I I Porllund Obtwrvcr Anniversary of DuBois death remembered by James II. Roger» by Jetie B Wild«, Jr. Chairman, Oregon Black ('aucun It is the creed of the Cau to serve as a catalyst for change. The Caucus must do this through the following meant: 111 seeking and identifying the relevant issues that ef feet llluck folks. 12) seeking anil identifying those persons interested in one or more of the relevant issues. (3) p ro v id in g leadership and/or followship in working out strategies with those |iernons who are interested in resolving those issues. (4) re s is tin g the noise created by those persons in terested only in talking but not working. 15) putting the freedom of Black folks before friendship and partisanship. |6) continuing to ask this question of ourselves and others: "What have you done for the cause lately?" cum O PEN L E T T E R We wish to make an open ap|*eal to Bob Oliver. Oregon State Ombudsman. On July 1, 1988, Governor Tom McCall » A H AUTO PARTS ♦ Complete Automotive Parts and Accessories For your complete automotive parts and accessories needs, shop D A M Auto Parts Now open from 10 a m . to 4 p.m. on Sunday. H io n * I t l - S S J ] n 0 N I . K llllng .w o .lh SI Fortland, Oregon 97211 Don M cA uley SHOP lENOW'S FO R B R A N D S you k n o w V A R IE T IE S y o u lik e SIZES y o u w a n t ' • M lM K lw Of A . » •A •» I UNI H D Ü BOCIW S Building Supply Discount Centers 1500' of pre formed Counter Tops. Factory seconds, 4' to 12' long $1.50 ft. Elrecome Fireplace. complete for $89.00. A ll wood and alum inum ladders, 20 to 30% o ff Seasonal Closeout! Step ladders or exterior. 30' Vanity M irror Cabinets We bought out a hardware special purchase, most sizes, $19. store. All cabinet hardware your choice 50% off From .05c ea. All hand and electric tools. an extra 15% off this week Furnace Oil fired, hot end! water cost $885. Still in • W ater Heaters. Gas or elect. carton $350. J- $49. A few dents in these. Fibre Glass shower stalls. $19 to $09. Save $30 at W hite toilet seats. Beg. $4.95 Special $2.95. these prices! Ceiling tile from $5.00 per carton. Less than Sc ft. 8' Paneling Stripe, 25c. lx»w cost. Walnut or lime. spec. 4X8. 99c. Aluminum windows, sizes, from $4. Metal Chimneys, dura vent, all fuel, close out. ’/» price. » W .W small tS IU S A H A i i i i nM » > « a . n fc g m tX J e « < *i «M $U C«ai»M-S444 I DR. JEFFREY BRADY toys: created the poat of Ombuds man. The Ombudsman is required to report regularly to the Governor and the legislature, noting problems of general application that indicate a need for revision of existing law, regulations or policies. Dear M r. Oliver: We, the members of the Oregon Black Caucus, would like to solicit your assistance in remedying once and for all the practices and policies of the Oregon Public Utilities Commission which leave every Black ap plicant for a dump truck license in the poaitiou of fighting for the privilege. There is enough evidence now to indicate a pattern of denial to Black applicants. The authority of your of fire, as we understand it. covers the investigation of a d m in is tra tiv e actions of state agencies: E ither on your own initiative or upon complaint of any personls). Otis Smith, Williams Jones and David Dawson, all Black, have had difficulties in ob taming truck licensing. Hope fully, the spirit of the Cover nor's Executive Order of April, 1972, decreeing an Af firmative Action Program ap plirahle to state agencies, recognizes direct and indirect relationships. It is not good enough to approach affirma tive action in a "business as usual" manner if unusual things are expected. We are certain that your attention to this m atter will help to pave the way for one more step in making Oregon a place where all of its citizens have an equal opjior tunity to pursue an honest living. Bancorp elects Elorriaga Directors of U.S. Bancorp elected John A. Elorriaga to the position of president and chief administrative officer of th a t co rp o ratio n , e ffe c tiv e September 1. Ellorriaga will also retain his title as presi dent and chief administrative officer of the United States National Bank of Oregon, principal subsidiary of U.S.’ Bancorp. LeRoy B. Slaver, who has held the dual titles of chair man and president of Ban corp, continues as chairman and chief executive officer of that corporation and also of the bank. In making the announce- rnent. Slaver said that the change is an important move in the complete integration of the financial services ex tended by Bancorp, the bank and other subsidiaries in the group, and that it will assure effective coordination of the planning and marketing func tions of all segments of the corporate structure. • Enjoy D en tal H ealth N o w an d Im prove Your A p p e a ra n c e 1 PLATE REPAIRS WMIll YOU WAIT T O G L A S S A * P«lVI lb U 4M 9 M N tK I «M MCABRI PK» URB M tlYIN » « VHHI *•« *91* l l h l t l • e tK lB tl FB«*N* NRlACiaMBYI NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED • ( ompietecoopeution ON AU MNTAl INSUIANU FLANS • COMPLETE DENIAL SIMICES Q U I I RKPUCCMINTt F08 H O M I! 8 IUILOINOS • MIRROBB b RRAMRR tOCATIO NIAN ItOYB C IN TIR IB O 4 N C B ro aA w ay 238-5964 TH E I FAMILY^ LAWYER Doctor's Fee Harold's wife died shortly after undergoing an operation. When a bill arrised from the surgeon, Harold decided not to pay. In due course, the matter wound up in court. “ Obviously, the operation was a failure," Harold pointed out to the judge “ Why should I hase to pay for services that were use­ less'" Respectfully, Oregon Black Caucus P.(). Box 12282 "DO Not Pul Off Needed Denial Care" William Edward Burghardt DuBois died in Accra. Ghana on August 27. 1983 lonly ten years ago) at the age of 95. It was the eve of the Great March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, March 28. 1973, in which more than 250,000 persons of every race, nationality and reli gious creed p a rtic ip a te d . Ironicly enough, the Great March seems to stand as testimony to the life work of W .E.B. DuBois, humanitarian and freedom fig h te r re n o w n ed th r o u g h o u t th e world. W .E.B. DuBois was born in the New England town of G re a t B a rrin g to n , Massa chusetts in 1888, only three years after the close of the Civil W ar, in a period in American history when the o verw h e lm in g m a jo rity of Americans believed that the world belonged to ihe white man and that Blacks and other racial minorities were not entitled to the rights and privileges enjoyed by the dominant caste. William Edward Burghardt DuBois accepted as his life long mission th«- responsi bility of the extraordinary individual of moral and Intel lectu al g ifts to challenge those oppressive forces in society that serve to dehu manize the poor and the powerless. At this death he was recognized throughout the globe as the most eminent Black American intellectual and political organizer pro duced in our history. He had w ritten 19 books; literally thousands of articles; pam phlets and editorials; socio­ logical texts novels; short stories; poetry; autobiogra phies; and position papers. His published writings on behalf of social and racial ju s tic e spanned some 60 years longer than most of us shall live. And at his death, at age 95, DuBois was the chief compiler and con tributor to the Encyclopedia of Africa, a massive work still in progress at the Uni versity of Ghana. Yet, DuBois (contrary to popular opinion) was born into a poor, but proud and hard working Black family whose traditions taught him personal d ig n ity and the value of discipline and self reliance in a society that denied the majority of Black people any modicum of those attributes so highly prized by whites. DuBois' self confidence and intellect was so highly de veloped at age 15 that he wrote in one of the columns of the Boston Globe, that "if Black people in the state of Massachusetts desire any ad vice on political organizing or books of value to them, they only need w rite W .E.B. Du Bois, and he would be glad to respond . . ." At the time he was, of course, a teenager. laiter he went South to Fisk University in Nashville. Tennessee, where he had his first encounter with "large numbers of Blacks". He later wrote that he was over whelmed by the "beauty of his people” and wholly un able to understand why w hite Americans were so reluctant to "admit to the worth and dignity of peoples of African heritage.” While working for a Har vard I ’ H .D . DuBois studied at the University of Berlin and it was during his travels through Europe that he later wrote: "I ceased to hate or suspect people simply be cause they belonged to one race or color . . But white America did not cease to hate or suspect DuBois. In 1898, DuBois received the Ph D. on His tory from Harvard and his d octoral d is s e rta tio n . The Suppression ol the African Slave Trade, became volume No. 1 in the Harvard His torical Series, yet all colleges and universities closed their doors to the brilliant young Black scholar la practice shared in common by most Oregon schools today in 1973. 1 have the evidence to prove this point). The young DuBois was not to be easily discouraged. He finally landed ill paying jobs at tine W ilburforce Col lege, and later Atlanta Uni versity. It is in this time that the classical work. The Souls of Black Folks 119031 and The Philadelphia Negro la massive sociological study) begain to appear. DuBois became one of the founders of the Niagra Movement 119081. the NA A C P; and various Pan African confer ences of the twenties and thirties. DuBois was editor of three singularly important periodicals: The Crisis; Hon zon; and Phylon; and thus for th irty years he was undoubtedly the most articu­ late. fearless and widely read advocate of Black liberation and racial justice in America. It is suggested by many prominent historians of the Black Experience that Du Bois was "the bridge" be tween the militant Frederick Douglass, who died in 1895, and M artin Luther King and Malcolm X. In 1903, in The Souls of Black Folk, DuBois wrote: " 'H e re in lie buried many things which, if read with patien ce, may show the strange meaning of being Black here at the dawning of the Twentieth Century. This meaning is not without in terest to you. gentle reader; for the problem of the twen­ tieth century is the problem of the color line." »' Seventy years later most Americans have not under stood the full implications of DuBois’ admonition. DuBois himself later became disaf fected with the robber barons of American capitalism and the inability of social political institutions to effect mean ingful change for Black and poor people, and thus DuBois began tu rn in g more and more to socialist theorists. He was, of course, charged by a racist and reactionary government as being Com munist the eharges of which he successfully re ­ futed; yet it led to his deci­ sion to live in Ghana, first of the newly independent Afri ran nations, at the invitation of Kwame Nkrumah and other African leaders. He died on August 27, 1983. on the eve of the historic March on Washington, while com piling the Encyclopedia A fri­ cans. It is of more than passing interest that Nobel la u re a te M artin Luther King's last speech before his assassina­ tion was in tribute to W .E.B. DuBois in February of 1988 in New York City. Reverend King said in part; “ DuBois was one of the most remark able men of our time. It was never possible to know where the scholar DuBois ended and the organizer DuBois began. The two qualities in him were a single unified fo rc e . W h it e A m e r ic a , drenched with lies about Negroes, has lived too long in a fog of ignorance. D r. DuBois gave them a gift of touch. If he lived today he would be in the front ranks of the («-ace movement. Du­ Bois' greatest virtue was his commited empathy with all the oppressed and his divine dissatisfaction with all forms of injustice." That is what M artin Luther King thought of W .E.B. DuBois. Amen. ©5> A Pwrli Frew—Any Pweh n S to p lw l HOUR* Wwakdops 8i9Oeun- »• 9 paw. 9a«.. 9i90w.aa. tw 1 pun. DR. JEFFREY BRADY, DENTIST SEMLER B U IL D IN G Phonat 2 2 8 -7 5 4 5 O F F IN A N C E operated tor the People • Checking Accounts - Saving Accounts • Bonk by M ail - Real Estate loans - Auto loans - Home Improvement • Travelers Checks Money Orders • Escrow Service MAXW ELL , . . .. . hmplover of the Month F re e Checking Accounts with $300 00 M in im u m B alance F re e Checking Service to Senior Citizens >65 or overt OPEN SATURDAY 10 AM-2 PM IdentiCheck® Check w»th e ith e r branch about M O N T m u AS FR I TO A M to a M 8PM MAIN OFFICE 2737 N E UNION 5PM MON THU««, 9 A M r Al 9 A M e, P M 5P M PIEDMONT BRANCH 728 N E KILLINGSWORTM 2 8 2 -2 Member 2 1 6 Federa» Deposit tn»urance 2 8 8 Corp -6 5 7 1 WANTED Day Care Mothers T o p r o v id e C h ild C a r e in y o u r h o m e Ages Infancy thru 12 yrs. Day - Swing - Graveyard Contact: However, the court ordered him to pay up I he court said a doc­ tor's services arc to be measured by the quality of his work, not merely by the results and this doctor had performed tlje opera­ tion in a proper manner. "The marvelous skill of ihe greatest surgeons in Ihe world," added the judge, "is sometimes futile." T his case states the general rule of law about medical fees. Fur­ thermore, unless a specific sum has been agreed upon in advance, the doctor generally has consider­ able leeway within reason in deciding how high the fee will he. May he take into account the patient's ability to pay? That is, may he charge a higher fee to a rich patient than to a poor one? Most courts say yes, sometimes on ihe theory that high-paving work will allow him to take on more low-paying work. Nevertheless, the basic stan­ dard of due care remains con­ stant, whether the fee is large or small or even nonexistent. In one early case, a doctor was ac­ cused of neglecting a charity pa­ tient In his defense, he insisted that he had less responsibility to be careful when he was working for nothing. But the court disagreed, and held him liable on grounds of malpractice. Die judge commented: "W hether the patient he a pau­ per or a millionaire, whether he he treated gratuitously or for re­ ward, the physician owes him pre­ cisely the n in e measure of duty and the same degree of skill and care." A pu h lii- service fe a tu re o f the A m e ric a n lia r Association and the O reg o n S tale lia r Asaoeia- lio n . M r itle n by IX ill B e rn a rd . FASHION WHEEL WIGLETS WIGS FALLS S .W . 3 r d & M o rris o n St. P o rtla n d , O r e g o n T a k e E le v a to r to 2 n d F lo o r 3 r d St. E n tran ce freedom bank O w ned by the People * J im * m u m *M t »HU« Meter« 10 AM end W e will try * • d e lv e r y«vr DCMWM11 by 4 PM THISJUMDAY I'm«' "T h e B ank W ith a P u rp o s e " © 1971 American Bar Association 4 . Thursday. August Ml. 1973 5 7 0 9 N . E. U n io n 2 8 3 -3 5 2 5 1 /«M A Family D ay/N igh t Program 288-5091 4835 N .E . 9th