multi-culturalism and Afrocentricity as being competitors, we don't think that is necessarily the case. For example, Keith O. Hilton is an African who lives in America (African American). America is comprised of people of various ethnlclties. One key is to remember that this is a transitional term and a forward transitional term, we might add. There are, however, some who have now come to embrace the term because it is fashionable to do. Also, there is even a group of progressive people who have grown tired of discus­ sions of multi-culturalism and even "diversity" and are look­ ing for another "buzz word of the week or academic year." MULTI-CULTURALI SM, as we see it, is not a buzz word or a fad.' Its deflnition and thrust are till emerging it should be. In addition to multi-cul­ turalism continuing to emerge, there is another crucial ue that is going to need to be ad­ dressed soon, and that is the notion of coalitions. And in particular, multi-cultural coalitions. VIEWS/OPINIONS o t American re lien ted and di ted with politici and politi . But d pi their co tant complaint , the tem eems to grind on. In 1990, 94 percent 0 the member of the Hou e of Repre ent tive who ought reelection won. U ing the powe of incumbency, neg tive tt ds to confuse nd lie te voters, and Political Action Committee I h fun ,incumben re eldom challenged erio ly. We need to change the rule of the political game in order to restore democracy to our political ystem. The first tep hould be universal voter regi tration, and holding national elections on Sunday rather than Tuesdays. Over eighty percent of all people with college degrees earning above $50,000 annually vote, while only 44 percent of all African-Americans voted in the last presidential election. Tho e who enerally do not vote re mong the mo t oppre ed member of our ociety. For example, only 38 percent of the unemployed and 35 percent of all . pani vote. Making democ cy wor m increasing the active participation for African-Americans, Hi panics, low incom and jobless people. We need a publicly-fin need election y tem, to ta e the corporations and the pecial interes out of our decision-making process. Our political proce mirrors the inequality of America' cla y tem, with the rich and powerful exercising disproportionate influence over our leaders. THE SA VI GS and Loan candal, costing taxpayers billions of dollars, i the direct consequence of politcial graft. We need a "None of the Above" voter option for all candidates listed for particualr offices. If voters di pproved of Clinton, Bush and Perot, for example, they could express their opposition by voting for the ballot line, "None of the Above" (NOTA). If NOTA won over all other candidates, a new election would be The tate nd federal election I w re deliberately d igned to e elude alternative political voi outsid the Democratic-Republican consensus. Th ignature requiremen for ltemative party candida m t be reduced, nd ballot maintenance requirements for al ternative patti hould be lowered. THE 0 Tingle effective tep in reforming the political process would be to permit candidates to have "cro -endor ement " or "fusion" between smaller third parties and major parties. Changing the election rules to penni t cro -endorsements would mean th t any progre ive party could run its own candidates for office on i own sl teo But if a major party nominated another progressive on its own ticket for a particular office-let' y, a Ron Dellums or Maxine Waters-the ALLY, WE need to support all progressive mobilizations t the national level which q tion and challenge the policie of both Democrats and Republicam alike. One critical event being held this summer is the People's Progressive Convention, which is hein led by noted Black activo t Ron Daniels. IN A COMPUTERIZED era, it would be a very simple process for governments to maintain and to update lists of voters and to permit same-day registration. Voting could easily be set up to occur over the telephone, greatly expanding voter acccs to elections. waste our time­ The Black vote don't mean nuthin' in this city . anyway! �Your* Vote Counts Register *to Vote� 7�.! hear you say that I Guess I'll go cast a vote for my favorite eri , th tionaJ Green P rty USA, the r b-Americ n Anti-Di crimin tion Committee, nd loc I form tion uch Pi usburgh' 11i nce for Pro ive Action, have endorsed th convention, et for Au t 21-23 in Y ilanti, Michi 1be goal 0 the convention' to create "united, independent; perm nent, and gr root movemenL" Democracy i not "thin ," mething we do only t election time. Democracy a public p hich m empowering people to control their own lead and to make their own political dec' ions. We have lost America to the corporate and political elit . Now its time to tate democr cy back. Let America be America again. Dr. M anning M arable is Professor of Polilical Science and History, Ulliversity of Colorado,: Boullkr. "Along the Color Line" appears ill over 250 publicaliollS intematioMlly, and a radio version is broadcast by more than fifty SUltiollS across North America. By JAMES E. ALSBROOK Two men who never saw each other symbolize one of the most tragic but least-clearly explained problems today confronting fair-minded people. One is a 73-year-old white man who spent 36 years behind bars in Kentuckey and chose jail instead of freedom. When released, he asked to be locked up again. He said he rejected freedom becau e he didn't "fit in." His daughter told reporters, "He can't cope with the outside world and adapt to society's way of thinking." He' felt "at home" in jail. The other man is a 18-year-old Black college freshman hoping for success in mainsteam America. He said he will keep and spread his ghetto speech, his rap music and other values rejected by most employers and most educated people. ' He argued that standard English , is "white folks' talk" and that Nat Cole, Duke Ellington and Bill Cosby were "oreos - Black outside but . ' white inside." HE SAID THE blues, rap music and ghetto speech, including profanity, were his racial heritage. He felt threatened and uneasy when physically or psychically away from the ghetto. He tends to ghettoize his environment. Both men are prisoners. One returned to his physical confinement. The other chose a mental confinement and carries his prison wherever he goe . Theoldman'stimeisalmo tgone - his life a waste. The young man's life is about to be wasted al 0 - unles he frees himself from two mental traps. The first trap is his believing that whatever i "Black" is best just as some other people beleive that whatever is "white is right." A bl ck pair of shoes, he would argue, i inherently better than a white pair of shoes simply because it i Black. David Duke probably would argue the opposite, totally ignoring ugar coat d poi on quality and looking only at color. The second trap is his confusing the-concept of race (one's physical features) with the concept of culture (one's learned values and behavior). Guilty of the same stereotypical thinking that misleads white racists, he foolishly believes his own culture and values are inherent in all Blacks. He made the same error Morley Safer made on "Sixty Minutes" when Safer said Arthur Ashe had "the white man's politeness and manners,' thereby implying tbat good manners were characteristic of only white men. SAFER HAD CONFU ED "race" with "culture" and was a victim of stereotypical thinking. Ashe and millions of other Blacks do not fit the popular, ignoramus stereotype used as a conenient, handy-dandy, one-size-fi ts-all image of Black people. Just as the 73-year-old man was phy ical confined and p ychologically conditioned by his life in prison, so the 18-year-old student was 'mentally confined and p ychologically conditioned by th� mental quirks, preconceptions and stereotypes he learned in the ghetto. If stereotypes misled the sophisticated Morely Safer, they can inveigle themselves into the belief systems and thinking patterns- of millions of others much less sophisticated. Right-wing politici-ans, rattle-brained talk-show bigots and empty-headed riffraff are reinforcing negative stereotypes of Blacks by churning up memories of Willie Horton, unwed teenage mothers and welfare families. THESE STEREOTYPES and coded insinuations are false. Government stati tics bow most welfare recipients and unwed mother are white. But the tereotypes hurting Blacks persist Perpetuating stereotypes damages Blac and confuses millions of American people ranging from the 18-year-oJd Black student to educated people like Morley Safer. Black servicemen, including my brother, a pilot in the 99th Fighter Squadron, reported that their assignments overseas were made more difficult because foreign people had seen and believed negative theatrical images before the actual Black servicemen arrived. . This is why Blacks and whites together must oppose and condemn hurtful, misleading stereotypical productions such as "Mo' Better Blues," "Porgy and Bess," "The Color Purple," and "Brewster's Place." Stereotypes abounding In these shows confuse many in addition to Morley Safer and the Black tudent. They are sugar-coated poi on, promoting in whites a false sense of superiority and in Blacks a false sense of inferiority. They provide false excuses for double standards America uses and exports around the world.