Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, June 17, 1971, Page 2, Image 2

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    P ig e 2
D iscipline begins and
ends a t hom e
P o rt la nd ' Obs e rv e r T h u r s d a y
June
1 7 ,1 9 7 1
S c h o o l have
r e la x e d
established standards ill th e ir
re cru itm e n t of m in o rity group
s t u d e n t s . We feel
that
this p ra ctice , p a rtic u la rly ona
g r a d u a t e school
level.
Is unhealthy, does not tend to
in s till in its stu ients a sense of
equal Justice and downgrades
By Spurgin W aters
Often tim e s i wondsr ju s t what type of d isciplin o parents w.rnld
ike to see In tlw public schools of this d is tric t?
1 w jn d e rw b e th ir thoy want fu ll tun instnioto* s o r maybe they
w ith fo r (till tim e wardans, perhaps they wanta little of bo’ii, hut
Published every Thursday bv L \ ie P ublishing Company, 22011
it seems to m« when 1 liste n to ira te parents ask fo r m ore d ls -
K U lingsw orth P ortla nd , Oregon 97217.
cip 'in e in tlx.* schools it seem as th sigh they are adm itting t o
SulMcnptioii raU* 40ienta per month by earner. $4.00 per >e«r.
fa ilu re to d is c ip lm i that Child a; horrid, o r being m o re blunt; they
$r ,00 per year by m a ll In T ri-C o u n ty area; $5.25 pe r year else- (all to possess the a b ility to co n tro l tb e lr a r a t.
T hen they seek
where.
Phone 283-2486
the help of the in s tiu ito , to teach a code of n u ’ al behavior, to
th e ir c h ild , when it is tlx* In s tru c to rs daty to teach him the
A l T'HEI) 1 EE HENDERSON, Publisher and Editor
Verna L . Henderson............................
Executive E d ito r
tangible things tha. he has to know to be a w a ll edteated individual
Halen H e n d rix............................ D is p la y and C lassifie d Manager
and com p etitive through knowledge gained in the classroom about
T a y lo r................................................................... „Advertising M anager
his outside w o rld .
Dewey
W illia m s ................................................................ .Production Manager
Values and rules of conduct I view as intangible things that must
A lb e rt
Spurgin W aters.................................................................... A ssista n t C irc
lx.* u la e tio
s ta n b lis h *! at home fo r they determ ine whether a ch ild w ill be
a d iscip lin e d in dividu al.
A lb e rt W illia m s ........................... .Forem an P re ss, Stereotype
Departm ent
O ften tim e s i notice an ira te parent a t a school d is tric t meeting
P a tric ia
Johnson............................................... O ffice
M anager
bringing In te x tb o o k s o ro th e rm s te ria l a student h is received in
Pleasant Session .............................................
Sports
E d i t o r class w ith the com plaint that it m ight c o rru p t his Childs behavior
Cassie
Jen kin s.............................A s s is ta n t
Sports
E d ito r
o r in cite h is c h ild s c u rio s ity to the point that h» w ill try to p e r­
Tony
M a rs h a ll.................................................................. C olum nist
form the same act.
Le ts use fo r example sin. king e.g a re tts.
C ontributm g E d itors....... T h e rio n Cobbs, Betty B yrd, B ill P’eiz
To th is Isa y it is the duty o f the in s tru c to r to teach aixi
make
the c h ild aware of the problem , show him how and why it
can
cause com p lica tion s fo r the lix ltv id u il tha: tndigles in smoking.
How and why they are figh ting an u o .iill hattle. If the ch ild then
does not receive a coda o r rules of m . ra ls that supports this
doctrine a t home, that is if n u mand d id can not get themselves
together and kick the habit, the fa ith in fathers words of w arn­
ing w ill fa lte r because a code o r set of m o ra ls— d isciplin e w ill be
lo s t. M o m n o r dad and less lik e ly a person as im personal as an
in s tru c to r o r a d m in is tra to r can guide o r d ire c t that individuals,
smoking future .
It is s t ill m y contention that discup’ me begins and ends at home,
not at school.
The Northwest’« Best Weekly
A Black Owned Publication
The Levy
fa ilu re
By Spurgin W aters
As we look back upon the second defeat of the operational Levy
by the c itic e n s o fP o rtla n d o n e c a n only wonder. What type
of
education do the citize n s of P ortla nd re a lly want fo r th e ir
ch ild en.
A s a p a rticip ant in the ro le of the last 12 years I can say tha:
my experience w ill be mu‘ iig re a ;e r than that of the cla ss of 1972
which now faces the p o s s ib ility of shorten school year as a re­
sult of the levy fa ilu e. T h is 20-25 day reduction in the duration
I o f th e y e a rw illm e a n th a tth e d is tric c w ill not even meet the state
required 175 day school year sta xlu rd T h is reduction w ill m ea t
that fo rth e f ir s t tim e th is d . s tr ic t w ill face a shorten school year
because its pa rtro ns have w arrentsd it . It w ill also mean that
students w ill be ou' on the streets w ith absolutely nothing to do
u n til sum m er a ctivie s come along in June.
How u tte rly h y p o c ritic a la n a c tp u rp e tra te d b y th e ta x p a y e rs of
th„s d .s tr ic t, venting th e ir hate and fru s tra tio n against taxes, I
m ight add taxes in general, against th e ir own childre n a x i 1
ask
you taxpayer, w ill taxes ever get any less expensive?
L e ts face hard (acts, asourow n standardsof liv in g ris e s
so
I then ou - increased f a ir share of taxes undoubtly m ust inc. ease.
Som etim es, a a l am human Ia is o s u ffe r flaw s in my way
of
thinking and forge t that I am m y b ro th e r keeper, it seems
as
though the citiz e n s o f P o rtia » ! don’ t even wish to be th e ir
ch ild re n s keepers.
Black Soldiers Have
Paid With Blood
L e
e d
te r
t o r
eve rend A lfre d
The
Henderson
P u b lish e r and E d ito r
The P ortland O bserver
2201 N . K U lingsw orth
P o rtla n d , Oregon 97217
t o
I h
Lee
Dear Reverend Henderson;
1 w ish to thank you fo r you r p a rticip a tio n in getting the
inform ation out to the Veterans corncerning the Veterans C a re e r
Developm ent P rogram held at the P ortland M em o rial C oliseum
on the 27th of M ay, 1971.
The P rog ram would not have been the success it was had it not
been fo r your assistance. There were approxim ately 1,000
Veterans at t h i Counseling session.
There is an onguingProgram in the Veterans C a ree r Develop­
m ent held each Tuesday at the Bank of C a lifo rn ia T ow er, 707
S.W. Washington, Suite 507 at 7:30 P.M , T h is P rogram started
June 1, 1971 as a fo lio w -u p on th e P ro g ra m conducted M ay 27th.
i f you have any suggestions on im proving the d is trib u tio n of
in fo rm atio n through m edia, to the Veterans, of other a c tiv itie s
that may be scheduled, please contact the M a y o r's Desk on
Veterans C a re e r Developm snt, phone
228-9411, E x t. 51
M a yo r T e r r y D . Schrunk, o ffic e ot the M a yo r.
HAVE YOUR CLUBi-
MEETING
FREE AT GENEVA’S.
Debbie Warren celebrates herbirthday with
husband James Warren.
I
«
Sen. Alan C ranston charged
Monday that black so ld ie rs have
• ' paid w ith th e ir blood
in
4 V ie tn a m " only to re tu rn to an
A m erica that denies them jobs,
housing and equal ooportunity.
In a M e m o ria l Day services
speech before the United V et­
e ra n s
C o u n c i l L „A . A i>
oye, 1313 E . Compton B lvd ..
C ranston said:
"S in ce the beginning of the
R epublic, the black so ld ie r has
fought away fro m home to defend
the freedom s denied him .
" A t the back of his mind
has
been the so fa r unrealized hope
that A m e rica would recognize
h is bra ve ry overseas by tre a t­
ing him as a man when he came
home. The black servicem an's
testam ent o f p a rtio tis m
and
g a lla n try rem ains a standing
reproach to the n a tio n ."
C ranston cited the reco rd of
blacks fig h tin g in a ll A m erican
w a rs. H e said black soldiers
were relegated to non-combat
duties in W o rld W a rs 1 and 11
because of d is c rim in a tio n , but
in Korea and in Vietnam , large
num bers were used in combat.
" O f the recent w ars, Vietnam
w ill probably have the highest
total of black de a th s," C ranston
said.
" Of those assigned to combat
units and jobs inSoutheast A six
as d is tin c t from near echelon
duty — blacks com prised m ore
than 20 percent double
th e ir
percentage o f overall
troop
strength, ” be said.
" F ro m January 1961 through
M arch 31, 1971,5,570black sol­
d ie rs have been k ille d due
to
hostile action, a n d approxi­
m ately 1,387 have died due to
other ca u se s."
Black Universities
Seek Liberation
By Jack White
These
tw o
sentences
s u m m a r iz e
t h e in te l­
lectual and p o litic a l basis fo r
t h e development of the black
universities-independent edu­
cational in stitu tion s devoted to
the lib e ra tio n of blackpeople.
T h e ir numbers are sm all and
th e ir resources are pa in fu lly
few, yet the black u n iv e rs itie s
c a n be found in c itie s fro m
Chicago to G reen sbo rs.N .C .,
fu rth e rin g education devoted
to revoluntionary P a n -A frica n
b l a c k nationalism . T h e y
operate
in old houses and
sto re fro n ts and at tim es In the
u n u s e d classroom s
of
colleges and u n iv e rs itie s .
The black u n iv e rs ity does not
put
m uch
s to c k
in
a c c r e d i t a t i o n , establish
ed standards— t h a t is , white
standards of scholarship o r
f a n c y buildings. Indeed, as
Edgar F . Beckham, fo rm e i ly
chairm an of the Connecticut
A ssociation of A fro -A m e ric a n
E lu ca to rs, put it: The black
u n iv e rs ity
e xists w herever
black people jo in together fo r a
black educational purpose., as
process, and as people, the
black u n iv e rs ity has only two
c r i t i c a l c h a ra c te ris tic s :
freedom from sxtraneous in -
f 1 u e n e e s and com m itted
responsiveness to
th e
educational n e ed s of black
people.
B la c k u n iv e rs itie s d iffe r
w i d e l y in stru ctu re , form at
a n d c u rric u lu m , but share a
common ideology: re je ctio n of
w estern, that fs w hite, values
And th e people Involved in
them see the black movement
as a s t r u g g l e fo r national
lib e ra tio n , not a figh t foreq ua l
rig h ts o r a piece of the pie.
M oving fro m theory
to
p ra ctice h a s been d iffic u lt,
however, p a rtly because of the
e x tre m e
geographical
d iffu sion
of
p e rs o n s
s u p p o r tin g
t h e black
u n iv e rs ity Idea and p a rtly be­
cause black educationw is a
new and untested concept. At
f ir s t , in 1967, the m a jo r thru st
at black education came on
white campuses, where black
studies p ro g ra m s -ru n
by
b 1 a c k s f o r blacks
but
supported by white funds. The
m .vement g ra du ally spread to
black
campuses In the South,
a n d E ast, notably Howard
I n iv e rs ity and F is k , both of
which were scenes of student
protests
aimed at reshaping
t h e s e schools into black
u n iv e rs itie s . But in them m -ls
of those s t ill pushing the black
u n iv e rs ity concept,
these
moves at established colleges
were m o re -o r-le s s fa ilu re s ,
(to be continued next week)
the quality of product that the?
law school Is subm itting to the
s t a t e of Kansas as
th e ir
p ra c titio n e rs . A l t e i
the
statement was read to
the
assembly, two of the
m ost
WTOMOT1VC PARTS « ACCESSORIES
mum
ja cko su sa kf the com m ittee a
recom m endations
w e re
ce rta in ly very invalid and not
in accordance w ith the tren is
ot the tim e s. In noting that tlie
m em bership did not vote to
(cent, from p. 1 )
Newton
trial
to resume
B lack Panther Leader
Newton w ill go on tr ia l
28 fo r the second tim e
c ha r g e s of k illin g
Oakland police o ffic e r.
A la m e d a County S uperior
C o u rt Judge W ilia m J . Hayes
set the fir m date fo r Newton s
r e tr ia l on m a n s I a u g h t e r
charges in the shooting death
of policem an John F re y .
The tr ia l had been postponed
m onthly since January be-
c a u s e N ew tons
attorney,
C h arle s R. C a rry , was in New
Haven, Conn., d e f e n d i n g
P a n t h e r Bobby Seale
on
m u rd e r charges.
G a rry’ s colleague, Benjamin
D r e y f u s , told Hayes that
G a rry would re tu rn in a few
days fro m N e w Haven
but
asked fo r reasonable tim e off
before the s ta rt of the Newton
t r ia l.
N e w t o n, who i s free on
$50,000 ba il, wore a black
le a th e r coat, black trouse rs
a n d powder blue turtleneck
sweater - asdid several other
adults among th e 80 Panther
supporters in c o u rt, including
3 0 p re - school ch ild re n who
p a rticip a te in t h e group's
breakfast program .
The F B I arre ste d one of
Newton s follow e rs as they le ft
t h e cou rtro om . W illia m J .
Jennings, 20, of San F rancisco
was
wanted fo r alleged d ra ft
v io la tio n .
Newton was convicted in 1968
of volun ta ry m anslaughter in
t h e death of F re y on o c t.
2 7 , 1967, he served two years
of a one to 15 year sentence but
was released when an Appeals
C o u rt reversed h lscon viction
on grounds the judge gave the
ju r y erroneous in stru c tio n s .
into other existing courses ,
which indicated in a printed
text were of m ore im portance.
The com m ittee also note« i that
the Washburn School of I aw
and U n ive rsity of Kansas I aw
287-1254
««m.-yp.m
O r
CtreejU
vocal objectors were E lm e r
Jackson, ot KansasC Ity, the
only black on the n ln e -n ie m lxir
State Board of Regents,
an«l
B e n F n m klin . a fo rm e r D.S.
attorney.
I am not afraid Nixon is trying to dump
m e Just because McCloskey is after him.
S a i
RECAP SPECIALISTS
"HUH SAID1'
284-9758
a c cept th e
com m ittee s
recommendations hut was told
to contUiue Its study, Jackson
said: I rn fa ir ly sure next year
rep ort won t tie rep ort like this
tlia t. O f m ore than 700 students
enrolled tn the two law schorls
In Kansas th is year, only 16 are
black. Atxl only 30, o f the 3,000
law yers ill the state are black.
3308 N.E. UNION
230 N KIUINGSWORÏH, PÖKH.AND PHONF
V
SUM’« MOM
Una faxifj buar&Mi
PORTLAND
CLEANING WORKS
NORTH & N.E PORTLAND
ONE DAY SERVICE
KNIT BLOCKING
OUR SPECIALTY
SHARING JU B ILA TIO N follow ing 57thannual commencement
exercises at Emanuel Hospital School of N ursing were M rs .
C harles (Yvette) Searcy, rig h t, m em ber of graduating class, and
close friend V iviane B arnett. M rs .S e a rc y had been an Emanuel
nurse aide fo r many years before she made decision to e n t e r
School of N ursing, managed school work and housework
«luring
course of 33-m onth program w h ic h fin a lly led to d ip lo n ia .
She
and M r . Searcy are parents of three daughters, two of them s t i l l
at home, and grandparents of one grandson and one granddaughter.
MINOR atPAISS N O CMASGt
ua a O ftivtav
^82-8361
3 ^ 6 8 N W illi a m t
•'You’ve
Re«f, Now Try Th<
fonder, Proprietor
Parking
Lot Sale
June 19th
T o supplement It'a dw ind l­
ing funds the S taff and Board
at L ife C e n te r are having a big
parking lo t sale Saturday, June
19 fro m 9 a jn . u n til 4 p.m
Unheard of values w ill he on
s a le . Nothing u n d e r a n d
nothing over $1.00— a ll kinds
of faclnating item s to choose
fro m .
The lady squeezed
us and here
we are!
LIF E means L o w Income
F a m ilie s
E m ergency. T his
C e n t e r provides on the spot
h e lp f o r
people needing
em ergency help. I t I s a self
help center that provides Fowl
C l o t h i n g , Kitchen I ten si Is,
Dishes, S ilve rw a re , Layettes,
Beds, M a ttre ss and
many
other needed Item s in ex­
change fo r volunteer
tim e
spent In the cen ter.
L ife Center is in It’ s th ird
year a t t h e 3 2 I N £ . R ussell
S t r e e t location. The In itia l
funds were provided b y
(he
Portland M etrop olitan Steer­
ing C om m ittee fo r a 6 months
period a fte r which only dona­
tions fro m citize n s kept the
doors open. A fte r another 6
m o n th s grant United Good
Neighbors came to the rescue.
I t h a s since been p a rtia lly
funded byU .G .N. a n d
fund
raising p ro je cts. E n tire con­
tents a tL ife C e n te r sre d o n a t-
0,1 by citize n s of P ortland and
surrounding com m unities who
’ re also responsible fo r con­
tinuation of ths cen ter.
She knew The
Fresh Guys"when
she saw us!
One squeeze tells you why people call us...
"The Fresh Guys"
Wonder Enriched Bread is wrapped while it’s still warm from
the oven. Wrapped in a Sta-fresh wrapper to keep it fresh, flavorin' a n t i
delicious. But Wonder doesn’t stop there!
Wonder Bread is rushed warm into bakery trucks...then
off to your neighborhood store!
*
•
Next time you’re buying bread,
look for Wonder. O ne squeeze tells
• • •
•
WONDER
you why people call us...
•
«aa
“The Fresh Guys” !
mild 3frr>*tjr
/«’ uviy«
•
P N W tC H V n B W IA n
-A
-
•
/
I
j