COMMENTARY ‘Emerald’ not committed to diversity By Sven Orozco I am writing in response to the May 6 editorial titled "Apply ing for staff can only help paper." and ! disagree with it. The Emerald basically said. "If you feel we're a white-only club, then apply and change things " But this is one of the biggest problems with addressing racism on this campus. Any attempts to alleviate racism must be strived for by students of color, with a few exceptions. The burden is on us. again The "white man's apo thv" is our burden. Case in point being the administration's expec tntions that Students of Color Building Bridges will bring about necessary multicultural changes It's the same few people doing the same tremendous task An advertisement for advertis ing department positions in the Emerald says the paper is "com mitted to a culturally diverse workplace Minorities are espe cially encouraged to apply." But just as the Emerald posed the offer for help. I pose the offer for the Emerald to help with uuilti culturalism. Is the Emerald's statement of commitment rhetoric? The Emerald admit* it lacks the perspective of "minority" stu dents: "That's true. If you judge the Emerald staffers hv the col or of their skin.” What kind of reasoning is that? If the Emerald believes we don't like the paper because there aren't enough dark people in its staff picture, then the Emerald still hasn't gotten it It's the white, male, heterosexual-only view that we feel needs to be taken from its position of "normal." To ask a few students of < olor to come on staff, do their jobs, confront the white-only work place and reorganize the paper (but from lower levels, of course) is impossible It's ludicrous and exploitive. That says the Emer ald really doesn't want to be com mitted There is no sincerity in its request. It's setting these stu dents up for failure. They'll be marginalized and isolated from the rest of the staff. They will no doubt bo seen as manipulative. And eventually, perhaps, they'll make a few advances and end in frustration. If the Emerald ever comes to the decision that, yes, it wants to incorporate muiticulturalism, it's going to have to accept that racism decreases productivity As the Emerald moves from a monocuItural-oriented publica tion to one that is multicultural, it's going to have to critically examine its organization increasing the number of stu dents of color is certainly a step in the right direction, but that’s just part of the process toward diversification The multicultur al efforts should be supported bv the whole staff Work first on issues of f S diversity and then global diver sity. And finally recognize the effort is to create a long-term process, not a finished produc t The effort will last as long as the life of the publication I'm sun- the Emerald will get a lot of campus xup|>ort. if it seeks it. but the motivation and the vision must be the Emeroltf s. Just as the Emerald has said to appli cants that they have "nothing to lose and everything to gain." so does the Emerald in ini orporat ing nuilticulturalism Sven Orozco is an undeclared undergraduate and MEChA his tarinn CONSutf&K CON^'OENCE IS DOWN A3AIN. WE HAV* fo p/no our WHERE CONSUMER CONFiOtNCt COMES FROM Hint. 1 1 uwvfjiu. Ktif i**jo UQm) rxe 9UT I UXSi WfU vf£J SOME \ AV5« U^Off$ uaiT'L IT PiCKS V* !jJJ Multiculturalism fulfills complete education By Diane Fellows The argument of whether to teach multiculturalism cours es at the University is symptomatic of a society that can not take responsibility for its historic al past and. there fore. relinquishes responsibility for its ever-present future. In a society that practices ethical propriety and responsibility for all of its members, this argument would not exist at all. I am a child of a Holes mist survivor — the Holocaust between the years of 1939 and 1945 in Germany. There were many holo causts in different places before those' years, and there exists today many more holocausts, just as treacherous and licentious as the one that I witnessed through story and image I was Itortt 11 years after the dentil til all those I would have called aunt, uncle, grandmother and grundfnther. I was born in safety; safety that let me witness the beating of blac k men and women, time and time again, here in my Western world, safety that lets me witness the terror fell by those of brown flesh, emaciated flesh, standing in dignity against flailing hatred; safety that allowed me to watch children have their heads blown off while I discuss appropriate course c urriculum and cor rect politic al attitudes I was reminded a few weeks ago of the tremendous work the human species has to do to ensure its own existence. In safe ty, witnessing the holocausts of the latter part of the 20th cen tury. I was questioned as to the authenticity of my own rec ollections of the extermination of my own family’s bloodlines. Ijet mo tell you, my friend, children never forget And because the memory of such a death rips apart lives, limb from limb, the choice is c lear. You. as individuals, iis a society, may either repeat atrocities through your own igno miny, or you may resolve to tuke responsibility for your human ness. Responsibility and ethical action are only first under stood through education. A university is a place of learning — of attaining the skills to load a productive life in society and skills to understand, critically, what productive life moans and to ask what kind of society is desired. An educational institution, after all. edu cates successive generations to act upon the learning process attained while being educ ated. This is a serious and wonder fully remarkable responsibility. An educational institution, such as the University, in the Western Hemisphere, in the tieginning of the 21st century, lias the opportunity to fully realize what it means to teach and to learn within a Western historical context. It means to teach not only Western culture through the clas sics, science and the arts, but to teach Western culture through a contemporaneous historical context; as the exchange and interchange of peoples, their experiences through time and space, in places that ure as distinct from one another as they ore similar. Lives that am not isolated, frozen on separate con tinents. hut depend on each other, across all continents for their very existence. Do not squander this opportunity to reach into the depths of your collective memory and recognize that each generation is only as good as the lessons taught to it and lessons learned by it. And in this world, where much of the hatred that intel lectually maims and physically destroys is perpetuated by those who hold university degrees, it will undoubtedly be your con science. or lack of it. that will dictate your actions It is only through acquiring knowledge of the other can we nurture our individual and collective humanity. Thus, as a child of one holocaust, my memory serves mo well. Diane Fellows is a graduate student in international studies * SUMMER &ffTIN£SS • Abdominal Workout • Aerobics / Bench • Aerobics • Weight Training • Yoga / Meditation Early registration $2 OFF 2:30 - 4:00 p.m. June 2& 3 For more information & enrollment call x4113 or come by 103 Gerlinger EARN EXTRA CASH! The U of O Student Health Center is seeking already CERTIFIED CPR INSTRUCTORS to teach CPR and First Aid workshops. • Applicants should be U of O students • Time commitment: 4-hour workshops Contact Joanne Frank: 346-2728 at the Student Health Center. Call by Fri., June 11, to make an appointment. Hiring for 1993-1994 academic year!