Page 2 P ortland/O bserver Thursday, liecem her 21, 1972 The Editor’s Desk ALFRED LEE HENDERSON White Christmas, White House, No room for Blacks Years ago Ralph E llison wrote “ The Invisible M an" te l­ ling how the 31ack people in the United States are not only oppressed and discrim inated against but th e ir very existence is not acknowledged. Today in Portland, Oregon, the Black man is s till in v is i­ ble. He is unseen in the halls of c ity and county government, he is unseen in the middle and upper levels of c iv il service, he is unseen in the boards and committees that determine the p o li­ cies of government and non governmental agencies. On Interstate Boulevard, a sign says "P o verty is what happens when people give up caring fo r one another." We are in the C hristm as season - a season of caring and sharing - a season when individuals, regardless of religious persuasion, are drawn into the s p irit of giving. Needy fam i­ lie s are provided with food baskets once a year; homeless men are fed one good meal; fatherless children are provided mended toys. One would think that during the Christmas season there would be a sharing of power, that there would be a sharing of the economic wealth. It is easy enough to give a sm all donation - throw a can of soup in the Sunshine h a rre ll o r buy an extra toy. Blit it cost m ore to let Black people share in the decisions tl at effect th e ir lives, o r to give a man an equal opportunity fo r a good jo b . It costs more to acknowledge tie sins of the past and of the present and to work to remedy th e ir effects. A glaring example of the "in v is ib le m an" was the recent dinner honoring M ayor T e rry Schrunk on his retirem ent, attended by 250 invited guests. No Blacks were seated at the head table - no Blacks were a p a rt of the program . The Black press was le ft out, omitted and net invited. Black people consider this to be an affront and a disgrace. Even the G reater Portland Council of Churches (now in the process of merging), which espouses the love of God and of man, has no Blacks on its staff. If the Council of Churches is to proclaim the good new s - the S p irit cf Christm as - it must put its own house in o rder. The C ity Council had another opportunity to share its de­ cision making process with the Black community but failed to do so during the Christm as Season. Christm as brings hope fo r some but fo r many Blacks it is the S.O.S. M UST WORK TOGETHER FOR FULL AND EQUAL EMPLOYMENT. . » . » • • • • • • saaeaeeeeeee««e»eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee As I See It ( Another Point of View ( Public w e lfa re Murder in America THE VANGUARD PORTLAND STATE UNIVERSITY (Guest e d ito ria l by LaVeta G ilm ore, Vanguard w rite r, Janies H . Rogers, professor of American C iv iliz a tio n / Black Studies, andGregg Ben­ ton, ex-president of the Black Student Union). On Thursday afternoon, Nov. 16 1972, two Southern U n ive rsity black students were murdered by state of- f i'ia ls in the wake of a campus rebellion. We are not surprised! This is typical of the Irra tio n a l violence practiced against black Americans fo r more than 300 years. It is the same violence practiced against those throughout our history' who have rebelled against white enslavement and white oppression. We are aware that this in­ sane incident was possible be­ cause [eople of co lo r in Amer­ ica suffer from one of the most dehumanizing, irrespon­ sible, exploitive and immoral regimes In the history of man­ kind. We are aware that we live in a society that is respon­ sible fo r acts and practices of im peralism , colonialism, rape and rampage of peoples of c o lo r throughout the w orld. But, it is important we bring this argument close to home. Recently, the HealthEducation and W elfare (HEW) regional office in Seattle reprimanded the U n ive rsity ofCregon, Ore­ gon State U niversity and P ort­ land State U niversity fo r their practice of institutional rac­ ism against m inority students in the state of Oregon. Ad­ m in is tra to rs at the three schools were given specific " a ffir m a tiv e " proposals to c o rre c t this offense in a ' ' rea­ sonable” period of tim e. This has not been done! We consider our education in Oregon totally irresponsi­ ble, non-responsive and totally irre le va n t to the real need of m in o rity students (Aslan. Black, Chicano, In- This same syndrome of psy­ chological and educational genocide practiced at PSU In­ curred the tragic events at Southern U n ive rsity - black students and facultydemand­ ing educational equality In In­ stitutions of higher education. Although there are tew iso­ lated cases of "concerned whites of good w ill" - large­ ly young and educated - a m a jo rity of white Oregonians, whether m inisters,educators, housewives, students, o r what have you, are totally Ignorant of the experience - cultural, social, economic, political - of m in o rity peoples. We would like to educate them, but authorities respons­ ible fo r higher education in Oregon have not responded and are not responding to our request fo r increased faculty, counseling services and stu­ dent recruitm ent. We believe this is the same problem confronted by black students at Southern U nivers­ ity . Malcom X said that, " I f white Americans do not wish us to hate o r despise them, then let white Americans stop oppressing u s ." We believe th is suppression to be on all levels. F or example, white A m e r ic a n s retu rned an avowedly anti-black president back lo the “ white” White House. Again, we are not sur­ prised. because white A m e r­ ica is concerned with its p riv ­ ilege, power and status quo. However, the tim e is now fo r white Americans at PSU and throughout the nation to real­ ize that "in s titu te s of higher learning "m u s t accept the challenge and necessary in­ troduction of innovative and comprehensive programs of m inority studies (Indian. Chi ano, Black, Aslan and oth­ ers) o r they must close their doors. We do not wish to imitate o r emulate the m a jo rity white culture. We black Americans did not create the genocidal. in Oregon: Myths and realities aggressive practices in indo- Chlna. White people did. AAe black Americans a re not responsible for the p ro life ra ­ tion of hard core drugs, c rim ­ inal activitie s, high unemploy­ ment and so forth in the black community. White people are. We black Americans do not segregate and suppress native A m erican s (Vidian, Chicano^ on concentration . amps called reservations. White jeople do. We black Americans are not responsible fo r the future downfall of America. White people are. We feel that at PSU so- called "re sp o n sib le " admin­ istra to rs and academicians can no longer squirm In tl« discom fort of th e ir a ir-co n ­ ditioned, insulated, private of­ fices - appropriatly decorated with pictures of Horace Manns, Sigmond Freud and F . Scott Fitzgerald (white cul­ tural heros) - sadly lament­ ing " t l « good old days." Considering the recent events at southern U niversity and the general condition of Black. Indian, and Chicano peoples In America, no white person In America, w hetl«r m in is te r, educator,politician, o r mythical average citizen can enjoy the rank privilege of passing judgement against peoples of c o lo r. 1 here can be no significant lasting peace between A m eri­ can whites and people of color u n til a viable, human, egali­ tarian, social democracy is created on this continent. However, we do not intend to s it around passively and w ait for this utopian realiza­ tion. We know that we cannot depend on tl« good w ill and prom ises of white people. We believe that what hap­ pened at Southern U niversity on Nov. 14, was possible be­ cause it is possible In the state of Oregon. Beware. Part III Many taxpayers in the State of Oregon and other states believe that many j«ople on public welfare can " liv e it up" instead of working. T l« facts appear not to support that supposition. T l« la r ­ gest amounts that can be paid during a one-month period in Oregon are: Old Age as­ sistance and Aid to Disabled (I person case) - $143.59; Aid to Blind (I person case) — $163.42; General Assis­ tance (fam ily of 4 - foodand shelter only) - - $155.73; ami Aid to Dependent Children (fa m ily of 4) - $243 3 5 . o b ­ viously, few people can " liv e it u p " on those meager sums. F u rtl« n n o re . the $2,920 per year received by a fam ily of 4 in tl« State of Oregon is fa r l«low the national annual poverty level of nearly twice that amount - - $4,287. The welfare program in Oregon does not need to cut tl« amount given to recipients, but to increase it. Even w ith the help of good programs and lim ited medical assis­ tance, the welfare recipient faces a bleak substandard existence. Many Oregonians helwve welfare ro lls are full of able- bodied loafers. The facts do not support that belief. It must he pointed out that IN OREGON, CHILDLESS ADULTS ARE NOTELICIBLI FOR W! I F ARB. A break­ down of the total reveals: 21»” are e ith e r over 65, to­ ta lly disabled o r blind: 5% are In a temporary c ris is ; 3% are fa lte rs looking fo r work: 21% are mothers caring fo r children — 3 out of 5 have pre-schoolers at home; and 51% are children with an average age of 8. F o r Oregon as well as nationally tl« largest group of working age adults is the ADC mothers. The status of the mothers from the latest ADC study (1971) show: 12% employed in regular full o r p a n -tim e jobs; 9>’ in w ork training programs or awaiting enrollm ent; I9lj, had no marketable s k ills o r were disabled; 33% were needed tull tim e In tl« home because of small children; 20% * ere conditionally employable; 7% were not In the home because of death, illrw ss o r other reasons. It needs to 1« pointed out that t« a rly I out of 10 ADC cases have monthly earnings that reduce th e ir welfare grant. Of i l l ADC cases. I out of 3 have son« type of Income that reduces th e ir welfare checks (fo r example, social security and survivors le n e fits). T l« welfare recipients in Oregon, like welfare reci­ pients all over the country, also have to deal with the welfare bureaucracy, j s well as tl« case w orkers. Some applicants i« v e r have their applications acted upon, while o lt« r applicants are given tl« run around. Sou« welfare clients have informed this w rite r that they were treated disgracefully by some case w orkers at the Ablina M u lti Service Center. Many others have nothing hut praise fo r tl« case workers at ti« Center. Lenwood Davis Rich* id M . Nixon stated tour years ago that "w hat Americans i«ed is N o I more people on ti« Welfare ro lls, tu t more people on p a y ro lls ." Obviously, that did not happen. Unemploy­ ment and poverty is at an all tune high In this affluent country. Chronic welfare in tl«S tate of Oregon must 1« tackled vigorously l>y Governor Tom M cCall and other leaders. Anil, unless sou« means are found to deal with this syn drome, this State, like the rest of tl« states In Am erica, w ill be on a collision course of devastate1 Busing foes don’t want racial mixing By B enjam in E . Mays Th* Northwest’s Best Weekly A Black Owned Publication Published every Thursday by Exie Publishing Company 2201 N. K il 1 ingsworth, Portland. Oregon 97217 M ailing address: P.O. Box 3137 Portland. Oregon 97208 subscriptions - $535 per year - T ri-C ounty area by mail 6.00 per year - Elsewhere by mail Telephone: 283-2486 ipplication to mail at second-class postage rates is pending at Portland, Oregon. A The Observer’ s o fficia l position is expressed only in its Publisher's Column (The Observation Post) and the E d ito r’ s Desk, Any other m aterial throughout the paper is the opinion of the individual w rite r o r subm itter and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Observer. Any erroneous reflection upon the character , standing or reputation of person, firm o r corporation, which may appear in tie Portland Observer w ill be cheerfully corrected upon being brought to the attention of the E d ito r. Let us deliver Portland Observer to your home every week! ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a P.O. Box 3137 P o rtland, Oregon 97 208 Address — — — — — $5.00 for 5 2 IM U H I ------------— — C ity — — ----------------------------------------------------------- State & Z ip ----- --------------— Apt. if a n y - — T e l -------- -— - —--------- -------- - ----------- — — A YOUNG VIE W OF W ASHINGTON LBJ ON CIVIL RIGHTS: THE MOUNTAINS ANO THE HOLLOWS By Ron Hendren INPA ALFRED LEE HENDERSON, P ublisher/E ditor F o r your subscription, send to: Portland Observer With Ron Hendren — F o rm e r President Lyndon B . Johnson came out of re­ tirem ent b rie fly the other day to address a symposium on c iv il rights at the Lyndon Baines Johnson L ib ra ry in Austin, which simultaneously made public some one m il­ lion pages of c iv il rights pa­ pers from the Johnson ad­ m in istra tio n . Johnson, who is s till re­ covering from a heart attack suffered e a rlie rth ls y e a r, was advised by his phy: ician not to make the address. " I ’ m goiig to speak anyway," he said, "because I’ ve got some things I want to say.” And, indeed, he did. Reaf­ firm in g his conviction that c iv il rights advances were among the most im o n ru n t ac­ complishments of his years in the White House, Johnson said, " T o be black in a white so­ ciety is not to stand on level ground. While the races may stand side by side, whites stand on history’ s mountain and blacks stand on history's hollow .” He made cle a r his belief that " U n til we overcome un­ equal history we cannot over­ come unequal opportunity." His message was one of nope fo r A m erica’ s m in o ritie s, but it was also cle a rly Intended fo r his successor In theWhlte House. While he indicated he did not believe reports that the President Intends to do away with the advancement and education programs estab­ lished under the Johnson ad­ m inistration and cut back on c iv il rights enforcement, he nonetheless urged black lea­ ders to seek an audience with M r , Nixon. " I think you should try to reason with the P re s i­ d e n t," 1« s a id ."T h e re ’ s noth­ ing wrong with asking fo r an hour of his tim e. You don’ t have to start of) telling him he’ s te rrib le . He doesn'tthink he Is. He doesn’t want to leave the White House feeling he has been unjust.” The fo rm e r President even threw in a football parable fo r good measure. Whites, he said, would be outraged if a twelfth man were put or the field to stop a black fullback, yet "e v e ry black American in the land - man o r woman - plays out life running against the twelfth man of a history they did not make and a f it» they did not choose." While he praised the ac­ complishments of a few Macks who have succeeded In poli­ tic s , athletics and entertain­ ment, M r . Johnson said " , . . we must not allow the v is ib ility of the few to dim inish efforts to satisfy our responsibility to the s till unseen m illio n s who are faced with that basic prob­ lem of being black in a white society.” It Is not often that a form er President crosses an incum­ bent, and M r . Johnson chose Us words carefully, leaving a Texas-sized clunk of maneu­ vering room fo r President NLxon. But the implication was cle a r that M r . Johnson would view as disastrous any effort to undermine tl« c iv il rights progress made under his ten­ u re . And age, health and re­ tirem ent status notwithstand­ ing, Lyndon B. Johnson is not the sort of man whose dis­ pleasure any President would want to incur. The reports that M r, Johnson is Impassively re­ signed to the unhappy fate wrought by his Vietnam poli­ cies are exaggerated. He s till believes, as indeed 1« has con­ tin u a lly maintained, that his­ to ry w ill vindicate him, at least on the domestic score. And he is not about to sit by Impassively if Indeed plans are in tl« offering to reverse the c iv il rights accomplish­ ments achieved under his leadership. If we were honest, I could take it better. A ll at once whites want quality education. We helieve in neighborhood schools. We believe in free­ dom of choice. We are against fusing. Son« are against fu s ­ ing so strongly that they bum tle m . They dramatize th e ir dislike fo r busing by inarch­ ing in tl« streets, calling upon government o fficia ls to stop fusing. Busing became a political issue so much so that several candidates tried to ouldoWal lace in th e ir opposition to busing. The c h « f opponent to busing is President Nixon. T l« opposition is so strong that many in Congress want to pass a Constitutional amendment against busing. T h is is nonsense. The ques­ tion of busing w ill be settled w ithin a few years and a use­ less amendment would be tacked onto the constitution. Even a little busing s tirs the community. The Atlanta Board of Education is being sued by certain p la in tiffs to fu r tie r desegregate the public schools. The charges are that there are too many schools that are virtu a lly all-w hite and desegregated. The chaiges jr e true. T l« question is how to rem ­ edy this situation wt«n the school enrollm ent in Atlanta is 77 per cent black and 23 per cent white. T l* Atlanta schools have been becoming blackers and blacker and less pale fo r the last 20 years. Twenty years age the school enrollm ent was arou id 69 per cent white and 31 per cent black. A plan t l * Atlanta Board of Education presented to tl« federal court would require the transportation of close to 4,300 pupils plus some more when more M tddle Schools are set up. T l * court has not ruled on the plan at thia w rit­ ing. And yet certain elements in the community are raising sand and threatening to keep th e ir children home until the busing question Is s e ttle d ,T l* p la in tiffs are pressing fo r a school system with a m a jo rity black in every school, rang­ ing from 55 to 87 per cent Black. L ittle busing o r much, t l * problem is ti« same. Though denied on every hand, we know that busing ia a code word fo r race. If honest with themselves they would say "ye s lusmg means race.’ We could accept it If a few blacks were bused to white schools and no white towhites were a large m a jo rity inevery school. Whites don’ t want to 1« a m a jo rity in a black school tecause they fear that th e ir children w ill get an In fe rio r education (no proof that thia is so). They must t« the m ajority tecause tl* y fear blacks w ill do violence to whites if blacks are In the m a jo rity (no proof of th is). They fear too much mixing would result in black boys and white g irls falling In love. These are some of tie reasons busing is anemo- tional, racial m atter. T l* tragedy is that there is no leadership in the white com m unltes of the nation to dispel these fears. Few whites have tl« courage to stand up and say let us make desegre gation work and do our bit to undo the educational wrongs leaped upon Negroes fo r cen­ tu rie s. In a segregated school system whites would not have much Intereat In quality ed­ ucation fo r blacks. L e t’ s face it. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Attorney General defended To the E d ito r: In an ed ito ria l entitled ’ Oregon defends ra c is m " you suggest that the state of Oregon was defending dis­ crim ination in the Elks Club suit, and that tl« Attorney General should use the powers of his office to Insure that laws are enforced and that a policy of equality of op­ portunity and of treatment he promulgated by his leader­ ship and example. Attorney General Lee Johnson agrees wholeheartedly with this pol­ icy. In the Elks Club suit, the Department of Revenue waa named as a defendant tie- cause it was charged with en­ forcement of tl« statute passed by the legislature.The A ttom ey General, as attorney fo r tl« Department of Revenue and tl« Legislature Is re­ quired by law to represent them In a ll legal proceedings. L ik e any other lawyer, this sometimes puts ti« Attorney General in a position where he would personally prefer not to be, but a number of factors should he brought to yo u r attention which I helieve m ore fa irly portrays the A t­ torney General's role in this lawsuit. F irs t, the E lks were re­ quested by the Attorney Gen­ e ra l to defend the lawsuit be­ cause they were tl« only real beneficiaries of a successful defense. F o r reasons un­ known, the Elks did not do so and the Attorney General was therefore required to file a b rief advising the court what legal authority support­ ed the constitutionality of the statutes In question. If this had not l«en dot« tl« A tto n « y General could have leen sé- v e ri y criticize d by ti« court. Following the court's de­ cision, which we predicted, we advised the Department of Revenue that tl« decision should not be appealed. The decision not to appeal the case w ill Insure tl« Elks remain on the tax ro lls until they change t l e l r discrim inatory policies. There Is another fact which I think more cle a rly demon­ strates Attorney General Lee Johnson's position on the E lks. E a rly last year tl« Attorney General Issued an opinion to the M ilita ry Department which denied to the Elks the use of the Pendleton A rm ory fo r Its state convention. The reason lo r tills conclusion was that the Elks discrim inated on racial grounds. I helieve that decision Issued by Attorney General Lee Johnson, without any fanfalr, more clearly demonstrates his attitude on the Issue you raised. I am enclosing a copy of that opin­ ion fo r your Information. James W. Durham, J r . Deputy Attorney General DR. JEFFREY BRADY MODERN DENTAL PLATES PARTIAL PLATES AND EXTRACTIONS Immediate Restorations Flete» leaerted immediately attar teetfc era axtreetad • Partial Plates • Dental Plates SLEEP DURING EXTRACTIONS soonim f in t o t n a i e iv ia i t IICtSTIRIDAHISTMITIST F A t« r a i l AMY F A t a n SOOFIOT NOURS: Weekday» Si JO te SiOO Setvrdey l i JO te 1 4M NO AFFO M TM M TNKlUAtY DR JEFFREY ■ :]7:VY DENTIST SIMLER 1 U H D IN G S A l r d A M o rris o n P o rtla n d O rtq n n Phone: 228 7545