The bugle blew too soon We don't blow any bugles until the war's over. -Malcolm X Last Spring South African President F.W. de Klerk declared that "the season of violence is over." This was supposed to mean that all that fighting over rights was behind the country, and that the rational process of negotiation would supersede violence on the road to equality. So, Nelson Mandela was released and the African National Congress (ANc), which he leads, was legalized. And the negotiations began. Then Mandela embarked on a dramatic world tour, simultaneously calling for the continuation of economic sanctions against South Africa and praising de Klerk for his reforms. The negotiations were (and are) slow. The process is on a course which would take years if it had any chance of succeeding, which it doesn't. De Klerk has promised the whites that he will produce a constitution which they can live with, as long as that takes. And the tide is gradually turning against the international sanctions. In the meantime the ANC called off its armed struggle against the government, and roughly a thousand people have died in coordinated attacks against the ANc and its supporters. There is considerable evidence the killing is being carried out by agents of the government who may or may not be acting against the wishes of President de Klerk. Violence perpetrated by the Inkatha Movement - comprised mostly of Zulus - has always been more or less attributable to the white government, which created the "tribal homelands" or bantustans which gave rise to the Inkatha x and its leadership as a power. But this latest string of attacks goes Cohen beyond that, because there are now reports of white men in government vehicles organizing the attacks and transporting the Inkatha hitmen to their targets. White reactionaries are doing us the service of clearly showing the relationship between the government and the Inkatha attacks. U.. When Mandela made his historic speech at the United Nations this summer, he went out of his way to praise de Klerk and the white government. He said: "[W]e believe that President de Klerk and his colleagues in the leadership of the ruling party are people of integrity.:We are of the view that they will abide by the decisions at are arrived at in the coupe of our discussions and negotiations." This was separate from his description of the threat imposed on the peaceful process of change by white "extremist" groups. That distinction is unravelling fast. One of the benefits of the world tour for the Arc was the further solidification of the AC as the voice of Black South Africa - the party to negotiate with. All the international support needed to back that position up came at a price - calling off the armed struggle and praising de Klerk and the "peace" process. Those steps apparently flew in the face of previous ANC positions, but, it was figured, Ac supporters could reconcile that contradiction when they saw the benefits gained from an enriched negotiation process. Now, as the process is interminably stalled and Ac supporters are dying by the hundreds, the ANC faces a credibility crisis, if not an all-out war. Several newspaper accounts have quoted Ac supporters demanding the resumption of the armed struggle and the distribution of weapons among the townships. And Mandela has threatened to answer their calls, unless the government acts to stop the violence. Eu. The Arc's approach to the split among the white elite -between the peace-loving negotiators and the fascist extremists - fails to recognize what is essentially a common interest. De Klerk and his faction may want negotiations with the ANc, and they may even. want a race-free system of voting rights someday. But they only want it after the preservation of existing economic and social structures can be guaranteed through other meansoting' alone will not improve conditions for the oppressed people of South Africa. The "extremists," on the other hand, won't even accept negotiations, and they'll use violence to stop the process if they can. But the extremists and the so-called moderates led by de Klerk are joined by the interest they share in a fractured and disillusioned movement for Black liberation. And the longer the negotiations drag on without producing tangible results, and the longer anc supporters are killed by the hundreds with no effective response, the closer both groups of whites get to their common goal. It's no wonder the government's so-called efforts to stop the violence have been without result. Mandela was greeted with incredible enthusiasm on his tour of the United States. He was heralded as the man who made a peaceful transition to democracy possible in South Africa, as well as for his deliberate tone of conciliation toward the white government. So when de Klerk came to wine and dine with President Bush - one of the biggest proponents of ending sanctions and getting back to business in South Africa - where was the protest? There was some, granted, but compared to the outrage that would have accompanied such a visit just a year ago, it was negligible. For that de Klerk has Mandela to thank, but it was a public relations service he didn't deserve. of the new residents were uninformed about how the houses function, resulting in difficulties after the recession. "During the recession the leadership held on, but those who moved in weren't as well- equipped to take on those leadership roles," Jones explains. To resolve the problems, the icc completely revamped the entire structure. "We've changed everything in the past five years," Jones says. "We've turned around a lot of the houses." "We've been buying a lot of stuff since 1985," he continues. Most recently, the icc purchased a house at 704 Hill this spring, which was dubbed Kagawa House by icc members at their meeting Sept. 27. Based on current financial estimates, Jones anticipates a bright future for the icc. "My best guess is that we will add maybe a house or two in the next two years." Based on the rate the icc is paying off its mortgages, Jones also foresees a major expansion of the co-op system around the year 2000. Despite the turnaround, the ic's problems did not end in 1985. Today, two of the predominant difficulties the co-op system is confronting are minority recruitment and the perception of co-ops on campus. Bill Woelkes, president of Sojourner Truth House, feels the two problems are related. "One of our biggest problems is our identity on campus... the way we're perceived," he says, adding that the vegetarian, communal-living, liberal image co-ops have may cause minority students, especially those from urban backgrounds, to shy away from them. "We're not thinking at their level." e Iccc recently developed a Minority Affairs Committee to deal with minority recruitment and retention in the system, but some members are questioning the necessity for the committee while others are skeptical about its outcome. "There are a few minorities living in the co- op, but for me, it (minority recruitment) isn't a big deal, although it would be nice to have more," Ed Veeser, a Stevens House resident, says. Jeff Kaufman, president of Joint House, explains, "We don't go out of our way and look (for minorities)," because most co-op members hear about the system by word-of-mouth rather than formal recruitment methods. This year, according to icc statistics, 71.86 percent of icc members learned about co-ops through personal contact. However, Kaufman adds, the newly-formed committee is "seriously looking into the issues" regarding the reasons so few minorities are co-op members. They are also thinking of ways to recruit more. Angela Shelton, an IsA junior, left the co-op system because of difficulties she faced as a Black woman. Shelton, the chair and sole member of the Minority Affairs Committee last year, claims the icc has no commitment to recruiting or retaining minorities. "Why is it that co-ops are low- rent housing facilities and don't have any minority members?" Shelton asks. "I don't think they have any interest in integrating their community." But some members feel strongly about increasing the number of minority members. "The icc doesn't really go out and recruit minorities like I think they should," Ginny Wolter, a Vail House resident, says, adding that she is uncertain how effective the Minority Affairs Committee will be in the long- run. icc President Alexis Willingans agrees there is a problem. "If you're a minority on the campus, you don't want to be a minority at home," she says. Willingans says the Minority Affairs Committee is hoping to set up workshops, increase their recruitment methods and establish a house mainly for minorities. It appears the co-op system may be taking a first, but not giant, step toward increasing the ranks of its minority members, although this step seems belated on a campus which has preached diversity for several years. Recruitment problems extend to the campus as a whole, primarily because of the way co- ops are perceived by students. "I think it (the student body) UhLCa l < ALk.! t ;woo_ I ~ 0 has more of a granola, socialist, h out-of-the-world view (of co- p ops)," Vesser says. "The normal perception is pretty whacked- p out." 14 While each house has its own n reputation, Vesser contends that "most of us are pretty straight- h laced," but residents are nI "definitely, definitely more t liberal than average." e Woelkes feels some of the a problems stem from some a members' desire to maintain a more radical image and attract the g kind of students who lean toward i a more liberal lifestyle. c "The perception the campus 41 Hick, redneck, honky... and the shock of recognition 7 tE. q !. I Pt4 4 Thirty years ago, a known racist running for high political office in Louisiana would scarcely have raised eyebrows- indeed, it would have been expected. Thirty years ago, Earl Long was running for Governor of Louisiana, invoking the name of his dead brother, Huey Long, foe of the rich, friend of the poor, and one of the more corrupt politicians ever to put foot to soil. Huey Long's name is being invoked once more, in David Duke's campaign for U.S. Senate. David Duke is painting himself as a populist who is in touch with peoples' concerns. He frequently tells his audiences "I am only saying in public what you talk about in private." That may well be the case, although people now understand the destructive power of language. There is no denying that progress has been made in the South. Where politicians of Duke's ilk were once the norm, Duke's campaign is now being treated as an aberration by the ever-eager Eastern Establishment press. Duke is appearing frequently in the New York Times, Washington Post and newsweeklies, as some demented racist demagogue who has inexplicably re-captured the minds of the decent (but let it be said, not 100 percent intelligent) in Louisiana on affirmative action and minority hiring are similar to the opinions of whites in the people of the South. David Duke has not risen out of nowhere, nor do I believe that only Louisiana could have produced such an ogre. Recent surveys by the University of New Orleans, using questions identical to those used by the University of Michigan's Inter- University consortium for Political and Social Research in their 1988 election polls, show that the opinions of white voters I TkoI United States as a whole. The survey continues "Could a David Duke happen in other areas of the country? Based on the national state, such as Arizona or Mississippi. Northerners have traditionally laughed at Southerners, as hicks, rednecks and peanut farmers, but the South lives on, our national doppelganger. Tempting as it is to pass off the South as the racist portion of the country, and to point to the extremes that David Duke represents, Duke is merely at the forefront. There are a number of indicators which suggest that the enfranchisement of ordinary Americans may slip into reverse this decade. President George Bush has been greasing his best .bi Mon.-S- 9ft 0P. , si El survey data on affirmative action and basic beliefs, our answer is a qualified yes." The qualification means that David Duke would be more likely to succeed in a historically conservative or racist , s a ys :1t " 8 pm. 0. T WEEKEND October 5,1990 a