Page 2 Portland Observer Thursday. October 14th. 1976 We see the world through Black eyes I Gretchen Kafoury - Gretchen Kafoury is the Démocratie nom inee fo r the House o f Representatives, District 13. This district encompasses portions o f low er A lb in a , north to Frem ont AAs. K afoury's Republican opponent is A nnette Reay. Kafoury is w e ll know n fo r her long interest in the rights o f w o m e n ond m inorities. Her em ploym ent has included a Peace Corps placem ent, ch ild care and the C ivil Rights Division. She has lo b bied fo r her various interests in the legislature, and this as w e ll as her p o litic a l activities give her an insight into the w orkings o f the legislature. The Observer h ig h ly recom m ends Gretchen Kafoury for State Representative, District 13. Berna Plummer - House Dist. 22 Berna Plum m er seeks the seat in the Oregon Legislature representing District 22 in East M u ltn o ­ m ah County. Ms Plum m er a R epublican is active in party affairs, h o ld in g several positions, and w as a d elega te to the Republican N a tio n a l C onvention. Her experience includes teaching, c rim in o l justice w ork, adm inistrative p la n n in g and e v a lu a tio n , and currently a ffirm a tiv e action o ffic e r for M u ltn o m a h County. AAs Plum m er has the intellect, the e x p e ri­ ence and the fo rtitu d e to m ake a good legislator. The Observer endorses her fo r this position. Betty Roberts - Senate District 10 State Senator Betty Roberts has served in the Senate since 1969 and previously was in the House of Representatives fo r tw o terms. She has served on c num ber of im p o rta n t com m ittees, in clu d in g : C hair­ m an of Senate Consum er A ffairs, and Senate Vice C hairm an o f Ways and AAeons. Her interests include education, local governm en t, c h ild care. She is an attorney by profession. Senator Roberts' experience and leadership re­ q u ire that she be returned to the State Senate. 1 W « ' J w , 1* TP» — tHtwî» W » <■« 'Stephen Kafoury - Senate District 7 State R epresentative Vera Katz represents District 8 in N orthw est Portland. A tw o term le g islator, Repre­ sentative Katz has had a p ositive e ffe c t on le g isla tio n in the area o f hum an needs. A m o n g her special interests are the a g in g , tennan t rights, h e a lth care, urban p la n n in g . She serves in the W ays an d Means C om m ittee and the State Em ergency Board, tw o of the most p o w e rfu l a nd im p o rta n t com m ittees. Representative Katz has not been a fra id to be counted on controversial and u n p o p u la r issues and has p ro vid e d leadership that has b ro u g h t m any benefits to the p e o p le o f her district. Another Point of View That dynamic Gray Panther, Margaret Kuhn, tells the story of an 82 year-old woman who for at least five years had been in bed for days at a time. One day she received a letter from a man she had not seen in years. It was followed by a phone call. To the amazement of her son and her family, with whom she lived, she soon after appeared fully dressed for travel ing. She announced she waa leaving to be married and asked only that they carry her suitcase to the cab which she had called. She thanked them for all they had done, gave them a forwarding address, assured them of her continuing love and left for a new life. She lived happily with her second husband until she died at the age of 90. Why is this story so engaging? When a person breaks out of society's rigid pat tern, we take notice. That courage and style displayed by Kuhn's friend is provo­ cative. After all. we, too. someday will be old. Old people are no longer rare. A t the turn of the century. 4 per cent of the population was 65 or over. Today, 10 per cent of us are elderly. By the year 2000, the figure will be 40 per cent. The pro­ blems faced by the elderly can no longer be ignored. Our society starts early to improverish the elderly. Continued ability to work is ’Decent ond good m an’? Salem C apital Journal Earl Butz, says President Ford, is a "d e c e n t and good m a n ." Perhaps so But it is hard fo r us to understand how the Presi­ dent or an yo n e else can equate the w ords "d e c e n t and g o o d " w ith the gross racism and filth o f the Butz statem ent. The statem ent, w h ich u ltim a te ly led to the Butz re signation M onday, d e a lt w ith bathroom , clo th in g and sexual habits o f A m erican Blacks. For a n yo n e to th in k a b out such subjects in ra cia l term s — about w hatever race — is a t the least sick. U nfo rtu n a te ly, Butz survived as a p u b lic o ffic ia l a fte r his 1974 " jo k e " a b out Pope Poul V i's position on b irth co n tro l: " H e no p la ya da g am e, he no m ake da ru le s ." Whatever the effectiveness of Butz as an agricul­ ture secretary, our society 200 years after the nat.on began with the notion "that all men are created equal" cannot tolerate the Butz preoccupation with race ond ethnic origin. The mystery is why it took President Ford three days to recognize that fact and get rid of Butz. Stephen K afoury is a candidate fo r State Senate, District 7. K afoury served tw o years in the House o f Representatives. K afoury is a fo rm e r teacher — teaching at J e ffe r­ son High School and the A lb in a Youth O p portunity School. In the legislature he served as chairm an of the Hum an Resources and Land Use C om m ittee. K afoury's m ajor interests are in the fie ld s o f urban problem s and hum an resources. He favors careful p la nnm nin g, e n v iro n m e n ta l p rotection, and atten­ tion to the problem s o f the city. Appreciation Dear friends. This is to thank Reverend John Jackson, the Albina Ministerial Alliance and all of the friends who held the special farewell service for me last Sunday. I am sorry that I was not informed about the service since I certainly would have been there. I appreciate the help and support all of you gave during my stay in Portland. I will be returning at least twice a month to oversee the Observer and look forward to seeing each of you then. Sincerely, A. Lee Henderson Opportunity (Continued from p. 1 col. 4) because it protects a basic right - the economic - which is the key to all other rights. Minorities must have “economic citizenship” - “to realize the reality of the Constitution, the individual must be inte grated into the work force.” In the United States, the most valuable property right is a job. EEOC receives all employment discri mination complaints filed with Oregon's Civil Rights Bureau. If the state cannot resolve the case or cannot investigate promptly. EEOC can take charge. EEOC receives all state investigations and if it is not satisfied, it can charge the findings or the remedy. If the case cannot be re solved in 180 days, the complainant is given the right to sue, although the right can also be obtained earlier. Title V II now provides attorney fees and legal costs. Jeffries also criticized administration priorities saying EEOC has a $63 million budget for Region X. while a single Boeing 747 costs $63 million. The conference was sponsored by the United Minority Workers, Northwest Minority Contractors and PU8C. Subscriptions: $7.50 per year in the Tri-County area, $8.00 per ’/ear outside Portland. Second Class Postage Paid at Portland, Oregon Thi Portland Observer’s official position is expressed only in its Publisher s column (We See The World Through Black Eyes). Any other material throughout the paper is th« opinion of the individual writer or submitter and does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the Portland Observer. National Advertising Representative by A. Bernard Devers B LA C K C H IL D D E V E L O P M E N T ; 1 am compelled to write this today and in it I will attempt only to raise and cause to be raised, a few very impor tant questions about our community. For weeks now I have passed the cor ner of Seventh and Knott, the sight has been utterly disgusting. Black men, young and old. the fathers and brothers of our Black Community, drinking and gambling on the streets. Have we come to this? Has the white man told us for so long, that we are nothing and that we are nobody until we have come to believe him? Have we no pride of community, of environment, of home, of ourselves? I wonder also why do we ever go However, 86 per cent of those polled believe that older people should be allow ed to continue working as long as they are productive and want to do so. The arbitrary age of 65 years for re tirement needs to be seriously reconsi dered. In our society those who are not child ren are considered superfluous unless they are productive and useful. Our throwaway society has chosen an arbi trary age of 65 after which a person is relieved of responsibility, of life sustain ing work and. in all too many cases, identity and self hood. Many persons never recover from tne snoex. tney re treat into illness or senility until death. The elderly see a physician, on the average, 50 per rent more than younger people, have twice as many hospital stays and hove health costs of four times those under 65 yean of age. The eldest 10 per cent of the population accounts for 30 per cent of the personal health expenditures. Added to the loss of income and self esteem, it is the burden of loneliness that follows the loss of friends and loved ones. It is truly a bleak picture. Our culture has done little to recognize the value or strengthen the life support systems of the elderly. Increasingly, however, there are those who refuse to conform to the dreary patterns. They point out verbally or by their actions the strengths, the wisdom and the vitality of oldsters that are large ly unrecognized, undervalued and un used. As the numbers of these oldsters in­ crease. they are going to demand more sensitivf treatment. Rightly so. They will find that they have greater freedom for political action than their middle-aged children who are burdened with responsibilities. Their thinking about themselves will change. They will find ways to "cope" with the loneliness. They will demand jobs. They will find better ways to handle health problems. I know because 1 will be one of them. through the trouble and risk of getting Black children into the world if only to feed and nurture them through their in­ fancy,' that they may spend the prime of their life, or the rest of their lives in someone's jail. Is this the Black fathers and Black mothers dream of Black child development Js it a fact, as others say the pimp and the hooker, the drunk and the gambler are the models of our Black community? I am persuaded to believe that Black child development is more than this. I am persuaded to believe that the Black child can develop into something more than an orator of profanity and curse words. Black men are charged with racial in­ justice. and discrimination, and with pre judiceness in the choice of models they present to our young Black children. To follow these examples is to insure the failure of our Black race. To follow these examples will insure that Blacks remain the majority race on welfare. While wel fare has its benefits, its greater effect Is to permanently reduce the effectiveness of our Black race. I t guarantees that we remain ignorant and poor. While it gives us money, it robs us of our pride and will to work. It buys us liquor to drink so that we are unable to think. Development Black Child: You must go it alone, seek a better community model: all are not gone. i Editor's Nnte:“Me and My Community" is a bi-weekly column by A. Bernard Devers, pastor of New Hope Baptist Church.) Kissinger Carol Thomas is Director of Civil Rights and Urban Affairs for the Envir­ onmental Protection Agency (EPA) in Washington. D.C. EPA provides grants to municipalities to build sewerage plants. Thomas said the agency operates on the assumption that a job is a basic right. Term enforcement has brought 14.8 per cent minority employment on EPA funded jobs in the Northwest, although a large percentage ot these employees are still in unskilled jobs. By June of 1977. EPA will have created 125,000 jobs in construction as well as 75,000 in equipment manufacture. “To the extent that a contractor takes affir­ mative action and is fair and open in hiring practices, it is only reasonable to assume that some minorites will show up in statistics." Carol said. Although there are no quotas, lack of minority employees indicates discrimination. EPA has not been reluctant to go to court, either to force contractors to use minorities or to assist those who do. Although contractors hire through the unions, if a union does not supply a minor ity, the contractor can hire and the per son then join the union. EPA went to court last year to assist a contractor who had done this and the union. Operator Engineers M701, walked off the job. (Continued from p. 1 col. 4) closed, preempt the role of Congress in the formation of U.S. foreign policy? (18) Will the financial proposals out­ lined. such as the Trust Fund and the remittance of pension rights and other assets, saddle a future majority-ruled government with the heavy debt burden and result in the large expatriation of capital? (191 How much is the U.S. expected to contribute to this fund and what assur­ ances have been received that the Con­ gress would appropriate such funds? (20) Ian Smith has indicated that there are "secret" provisions which have not been made public. Have agreements been reached that will be unacceptable to the bmt African and the American people and that either will not, or cannot, be honored by the Congress? The Black Leadership Conference also spelled out a proposal for sound U.S. policy in a 12-page manifesto, delivered by Michigan Congressman Charles Diggs. Chairman of the Conference. The manifesto supports the South African liberation struggle through peaceful means, but supports the right of freedom fighters to fight “by any means necessary” to gain their independence. Over $150,000 was pledged by Black organizations to finance an on-going committee to further the cause of free dom in South Africa. ROZELL’S Rosell's w ill give 10% ef your price to year church or charity ta groups of ton or Featuring: Bar-B-Q, Sou Food, Potato Pie, Shakes and Soft Ice Croom. <>P*« 10:00 a.m. to 10:UU 00 jsm j Sun Thurg IO :$ | a.m. to 12 rtwJ Inight. Fri & Sat N .£ . UNION AT AINSWORTH 5949 N.E. Ugtao ' Subscribe to the Observer 1st Place Community Service O N PA 1973 Published every Thursday by Exie Publishing Company, 2201 North Killingsworth, Portland, Oregon 97217. Mailing address: P.O. Box 3137. Portland. Oregon 97208. Telephone: 283 2486. critical to economic security. Yet unemployment among workers be tween 45 and 60 is a chronic problem resulting partly from blatant discriinina tion. A recent poll shows 87 per cent of thoae responsible for hiring and firing admit to discrimination against older workers. In 1975, unemployment among those 45 and older reached 19 per cent of the total unemployment. 27 per cent of those un employed over 27 weeks. As we know, joblessness can be devastating to the self-image. Mandatory retirement also contributes to diminished self-image. Recently, a Senate special committee on the aged reported that 40 per cent of the retirees in this country retired against their will and 32 per cent would continue to work if they had an opportunity. Me and m y Community ______ Portland Observer A L F R E D L. H E N D E R S O N M ito r/P u b U sh er by Yvonne Brathw aite Burke Vera Katz - House Dist. 8 House Diet. 13 .«ft . Gray Panthers $7.50 1st Place Beat Ad Results O N P A 1973 5th Place : Editorial N N P A 1973 Honorable Mention Herrick Editorial Award N N A 1973 t City $8.00