. .
"
,
VIEWS/OPINIONS
oing to Vi tnam.
invi ted to pe
convention,
official re
raci m". T convention' pea ers,
with few exceptions, were a parade
of bigotry. California Attorney
General Dan Lungr n gave
"law-and-order" app al to covert
raci m, which David Du e e ily
could have delivered.
Pat Robertson thunder d that the
1992 presidential campaign w a
moral crusade again t immoral
enemie. Former Education
Secretary William Benn t attacked
"rampant promi cuity." Marilyn
Quayle pat venom at h r husband's
critics. With a neer masked a a
mile, he declared that not all
Americans during the sixties "took
drugs, joined in the exual revolution
or dodged the draft." In Marilyn
Quayle's eagernes to refight
yesterday'sbattles, sh conveniently
forgot that little Danny de1ibrately
joined the National Guard to duck
OF HOI
regarding abortion
oppo d- ven in in tanc of rap
and ince t! Th delegate were
overwhelmingly white nd
economically privileged. Out of
more than 2,200 delegates and 2,200
alternate ,only 103 delegate and 94
alternate were African-Americans.
By contrast, at th Democratic
ational Convention in ew York
City, 771 delegate were
African-Amencan , nearly 18
percent of th total. In Houston
Black Republicans were supposed to
be seen but rarely heard. None were
in policy akingpositions inside the
Bush campaign or Republican
leadership. . .
When Allen Keyes, the ,Black
Republican Senatorial candidate in
Maryland, pleaded for weeks to be
, pedal
, ,they will en-
tbeir itiom 1
We will alwa trive., be
�ly, ed 0 am infotma
live. The following examples
meofour t columrs.
If you would like to 1'eCC1've
copies o eolumrs, pi
00 0 d l1ar, your oommen
am a SAE to: HII.: : HIOHFR
� , 3139·N. Garey
Avenue, 11101, Pomona, CA
91767.
- ULlURAL •
MA110 : It is important that
people 0 African descent maintain
that our particular cultures are al
ways "mainstream' and rot "sub
cultures" or "mirority,"
(x)LUMNS: a) In Horor of
African Women & tbe African
Personality, b) Some Latina; Are
African Too, c) A MOO Is A Mar
velous Thing To Develop
- FINANCIAL I\IRS:
Morey affects everybody. Having
a bener umerstaming of finarees
mears being mart. COLUMNS:
a) Big Band Business, b) Tre
0>010 Kid ard Entrepreneurial
Opportuniti c) TIl! Histoty of
College Finarcial Aid
- KIU.S TECHNOL
OGY: eexpore �job
opporturu tieS with experts and
, wanting to get . or learn
about particular fields.
<X>WMNS: a) Joining Profes
sional Associanors: Still Very Im
portant, b) TIl: ughter Side to ttl!
Job Search. c) Careers in Higher
Education
PUBLIC RELA·
nONS'VISmlllTY: We
believe that ore needs to be his or
ber own best advocate. Believe in
am II yourself, COLUMNS: a)
TIl! College With�. Shiny Mer
cedes, b) Cosby College, �y
College, Cosby Collegel, c)
Educatiori Coverage in the African
American Press
4 EAR H & DATA
COLlECIlON: Not all re
search is oore in a laboratory. For
example, regularly reading the
rewspaper is a form of research.
COLUMNS: a) 50 Essential
Books on the History of African
Peq>le, b) Rodney King am Col
lege Students, c) Dr. Sunday'
ulu's Timely Sickle Cell Dis
Research
- RIOCRFATION: It is
tralthy todevo time to recreation.
At the same time, it is important to
know that what is corsidered
"entertainment" to some may be
serious business to others.
COLUMNS: a) Let's Play
Beseoau, b) The Caribbean: M>te
Than An Exotic Vaca . lls_c)Spike
Lee' Fust Three."
MULTI·CUI,
TIJRAIlSM: As we approach
tte 21 t century, we know that the
world is one village made q> of
people of all nationalities.
COLUMNS: a) Continental
African Stu1en� in the USA, b)
Journalists of Color Coming
Together?, c) The Washington
Whit kins and the Cleveland
Africans
- GLOBAL AFFAIRS:
TIl: most fundamental component
of 21 t century communities aOO
nati ns is the fact that we row
long ne global village. Wl'at
bappers anywhere on � plaret
may impact everywhere on the
plaret. COLUMNS: a) Africans
in Ria: TIl! 1 Book, b)
Wh re are the Educators on
E 's: The 1 )M tinn n-
tial £31' .k rica . t?,c) How
Well I t en Know Geog-
raphy?
J&1ON: IDGHEREDUCA
nON is designed to dialogue with
colle ondworldreoders. Educa
tion is on oing and certainly na
limited to classroom study. La's
talk. (714) lU).()650.
Dr. Manning Marable is
Professor of Political Science and
History, University of Colorado,
Boulder. "Along the Color Line"
appear in over 260 publications and
is broadcast by 60 radio stations
intel7lQtionaUy.
Readers Wrrte
WHICH KA5 MORE .
. WEJQfT IN AN K�ICftH
CCU{T (f Lt\W?
tudyof
addiction
cur for
crack cri i
?
•
I continue to search for olutions
to the 'crack' problem that is devas
tating the African-American com
munity.
11 .... '0·\ '\tHO (11 " nn.· In' m . "011 • ')a.:entl� JlJl
the Lamjng State Joumal, dated July
25, 1992. The item refened to a dis
covery made by the Medical Re
search Council of Canada and
Bristol Meyers Squibb at the Univer
sity of British Columbia.
It eems that neuro cientists,
using mice as subjects have dis
covered a direct correlanon between
cocaine use and hunger.
The r ults showed that the �r
lion of the brain that receives
pleasure from cocaine is the arne
area of the brain that reacts with
pleasure from eating.
..
IT WAS ALSO noted that thi .
same area might playa role with
people who cannot adhere to a
prescribed diet.
. The Neuro cientists were also
very confident that they would be
able to process a drug that could
destroy a persons craving for 'crack'
cocaine ometime lri the near future.
The que tion now is what do our
communi tie do in the meantime?
The answer could be in what many
of our organizations have already
been doing. Only we may need to
See READER, A 10
0,
,.,. HAKR' $ ---H-
,
•
r O·
•
•
VI·
ra
·1
torment from being rejected and treated
disrespectfully, simply because of his. kin
color. So' does Co by. So did Louis
Armstrong. So has Oprah. So has. Eddie
Murphy. So do all Blacks. At least
sometimes, in the company of other Blacks.
Sister Souljah, Ice- T, NW A, Ice Cube and
tbers are receiving a bad rap from the mos tl y
white media. Regretfully, the anger
expressed by Blacks, and the hock exhibited
by most whites who consider this anger to be
merely an aberration, clearly shows how far
apart the races really are in this society. One
wonders how white would react if they
knew how Blacks really feeL The media has
actually defined Black attitudes for Blacks.
This has in effect made many Blacks oppose
Sister Souljahand Ice- Twhen, in reality, they
feel the same wa� that these rap stars do.
�y DR. CHARLES W. FAULKNER
Coping
from the high school drop-out, to the grocery
s tore clerk, to the intellectual. All of these
people come to his speeches because he says
·what they feel.
So does Sister Souljah. So does Ice-T. So
does NWA. Yet, Blacks are not going to rush
to the nearest gun store, buy a emi-automatic
weapon and start shooting cops, whites or
anyone). The words from these rap arti ts are
exaggerated expressions of contempt that
most Blacks have for tho e who constantly
di re peet them, simply because they have
le pigmentation in their skin than the
majority race. Rap lyrics no more drive
Blacks to become killer than do the
ultra-violent television show . And, many of
the most popular television shows ctually
how people in the act of engaging in armed
street encounters with law enforcement
officers.
Society need not fear, for now, Blacks
going into the streets randomly killing
ci tizens. Socie ty hould, however,
understand in realistic terms, the in-depth
anger that practicall y every Black person
feels. Sammy Davis often poke about hi
even to their friends during the hfight and
excitement of competition.
When Blacks express the extreme
frustration that they feel, as the result of the'
constant racial discourtesy and rejection that
they experience every day of their lives, the
emotions are overwhelmed.
"F---k you, you white m----r f-----r. I'll
f---k you up." This remark is expres ive of
what most Blacks feel, deep in their hearts.
And, it eros es all Black economic and ocial
classe .
"I'll beat you to within an inch of your
life!"
"I'll break your damn neck!"
"I'll knock your dam head off!"
"I'll wring 'your neck until your head
drop off!"
"I'll tear your damn arm off and beat you
to death with it!"
Who made the above statements? Si ter
Souljah? Nope. Ice-T? Nope. Bill Co by?
Yep! Co by uses these statements a part of
a comedy routine in which he talks about
some of the horrible (but amusing and
harmless) statements that his parents made to
him when he was a child. No one really
expected his parents to tear hi arm off and
beat him to death. Even though he probably
thought they would.
The: e statements (threats) represent anger
and frustration. But, not real intention. Most
parents Black and white, probably make
similar empty threats to their children, or
MINI TER LOUl FARRAKI is
regularly characterized in the media as being
"racist", "extreme", "dangerous" and "an
exception". Yet, he need merely pin a poster
on a tree, announcing an upcoming speech
and hundreds, even thousands of Blacks (and
whites) will show up at his speeches. They
will endure the near-embarrassment of
everal body earches by Farrakhan's
bodyguards, just for the privilege of bearing
Farrakhan say what each of them feels. In no
way i he "an exception". Farrakhan
e entially represents the view of Blacks
The fact is that if racial roles were
reversed, and whites were uffering the
discrimination that Blacks uffer, whites
would likely de troy the ociety. Yet, Blacks
do little more than talk. And Blacks fooli hly
allow themselves to be labeled as raci is.
.'