Quiz To Increase Our Awareness As Black History Month ap pr< ches, and the community is m ’ncreasingly aware of the num s roles in the history of the Western world played by blacks, we wish to add to this ever-expanding reservoir of knowledge. The following quiz may prompt or increase African-Americans’ awareness of history. 1. Name the black identified by some scholars as arriving with Columbus in the New World. 2. To what state and in what year did the first group of blacks arrive to erect a settlement in America? 3. Name the black discoverer of what is now Arizona and New Mexico. 4. In what state was the first law enacted protecting slaves who flee owners because of ill treat ment, and was also the first to legalize slavery? 5. Name the slave poet who wrote “Bars Fight” and was generally considered the first black poet in America. 6. Name the 22-year-old free black who was the first person in the North American colonies to build a clock, though he had never before seen one, and which clock chimed accurately for more than 20 years. 7. Name the black abolitionist born in Wilmington who in 1827 established a secondhand clothing business in Boston, and two years later wrote “Walker’s Appeal,” a call for revolt in the South which created such a furor among slaveowners that at least one Southern state legislature made circulation of it a capital offense. 8. Which of America’s founding fathers wrote, “I have never own ed a Slave Leven] when it has cost me thousands of 'f--liars for the labor and susten^ je of free man, which I might have saved by the purchase of Negroes at times when they were cheap”? 9. In what city was the Zion Methodist Church organized in 1796? 10. In what city did Richard Allen organize Mother Bethel Church, a Negro Methodist Episcopal Church, and also the ci ty of the first black Episcopalian congregation in the United States? 11. Historically, blacks were considered what fraction com parative to non-blacks in America? 12. In what city was the first abolitionist society in the United States organized. the answers to the above ques tions are Pedro Alonzo Nino, South Carolina, Etevanico, Massachusetts, Lucy Terry, Ben jamin Banneker, David Walker, John Adams, New York City, Philadelphia, three-fifths, Philadelphia. Multi-Cultural, Yes; Minority, No! There are already enough obstacles in college and life for students of color without having to be subliminally conditioned to ac cept substandard campus, na tional and world citizenry. We are talking about being labeled “minorities.” Four-fifths of the world’s population is Asian, Asiatic* African and African. In Western terminology, that means yellow, brown, red and black folks. Not only are they in the majority with regards to numbers, but also in terms of land mass occupancy. Contrary to what is shown on most world maps such as the Hangstrom Map of the World (Alaska is not larger than China, Greenland is not larger than In dia, Russia is not larger than Africa?), a more accurate picture of the world has emerged using the Peters New World View Map published by Friendship Press. The Peters Map has been around since 1973 and presents a balance to world geography. Whereas the Hangstrom Map is colonial and ethnocentric in design, Peers more accurately positions Africa and Asia as center and near-center. In fact, in terms of size, the USA could be placed within Africa at least twice and still have room to fit all of Europe. For example and closer to home, New York city is predominantly black and brown, yet daily those same residents are told that they are in the minority. Eighty-five percent of the students in the New York City public school system are black and brown, yet those young minds are “educated” to believe that they are in the minority in that ci ■'ty. Is it any wonder that New York still doesn’t have a black or brown mayor or even majority represen tation on its Board of Estimates (made up of the five borough presidents)? All together now, “I love New York!” In California and Texas, can anyone deny that the brown tide is rising? The Latino community will be even more tremendous by the year 2000. An ironic and unfortunate dilemma that is faced regarding “minority” is its usage among those who are educated and should know better. In terms of numbers in this country, when referring to people of color, minority might seem accurate, but challenges still need to be of fered. There is too much excess baggage and negative connota tions that come with the word (less than, inferior, losing side) for people to continue to refer to themselves in that way. Whether one majors in sociology, accounting, medicine or any other field, it’s going to be very important to challenge those who attempt to describe you and your cultures as minorities. Propose the use of the word “multi-cultural” or m-c for several reasons: (1) it is more ac curate and positive, implying a forward appreciatoin and understanding of more than one culture (remember that America is a pluralistic society); (2) unlike the word “minority,” which was actually assigned to us, m-c comes from our own self identification; and (3) phonetical ly, it is as short and easy to pro nounce. This idea of replacing “minori ty” with multi-cultural or m-c has picked up momentum around the country. For example, at many predominantly white colleges/in stitutions, m-c students and pro fessionals are successfully chang ing their minority affairs offices to multi-cultural affairs The key is that they are raising the right questions and collaborating to find answers, This is higher education. Desperately Seeking A Gentler And Kinder Society BY REP. GUS HAWKINS Guest Editorial As Ronald Reagan rode out into the sunset last week he left behind a budget that was of the same vin tage of prior years. More money for the military, and less for children and families. In the last eight years he has run up the big gest budget deficits in history, leaving behind a fiscal mess that will undoubtedly pit one good pro gram against another. Because we are in the final days of the Reagan administration, I would normally ignore these fun ding requests. But I am concerned that the incoming administration may go along with some of these figures, including program cuts in education and the painful reduc tions in child nutrition. The Reagan budget is so absurd in terms of its deep cuts in “peo ple” programs it sets up the possi ble scenario of “bad cop, good cop” routine. If Bush asks for a few increases in some education, housing and health programs he will appear to be a welcomed im provement to his predecessor. But the problems in education and ur ban America are too significant to simply throw scraps at them. For example, cost-effective federal programs are now reaching levels far below their eligible populations: • Head Start, a super is^ khitokiai. i* km. ' • *•' l*■'?. '0* "W'i■' ___ ' Pf^P* **PS Miller Says BY SHERMAN N. MILLKK SI FKRC'ONDUC'TIVITY AND SOLAR ENERGY WILL OBVIATE OPEC’ We are now at the dawn of the 1990s, so I will try my hand at being a futurist'. I foresee an economic nightmare for the Arab world by the year 2005. It will be a direct fallout from terrorist bombings, such as Pan Am Flight to:t Now before 1 am labeled a kook, I ask you take a moment to grapple with my rationale. In 1988, I found myself rushing through a domestic airport to catch an airplane. When I got to the person and baggage checkout station I promptly handed my laptop computer over to ho checked. Then I started through the metal detector. The alarm went off. I told the lady thill I had on safety shoos. I expected her to merely run the handheld metal detector over my shoos. But this lady made me take off my shoos so they could Ik- run through the X-ray machine I was perturbed because! looked a bit foolish with my shoes off standing in the midst of a major airport. When this officer saw .that I had told the truth, she said that her stringent checking was for my own safety, especially with all the terrorist problems in the world. I left thinking she was just too lazy to pick up the handheld metal detector and check my shoes. On a late October 1988 trip to Geneva, Switzerland, my dander was raised once again. En route to the airport, I stood outside of my taxi to watch the driver load my bags. I wanted to be sure nothing went wrong as I was anxious to see my wife and children. I had passed through London, England and Belfast, Nor thern Ireland on segments of this trip. I had even spent a couple of days in Londonderry, Northern Ireland. I had an ticipated the body search I received at the Belfast airport. However, I thought Geneva was the last place on earth to encounter problems with terrorism. Before leaving for the airport that morning I ate breakfast. My bags were already packed before I went down to eat. When I returned to my room I saw some dirty socks i that I had failed to pack. I opened one of my two bags and put them in. I did not think any more about this incident until I got to the airport. A young lady came up to me while I stood in line trying to check my bags. She started asking questions. “Were your bags ever out of your sight? Did anyone give you anything? Were your bags ever opened after you packed them?” I truthfully answered her questions. The next thing I knew they pulled the bag that I had opened. I readily agreed to let them search it on the spot. They shipped my bag to a special screening area where I was required to open it in their presence. They claimed they wanted me to check to see if everything was the way I had packed it. I felt like a suspected terrorist; a criminal, whose only crime was telling the truth. But I did not hesitate to follow their instructions. I opened my bag. They then placed a seal on it. My nerves calmed now that my ordeal was over. 1 headed for the plane. Each person on a TWA flight had to pass through a screening door. When the fellow looked at my ticket I found myself in a room getting the third degree. ; I staved my anger because I wanted to get home. I pro mptly answered the interrogator’s questions. Once I was anointed for passage on board TWA Flight 0831 from (Sec MILLER. P 9) ERNIE’S WORLD BY ERNIE JOHNSTON. JR.. BY ERNIE JOHNSTON, JR. SUPER BOWL PARTY TURNS INTO SCHOLARSHIP DOLLARS Every year a group of us guys get together to watch the Super Bowl and it is now billed as our own annual party. For the most part, those in attendance are Aggies, alumni of A&T State University with a few others who went to a historically black college. One of the unique things about this gathering is that all of the guys were at A&T during the same time period so it makes for a lot of reminiscing. The idea of the party is to rotate sites each year and each person in attendance is charged with bringing a dish of food, so there is plenty of food and drinks at the party. Ed Pitt, one of the early organizers of the party, came up with a unique idea this year. Just prior to this year's party, he was on the phone to me suggesting that the party would be a good forum to ask the Aggies to make a finan cial pledge to the annual giving campaign. . In previous years, those attending numbered about a dozen or so. Last year there were about 16 people at the Super Bowl party. This year was a record number with one person saying that maybe in the future we will have to book a hotel ballroom. Out of the 24 people, at least 18 or so were Aggies, so dur ing the halftime of the game, Pitt along with Fred Davis, who is a member of the national alumni annual giving com mittee, explained the importance of the alumni giving back to the institution where they had received an education. Each person was asked to make a financial pledge and when all the pledges had been tallied, it amounted to a little over $3,000. The consciousness of African-Americans is being raised nowadays with the likes of Bill Cosby and others who are making financial contributions to the historically black col leges. African-American graduates are now seeing the impor tance of giving something back to their alma maters. Ed Pitt made an important point during his appeal for pledges- that those from other institutions at the party should contribute to their own schools. More and more dollars are needed today than ever before to send those deserving students to school. What happend with the Aggie Super Bowl party could be duplicated by others who have such gatherings. And then again, it does not have to be a Super Bowl par ty to generate funds to a school's financial giving cam paign. There are those who get together from time to time dur ing social gatherings and those would be splendid forums to make financial pledges to institutions of higher learning. These days with increased tuition and the need for African-Americans to receive an education, the concern should be toward making a financial commitment to assure that there can be a successful and productive than getting together, swapping jokes and having a good time. We don't have the millions and millions of dollars that Cosby and “■— --*“ our African-Amerieaivcollegcs but we can to meet our obligation. Great expectations from a new man By Chick Stone Abraham Lincoln’s inaugural wish that the Union be touched ‘by the bet ter angels of our nature* has been re united with fellow Republican George Bush’s yearning for *a kinder, gentler nation. The parallels are irresistible. i.inmin inherited a nation divided by geography. Bush inherits a nation further segregated by his immediate A strong-willed Lincoln forged uni ty out of a mean-spirited divisiveness. A resolute Bush has pledged an enlist ment of his energies against the rem nants of that national schism. ■Bigotry and indifference to disad vantage ... will find no safe home on our shores, In our pubic life, in our neighborhoods, or n our homes,* Bush declared four days before his in auguration. *It will, I promise, be my mission as president of the United States.* That George Bush would group ■in difference to disadvantage* with big otry is especially encouraging be cause this nation’s moral bearings have been momentarily sidetracked. As MIT educator John S. Wilson ob served, *The Reagan years made peo ple feel more comfortable expressing intolerance.* The Bush years are expected to be the opposite. So much of Bush’s phi losophy, defined In his warm-hearted Inaugural address, portends a new na tional climate. Ironically, Americans have been snugly burrowed In the old climate. How else w explain a M percent ap proval rating tor a departing presi dent with an eight-year record of na ked hostility to racial equality, contempt for human suffering and se nile oblivion to honesty. Ronald Reagan was never a class act Unlike Lincoln, he never rose above his humble beginnings. He wal lowed In their excesses. Instead of gracefully turning over the nation’s stewardship to a faithful subaltern, the Lilliputian-minded ac tor stalked out of the White House ... defending resigned-in-disgrace Attor ney General Edwin Mesae from a Jus tice Deportment censure ... blaming black leaders tor the contumely of the nation’s black citizens... scolding the homeless to reed the want ads ... shrugging off responsibility for the CHUCK STONE deaths of 341 Marines in Beirut... ana defending an unconscionable plot to exchange hostages for arms. With his 68 percent approval rating after a record like that, the Groat Communicator will be remembered by posterity as the Groat Prestidigitator. George Bush arrived at history’s doorsteps not a moment too soon. In many ways he should excel For starters, he’s capable of staying awake through cabinet meetings and being a president de facto in charge. Even when he pauses and seams to grope for an answer, he does some thing Reagan never did. He thinks He also has surmounted contradic tions with grace. After denouncing Dukakis for his “Harvard yard bou tique* obsession, the Yhle alumnus appointed four Harvard man to Ms cabinet. Promising an administration of new faces, he instead borrowed lib erally from both Reagan administra tions. Opening his presidential cam paign in Texas with a plea for racial tolerance, he later allowed aide Lao Atwater to orchestrate an insidiously racist campaign. Bush’s Mggoat prob lem will be finding a way to restrain Atwater from routinely referring to blacks as “niggers* in conversations. The president sets a tone that chal lenges our conscience and fathwi great expectations. Reagan failed grievously on both counts. Finally, George Bush returns two elements that the presidency had last — an affinity for the values of the founding fathers and a wife (“the sil ver fox*) strenuously committed to equality. In I960,1 interviewed Reagan in clusively in his home the weekend be fore the GOP convention. He m pressed enthusiasm for minority aslf help, and I left with mat expectations. In 1989, I*d settle far a .500 batting average — and i Lincoln. ®MwrannMpni Other VIEWPOINTS A MUSLIM PERSPECTIVE: HOW TO SOLVE THE CRIME PROBLEM BY SULTAN MUHAMMAD ABDUL MU’IZZ Crime and corruption plague man today more than at any other time in human history. We build more prisons, give stiffer prison sentences, and hire more policemen; yet, the crime rate continues to rise. Over the last four years the nation’s jail population has risen nearly 40 percent. In many American cities the only municipal construction projects are the building of new jails. What is the solution to this problem? Why is it that we can send men to the moon, manufacture body organs and make ages-old diseases obsolete but when it comes to preventing our youths from becoming thieves, robbers, ex tortionists, and murderers, we can only express anger, frustration, fear and powerlessneas, thus becoming fair game for self-serving politicians who pro mise to legislate stricter laws and tougher penalties. The death penalty issue is what I call a good example of political flim flam. Politicians promise a fearful and angry public that if they are elected they will make the streets safe by executing murderers, rapists, and heavy drug pushers. The fact is that death penalty laws have never aided in the reduction of crime in the past and are obviously having no effect on today's crime problem in America. Man must realise that he cannot solve this problem on his own. This pro blem will only be solved when man turns to nis creator for gnirtunr* Allah (God), the creator of man, guides man by sending prophets to teach him what he does not or cannot know by his own means. Prophets are sent to teach the secrets of life, the true nature of man, about good and evil, right and wroiW and how to purify the soul from evil and correct the thinking and actions of men. The last and greatest example of this is found in the life and works of Prophet Muhammad. Prophet Muhammad was born in 570 of the Christian era in what historians refer to as the Dark Ages. This period of human history was characterised by ignorance, superstition, immorality, and widespread terror and injustice., The influence of true religion was all but dead in the world. Both Christianity and Judaism had become weak and corrupt institutions, im potent in the face of man's moral, spiritual and intellectual stupor. During the Dark Ages, the people sunk deepest in vice and immorality were the pre-Islamic Arabs. The Arab prided in his ignorance and boasted of his barefaced immorality. He was addicted to drunkenness, buried female of fspring alive, married stepmothers and treated women like chattel. The physically strong took advantage of the weak and robbery, violence and murder were a way of life. When Prophet Muhammad reached the age of 40, Allah (God) revealed the Holy Quran to him to serve as the means to guide humanity to the straight path, by quickening1 is soul, awakening Ms conscience and enlightening the human mind. It is found in the Quran that the Arabs were worshipping idols. ston—, treat and heaps of sand. Within less than a quarter of a century, the worship of one true God ruled the entire country, sweeping away all superstition and giv ing in its place the moot rational religion that the world could The Arab who prided himself in his ignorance had, as if by a magician’s hand, become the lover of knowledge. Drunkenness disappeared so entirely that the very vessels used for drinking wine could no longer be found. Cruelty, vi«-e. and senseless violence had given way to brotherhood, kindness, charity, sex ual morality and chastity. The moral transformation brought about by Prophet Muhammad, guided by Allah's last revealed scripture, the Holy Quran, is unparalleled in human history. The Islamic attitude toward immorality, and the mission of Muslims is described in the Holy Quran in the following words: Let there be a community among You, advocating wliat is good. Demanding what is right, and Eradicating what is wrong. Tnese are indeed the successful. v _ -Holy Quran 3:104 You are the best community ever Raised, you enforce what is l what is wrong; and BhtlieJslamiv- beliefthat in order to address human, first understand the human being s mature It is the Christij IPlli