P 01 PO • , Dinki n really paign of political due tion nd mobiliz tion within his core constitu Dey - union mem , African-Ameri­ ca nd m t ti , and low income people - to explain the reaao for th citY economic and social crisis. He never in- pired them to fight back, or ar­ ticulated a viable alternative for a multicultural agenda of urban empowerment. One measure of this failure is the fact that th re are one halfmillion unregistered black voters in New Yor City_:_' and that if only one-ninth of that group had been voters, that Dinkins would still be mayor. The mayoral victories of Gi­ uliani in New Yor and censer­ vative businessman Richard Riordan in Los Angeles earlier ight of le der I y ier to under t nd the WE REMEMBER THE vi­ cious slaying of Eleanor Bum­ pur , the ixty-si year old --------- - --- ----------� By J ames E. Alsbrook Colin Powell a Black man as president of the United States? Now that this charismatic and beloved former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has retired from the U.S. Armed Forces, various polls show that he, like Eisenhower, gained admira­ tion so widespread that he would be a formidable candidate for the office of U.S. President. He is only 56 years old and has at least 14 to 16 "good" years remaining. Powell's political possibilities have been reported exten­ sively in recent issues of various media including the New York Times and U.S. News, and a very supportive book on him was published a few months ago. These white writers agree unan­ imously that Powell could be the first Black President of the U ni States because people generally agree that he brought new respect for the U.S. military forces after the humiliating defeat from Vietnam. , . , Powell is the author of military plans that were highly regarded and taught in military schools. . Powell's' published thinking on military tactics, strategies, and maneuvers came to the attention to top defense officials in the Reagan administration. ADMm. G POWELL' MILITARY concepts and ad­ vanced thinking, they brought him to Washington in the Defense Department. Amid the pr ures and wranglings of the Cold War, Reagan swallowed his usual anti-Black policies to get the best advice from the most talented source and on November 5, 1987, named Powell as his National Security Advisor. Bush named him Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on October 1, 1989. When war with Iraq was definite on Jan. 23, .1991, Po�ell on television told the world his plans for the Iraqi army: "First, we are going to cut it off. And then we are going to kill it." This bluntness h ked people, but Powell did exactly what he said. Clinton clearly intends to become a candidate again in 1996 and (}Q is urely fixed as his running mate. IF GORE no major blunders, he would not step aside for Pow 11 in 1996, u Gore wants to be President after Clin on has served two terms - in the year 2000. But if Powell decides that he should be a Republican, the picture chan dramatically. Polls show that Powell today has a higher approval rating than either Clinton or Dole and that Dole would run far behind Powell. Dole definitely wants to run in 1996 and then his competi­ tion pro ably would Jack Kemp, Dan Quayle, Sen: Graham of Texas or some unexpected entrant whose hat is not yet near the ring. one of th e now has hown the charisma, the clout, or the mass ap I to win the 1996 p idency against Clinton or Powell. If and when Powell decid to run, Black people must consider th facts: Clinton is a prov n fri nd to Black people as shown by his numerou B ck appoin and by his liberal racial polici . Pow 11 pr ident or vice-pr ident would soften much anti-Black prejudice, be a good role model for Black youth, chan millions of minds bout the ceilings and the "pla "of Black peopl in Am rican iety, �te � new image of BI ck pl and improve th psychological climate in which Afri n-Am rica liv and work. A new level of respect for I ck pi would follow Along t Color � in Dr. Manning Marable is Prcf. fiorof History and Political Science, and Direo­ tDrofthe Afriro.n-Amerimn. Studie 1 nsti­ lute, Columbia University, New York City. "Along the Color Line" appears in over 250 publication and is broadca by 75 radio stations internationally. ",­ - Lester's World '_ -.� .. " ," ' By urn. · a Abu -J amal The Russian White House, once home to the Russian Con­ gress of People's Deputies, may best be called the Black House, what with the facade of dark soot that now covers the building, the result of hours of bombardment by tanks under orders of Rus­ sian President Boris Yeltsin In the most ferocious rebel­ lion since the Oct. 1917 Revolu­ tion, forces loyal to the People's Deputies Vice President Ale - sandr Ruts oi and Parliamen­ tary Speaker Ruslan Khasbulatov, struck out at th state and government media represented by P ident Yelt­ sin, on Oct. 3, 1993. Well-organized units of rebels hit crucial TV broadcast nters, the M cow Mayor's Office and related targets, after Yeltsin . banned the Russian Congress, surrounded the Parliament building wi h troops and barbed wire, 'demanding th ir ouster. Yeltsin's banning of Parlia­ ment violated the Russian Con­ stitution,and was thus, illegal. Imagine an American lawyer and constitutional scholar then, applauding the banning and lauding Yeltsin's admittedly un­ lawful act! THAT LAWYER that scholar was U.S. President Wm. . J. Clinton, Esquire. The U.S., and other GATT 7 capitalist po we have unanimously ap­ plauded and supported Yeltsin's banning of Parliament as well as his armed strike at parliamen­ tary re Is, regardless of consti­ tutionality, prai ing him as a "democra t. " Only in Russia could a "d me­ crat" shr d th Constitution, ban Parliament, shut down op­ position newspapers, unl ash tank fire on Congress, remove provincial gov rno nd impose dusk to dawn curfe The Great" mocrat," Czar Boris I, owes his power, not to the Russian people, but to the loyalty of th generals and to Western "good" will. The W rn corporate media • j _- � _- - ��-------- - - - ---------...- - condemned members of Parlia­ ment as oldline Communists, rightwingers and monarchists, raising Yeltsin as Russia's great­ est hope. By the West's coronation of Czar Boris as "democrat" they actually meant "most open to Western Capital Investment." They opposed the Rut­ skoi/Khasbulatov Parliament because both men, especially Khasbulatov, strenuously op­ posed the direction whe R - sia was headed economically. DE .,1 92, Khasbulatov, speaking at the 7th s ion of Congress, at ed th "Ameri­ canization" of th R ian n­ omy calling instead for a "socially oriented market" simi­ lar to those found to be success­ ful as in Europe, Canada and China. One scholar report Kbasbulatov's comments ere "warmly received" (Prof. S. White, "Russia: Yeltsin' King­ dom or Parliament's Play­ ground?," Current History, From Death Row 19 3). Sur ly, neither Y ltain nor G 'fT 7 his ords too warmly. o tomiz is Russian oci­ ety from th re nt poli ica1,.eco­ nomic and social uph aval in th ir coun ry, tha poll ng "who ruled Russia?" turn up: the Mafia (21.8lJl); no on at all (9.3%); Yeltsin (9.7Cft); th gov­ ernm nt (3.9lJl); Par li m nt (0.2%); and alcoholi (0.29l). To sure, capi lism i com- ing to Ru i, nd with it pov- rty, cl trife hnic h blood, nihili and ali n ion.