2 .) ITH I TO HI H C TlO Tri-cultural heritage of Hispanic Americans (part thre ) third partof� we presemcd aJ'Ourxl � Sk>p U ra>unting Us Africam: The African (Afro Latioo) O>rnmunity Also Con- . DOrow." The following are excerp from an y by Dr. Angela Jorge o � Modem Languages Pr0- gram, S13 UniveISity of New YolkJO>lle at Old Wcstbwy. (Dr. Jorge' Y is ore of twenty four that are mOOed in my upcoming book titled "Multi-Cul­ tura1, � Mimrity o!") Angela notes that "an Amerafrohi panic family is �itmr African, mr �rindian. oor Spanish; it is all of hse. LTHOUGH THE Amerafrohispanic is all of these, it has been difficult for Amerafrohispanics to entll1Btisti­ cally accept �ir w1iqueDe.$." At the same time, s� docu­ ments that, just as in � African American community, African r001s are alive am well in 1m Latino corrummity. , Hispanic Americans are a people whose cultural r001s are folOl in the Iberian Peninsula, in � New World AmeriIXiian cul­ tures, and in the cultures of the peoples of West Africa. This tri-aUtural �ritage sug­ gess that the more appropriate name for these people is Amerafrohispanics. To call Amerafrohispanics HispanicAmericam is Ddeny that the Amerindian am African roots of their cultwal �ri13ge are alive am well am are part of which makes Amerafrohis� m.� they are. EACH OF THE three peoples that primarily contnbutc:d to the formation of the Amerafrohispanic had a culture, albeit, a culture that may have been at a different level of development from the other two groups, but, nonethe�, a culture. Each had a language; a way of rearing�irchildrenamcaringfor tbeir sick am el�rly; of hunting am feeding the community; of worshipping tll:irgodorgods; and of passirg on their ttaditiom, tbeir particular world view am par­ ticular history to the oro genera­ tion. Because each cultural m>de rreets the needs of the people that have come togetll:r am identified tberrselves as a particular cultural group� no culture � superior or inferior to amther. ' The survival of African and Amerindian cultutal tmi1s in the New World Spanish speaking , population and the miscegenation that took place between the Africans, the Arrerindians, aI¥1 the Spaniards suggest that Amerafrohispanics cannot be ' neatly classified. The numerous phemtypes in the Amerafrohispanic community signals to the observer that each 'family, including the exteooed family members, is a microcosm of the tri-cultwal accommodation thattoo placeatthenmtintirnar., most personal level, HILE THERE ARE �n-rrohispanics woo maintain that they are direct desceooe� of the Spanish conquistadors aI¥1 colonizers, implying that they are not racially mixed, there are Amerafrohispanics woo do recog­ nize their mixed racial back­ ground, but woo find 'tre rigid white-Black mcial stratification of fr£Anglo-Americansociety unac­ comrmdating and thus avoid any racial self identification. While the answer � tre ques­ tion, what aml, orQuesoy? eludes many, two popularly known adages invariably surface wben a discussion on race takes place among�I1O Ricansard Cli>am. ONE ADAGE, EI que no tiene de congo, tie� de carabali, means that the individual woo does not have Congo ancestors has C8rabali, or said differently, it rre.ans that everyone � at least ore Africa ancestor. VIEWS OPINIONS beyond the prejudice d to rely on e ch other. BI c docto ed BI ck p tien , rich d poor ali ; Bl c with legal problems ought out Attorney J me McGee, prominent community po espe on who would I terbe elected the city's first African-American mayor. Black folk were ware of "cl di tinctio "which cu; cro our community, but the income distance between the BI ck middle cl d the poor wa le than two paychec . Middle cia oclal tatus was not just tied to one' income; it w also a reflection of educational attainment, the character of one's children, and person' service to hi or her church and neighborhood associations. SOCIAL CLUBS.BAD a role in group upliftment, working to tutor Black teenagers on weekends. We also kne.w without being told that despite the value of our homes, automobiles or other personal property, that anyone of us could be harassed or called "nigger". Our core strength wi thin the Black they lack the education and skills to obtain decent paying jobs. I shudder to think how much worse things might be without the II r ty. o tyino can- dean comm . ti are ection 0 0 income polarization on mo t Bl cconting to Bureau, b in 1967, ut 8S percent of all Black families earned bet een $5000 to 50,000 annually, m ured in inO lion dj 1990 doll . Forty one percent earned be een $10,000 to $25,000. In hort, the number of the extremely poor and de titute families wa relatively mall. About 75 percent of all Bl c families ere headed by married couples, and the v t m �ority of Black children gre up in two parent households. The CeDS Bureau' ti tics on the Black family of 1990 ere trlkingiy different The size of the Black: orting cl clecliDe4 significantly, and �o pole of amucnce and ex1Ieme poverty have grown sharply. For example, by 1990 about twelve percent of all Black f'amilles earned und $S,OOO. Vote for.WCCC mill' om Con e ely, the BI c upper ddle cl , peci ly 0 holds ith both P n employed, becam f r more ffiuent. The medi n income of frican-Americ n famili in· hich both the wife and husb d ere employed e from bout $28,700 in 19 7 to over $40,000 in 1990, an increase of 40 percent L More n 15 percent of 11 Bl c familie e rn bove $50,000 annually, and thousan of BI c ho hoI earn over $100,000 e ch year. Many of these Bl ck families moved out of the central cities into the m tty- hi uburb, and the ties which linked them to the ghetto' problemt bro down. Black empo erment in the twenty-fint century will require African-Americans to revive those llnka c cl and income boundari , if e have any hope in destroying the barrier of ch a all Dr. Mallllillg Marable is Professor of Political Scimce and History at the Unlversity of Colorado-Boulder. "Alollg the Color LiM" appe4l'S ill over 250 publicatiolLf, and is broadcast by more tban 60 radio statiolls inte17llllionally. READERS WRITE As Prosecutor for Wayne County, I have the responsibility for prosecuting young men and women who have one thing in common: When I'w boy growing up in D yton, Ohio' African-American community on th city' west ide, I w lw Y w re of what ItBI c n s " me nt. We didn't experience th ugly oppres ion of Jim Crow egreg tion, yet we till confronted les evere form of di crimination every d y. BI c were pennitt d to vote, but ere ilently denied po itio in the city' go mment and civic hierarchy, y father went to literally every bank in the city to borrow the funds to establish a small busines --and was denied credit at every institution. White-owned boarding hou e on Gettysburg Avenue, which wa the outer boundary of the Black west side, had signs posted in their doors and window : "No Colored." Nevertheless, there was also a deep ense of shared commitment for group advancement, and a willingness for individual sacrifice for the benefit of one's friends and neighbors, which permeated the, entire Black community. Denied full access to the wbite world's opportunities, people learned to go " . . . By JAMES E. ALSBROOK A new explosion of nationwide tension over public school desegregation may have begun in Columbus, Ohio. The 1954 Brown v. Topeka decision is being' tested there by the city's school board proposal to minimize court-mandated busing and re turn to "neighborhood schools." The proposal came from the office of Dr. John A. Middleton, the Black superintendent, and his white administrators. It reviewed old disagreements, old suspicions and race-based arguments fanned by the media. Several so-called "-town meetings" to hear citizens' questions and opinions are scheduled for October and November. Suspicions are strong and lines already have been drawn. ' Educators from various cities nationwide are watChing developments to assess possible changes in their own cities. SURPRISING REACTIONS jumped to the fore immediately, for most white students interviewed randoml y on television said they would rather "stay put" and be with the friends they had developed and maintain the school loyalties they had internalized. Leaders of the predominantly white teacher's union also oppose the proj ected change. Their president said the change would disrupt effective programs and be conducive to racial re-segregatlon. Those favoring the plan for neighborhood schools argue: - More students could walk to school and not ride a bus. - Parents of students would not have to get up so early in the morning to prepare their children for bus rides somtimes lasting 30 to 45 minutes. - More Blac teachers probably ov.3rd alternatives offered by Wayne For the sake of all Wayne County County Community College or how citizens, we must pass the Education much worse things could get if the First proposal. college is forced to close. WCCC serves a population of all would be teaching more Black students and would be positive role models for these students. - Black teachers would understand the Black students better, communicate with them and their parents better, and be more effective than other teachers. _ Special content on Black history and Black pride could be worked into the curriculum, thus developing more-positive ,feelings about self in tbc Black student. _ Some white high school counselors have tended to steer white students toward academic or "brain work" cl es and institutions of �gher learning while, sending' Black students to "hands work" or industrial technology classe , ignoring the academic 'ability of higIHcoring Black students. - Some, BlackS argue that "a Black student doe. not have to sit beSide a white tudent in order to learn." � 0 ,--fl- HAR.R..I S-#­ @/99Z- '_ "White flight" has reduced school population byone third. THOSE OPPOSING 'the neighborhood schools plan argue: - The plan is a ploy to circumvent the Brown v. Topeka Supreme Court Decision and its thesis that racially segregated schools are "inherently unequal." - Integrated schools made po ible by court-mandated busing provide students the experience of interacting with various youngsters from various cultures and value systems, thus providing students with "real world" training and' promoting those peaceful and understanding relationships that are vital to peace and security in a "meltmg pot" democracy. Racial misconceptions and prejudices held by parents are often modified by the at choollearning proce . - Racially segregated schools wherein Bl CD are concentrated are Plantor chool neig'hborhood II op n old wound races and ages. With the reduced industrial bas� of Soutlleast Michigan, education is the only hope of escape for most YOUDg people from a life of poverty and unfill� dreams. YET THE SCHOOL faces a crisi that could close it. On r1 �� l. q "!II. yDC .9>unty 'Y1Jl �,. � to approve I mJlJage for the schoOf. wccc is the only community college in the srate without a dedicated millage, and with recent state cutbacks, its ,ftry future is in jeopardy. Because of recent news ,tori about FBI agents on the campus, I feel compelled to set the record straight When Dr. Rafael Cortada took over the school two years ago, he inherited a school that had been marred by mis-management Dr. Cortada set up strict financial guidelines and cleaned house; The school opened the books to' state investigating agencies. When financial improprieties were uncovered, Dr. Cortada voluntarily brought those findings to my office for review. It is very important to lDlderstand that the subject matter of tho e investigations pre-date Dr. Cortada's administration, and that it was he who sought review by the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office. After concluding that there w no evidence of state violations, as a matter of thoroughness, I referred the materials to the U.S. Attorney' SHWCCC,A10 easy targets for deliberate ac of omission (neglecting or falling to do whatever is done for other schools) or deliberate acts of commission (intentionally doing to Black schools whateveris NOT done to white or other schools). - The "false sense of superiority" the Supreme Court said white students feel in racially segregated school and the "false sense of inferiority" the Court said Black students feel at raCially segregated schools would return in segregated schools and inflict psychological damage on both races. - These feelings of white superiority and Black inferiority sabotage the best perform.ances of both groups., ' - Equal educational opportunity , exists only when both races have equal access to the best human aDd material educational resources in the community. • · " • ·