new p per. . Edu lion re Ily i ongo­ ing and certainly not limited to cl room tu • In fact this very new paper that )'OU are reading i in our e tima­ tion a m mber of the premier "community college" y tem in the nation. The year 2000 lmostof- ficially upon us. In many w y , it i Ire dy here. Par­ ticularl y for many college and universitie in thi country, in terms of tudent compositions, it Is here. TWO 0 OUR bigge t goal in 1993 are 1) to con­ tinue providing quality opinion pieces and 2) to in­ crease the number of college students reading these newspapers. One way to do thi is to seek your direct assistance by encouraging you to take out subscriptions to this newspaper for our college OIlS, daughters, relatives and friends. Another way that will con­ . ue to promote the Pan , . can press is by allow' COllege tuden to ub i gue t e • flit". column. Topics will vary, 0 if you are lntere ted or know of someone who educa­ tion topic in mind, let us know. We continue to believe in the Pan African Press. At this time, we would like to public­ ly thank the many newspapers that run this column. AT THE end of the year for the past five years, we have selected four newspapers annually as our agship newspapers. Each year it has gotten tougher because the pool of newspapers continues to get stronger. But this as you can imagine is a pleasant situation that should continue to get even tougher. One major stipulation is that no newspaper is eligible to be a flagship newspaper two consecutive years. A second stipulation is that the column ran in the newspaper for at last a ear. The follow­ ing are our first five years' flagship newspapers: 1988: The Bakersfield (CA) Observer, the Long Beach (CA) Times, tile Roanoke (VA) Tribune and the San Bernardino (CA) Precinct Reporter. 1989: The Florida Sen­ tinel-Bulletin (Tampa), the LA 'Black Busine s Journal (CA), New York Big Red News and the San Diego Voice & Viewpoint. 1990: The Buffalo (NY) Criterion, the Las Vegas Sen­ tinel- Voice, the Richmond (V A) Voice and the San Ber- nardino (CA) Precinct Reporter.: r 1991: The Chicago Inde­ pendent-Bulletin, the Los An­ geles News Observer, the Memphis (TN) Silver Star News and the Roanoke (VA) Tribun . 1992: The Michigan Citizen (Highland Park/Detroit), the Las Vegas Sentinel- Voice, the Los An­ geles Herald-Dispatch and the Richmond (VA) Voice. W TOLl> by pOlitical experts that Clinton appealed succes fully to hite suburban oter , who made the critical difference in the election. Ho true this analysis? A closer study of Clinton's real constituency reveals that his prime upporters were racial and ethnic minorities, working class and poor people, and people who depended . . . &&&"�."'ju--...O PLU fromtbe el 0 ere the unprece en ed gains cored by omen, La d African Amerl • The number 0 omen in the Hou e of Representativ soared from 28 to 47, with men in the Senate. African American representation in the House jumped to 38, n inaeue 0 thirteen; and tbe n r of Latino representativ ent from ten to seventeen. A Korean-American Republican wu elected in California to the HILTON: HIGHER EDUCA.­ TION is tUsigMd to dialogue wit" college wo reaMrs. Educa­ tion is o"goi"g and c.rtainly not 6limiteti to classroom study. Let's talk: (9()9) '899-0650. \'IE" S l.� ()PI'\H)\ heavily on uch e tudent cd tio 10 , Social Security ymen, r ocial rvi Accordin to vo ' exit poWn d ta, eighty-two percent of 11 Afric n American ho voted elec d CintOD, th t level 0 upport which the Democr tic . candidate ould receive from any group. Clinton received u tan I upport from Jewi h voters (78 percent) nd from Latino (62 percent). . The intolerant, homophobic character of the Republicans' national convention w critical in mobilizing millions of American le bian and gays behind the Democratic nomin . Estimates of Clinton' Ie bian/gay vote in the election re pproximately 75 percent. WO G CLASS people and the poor were 0 vital to Clinton' victory. Americans earning under $15,000 annually, upported the Arlta Democrat by 59 percent, Other key groups in this category include: trade union member nd members ofho�holds (55 percent), Lester's World ,.. � 'T ... a : � 0 � � 110 c:c 0 � ,.. '" VI ... :: tf :.4 � :: a :2 (J ... ... ,.. .. 5 c:c � III = � ... 7- , ;: 00 ,., 0 � III � "- ill ::e ;, 0 (J J d • nva mon BUSH CORED B amon "bom again Christian- evangelicals (61 perceni), Southem bite males (48 percent), conservatives (65 percent), and people earning more than $75,000 annually (48 percent). If African Americans and Latinos had stayed home from Polls, B h would have receiv CI n rro electoral college and popular vote victory, A plurality of all white voters went for Bush (41 percent) over Clinton (39 percent) and Perot (20 percent). The overwhelming backing of TO MAI�E A MO' BETTER MOVIE .... I'NEEDED A MO' BE TER . BUDGET. BY ANY MEANS N �S$ARY. H�Nll!Ii.1tIII I , , .,. ORAOWEDi� - omalia a n ·of • Ion 0 COPYHI III e 19�2 f.:ERN rJESJ(; INC, A L RIG" J H' � I:}{ v U) • I • I aleo By JAMES E. ALSBROOK Did President Bush sendtroops to Somalia in these last few days of his presidency to portray himself in history as a compassionate hum ani tarian? Did Bush calion the United States and the United ations in this help the helpless" gesture in order to live again his Desert Storm glory of being the dominant leader in contemporary world affairs? Did Bush respond to e heart-wrenching urgings of a soul so filled with the mil of human. kindnes that he revolted at the ghastly specter of human hunger, want, and ufIering? DID HE SEEK to give himself and the 260 million citizens of''tbe United States the satisfaction and the moral "high ground" of feeding the hungry, clothing the na ed, and healing the sick - thereby obeying � popular Biblical injunctions and enjoying the self-satisfaction of giving at Christmas time? No matter which of the four questions deserves a "Yes," all four could contain orne measure of truth. The greater truth, however, i that the prostrate Somalia today i the product of at least four major misfortunes. , They are that British colonialism began tbere 106 years ago in 1886; Italian colonialism began there in 1889; Cold War competition b tween the United States and the Soviet Union began there after World War II; and murderous rivalrie among everal large klan in different ections of the country have been going on for centuries. The British and Italians were not good colonists because they departed or were forced t before establishing viable sy terns of government. They exploited the natural resources and agricultural products of Somalia.' ' , BECAUSE SOMALIA, on the horn of Africa, was a strategic location for both contestants in the Cold War - the United States and the Soviet Union - both so-called superpowers wanted landing rights in Somalia for their aircraft and seaport rights for their various war ves els. To get the e rights, both pow�rs gave Somalia many millions of dollars worth of armaments. From 1966 to 1968, the United States gave Somalia more than 100 million dollars worth of guns, true , tanks and other war material. Before the United States made the deal with Somalia, the Soviets already bad given the Somalians millions of dollars worth of war products before opting for Egypt. Reporter for Brili hand American ne p pers say that the and. By PAUL ROCKWELL Suddenly Malcolm X i everywhere. In the glow of Spike Lee' acclaim d epic, it i Y to for­ get that Malcolm w an Object of wid pread censorship. In 1961 th Univ rsity of Cali or­ ni stopped Malcolm from add ing tudents and teac ers in BerkC\ey. The French gove ent nd U.S. State Department p vented Malcolm frc»tW. �9� i 'P�' 'Ill 1 m flbirH . in theitJ. ,0' �1�MQltllll." Maleoin\ \\Ant . ioO:ntt\ildh publish major wo ks, turning hi image into a caricat reo America ilenced its most effective leader in the early battle against drugs, before crack cocaine became an Far ore thin I Fad epidemic. Who calculates the co ts of Malcohn X was not a roc r, and censorship and ignorance? An entire youthful ehth I m tbund his name decade of ghetto youth grew up i not aping, ignorant fad. The rise without the benefi t of Malcolm's of interest in Malcolm ref) a quest, teachings about crime and self-indul- a yearning for new kinds ofleadership, gence, about despair and elf-hate, especially d ire for chan in race about the violence of the oppre r relations. Adults who wor with against th oppressed. young people can sense an emerging coftSCiousn . The dade period of the 1. , a period of dru and disil­ lusionment, may be passing from us. Walter Dean Myer -who e new biography, Malcolm ,X: By Any Means Necessary, wilt soon appeal to teenager across the country_:_. reminded me in a recent interview of anold Black piritual thatsays:"Please don't let thi harpist pass."The new X-climate offers a long-overdue op­ portunity for educators to overcome the legacy of distortion and censor­ Ship. Here i a chance to make connec- - tions with tuden and to participate in a kind of teach-in 'about race in America. In m opinion, all public chool and librari have a respon­ sibility to make sure that teenage • IT W AN "underground pub- Ii her-now called Grove Pre s-that first published The Autobiography of Malcolm X, today' best- elling cl - sic. It was Pathfinder Press, a' small alternative publisher, that reproduced many of Malcolm's speech .In lud­ ing hi talks with young people . Smaij,dedicated African-American bookstores-like Marcus Books in Oakland and San Franci co - kept Malcolm's teachings alive. History mov quickly and is full of surprises. Suddenly Malcolm X i a household word. Attracted no doubt by Malcolm' dynamism and defiant pirit, Black, Latino, Asian, and White youth are wearing X-cap and Mal­ colm tee- hirts. Mass intere t in Mal- See MALCOLM, A10 po ? • wor typical Somalian solder today wears an American-made uniform and carries Russian-made AK-47 rifle. The major klans are the Issa in Northern Somalia, the Hawiye in Central Somalia and the Gadeni in the ge rally southern area. Each has its own territorial dominance and political party. The murderous rivalries among lclans involve many thousands of members and many hundred of years of hostility. fanatical killing today of Mo 'lems and Hindus in India. Just as the several f ctions in Black Somalia today are starving their ancient e nemle in a centuries-old fight for domination, so today are the Serb in white Yugoslavia tarving the Bosnians to minimize enemy resources a d facilitate domination of their own value, heritage and leadership. Be u e of the prevailing world-wide ecouomic recession and because the United State bas slipped below two former enemies, Germany . and Japan, in economic and financial stability and power, perhap this • question is appropria : Is Bush proclaimlng to e world that world domination involves not only commerce and finance, but also the military power to punish or to de troy anything anywhere on earth? , . TH lTUA nON in Somalia today should not shame African-Americans. It is similar to that of the Hatfields and McCoys of old-time Appalachian Kentucky, the American Civil War between the North and the South, the ethnic and religious war today ravaging the former Yugoslavia, the centuries-old Ireland contlict, the Jcilling of foreign workers today in Oermany, and the \