Page 2 Portland Ola U th . 1978 We see the world through Black eyes Radsm in Oregon Racism seems to be on the rise in Oregon - though sometimes cloaked in innocence. Students who burned a cross in front of the Black Cultural Affairs Office at Oregon State University claimed it was only a prank — that they did not understand the racist implications. It is strange that they found their way to that office with their cross if they did not understand. Is it just a coincidence that it was not burned on someone else's lawn? Students at Portland State University accepted an advertisement for a "White Student Alliance" for their newspaper. The words "white student alliance" did not touch off any suspicion that this might be a racist organization. Freedom, net communism It is interesting to read in our daily paper that the new nations of Africa will turn to the USSR and communism if left to their own bidding. They foretell that if the Black majority gains control of the government of Rhodesia, this will nationally become a communist state controlled by the USSR. The African people hove never given any indica­ tion that they want to be controlled by the USSR any more than they want to be controlled by the United States or Britain. It is a fact of life that the U.S. has not supported the liberation movements in Africa but have aided the colonial governments. Our recent interest is not a response to the quest for freedom but to a fear that we will be outflanked by the Russians. The people of Africa have demonstrated that they will seek help where it is available, that they will accept assistance from the USSR and Cuba. This does not mean they are interested in communism, it only means that they need help. They certainly have not received it from the capitalist democracies. If the United States would stand for freedom and equality, and put own democratic ideals into practice, we would not have to worry about the communists so much. If we could understand that the people of Africa are concerned about freedom and not about political idiology, we could be free to assist them without political and the economic strings. We could see the development of free and irjfclependhnt nations in Afrieo that poeid build their political and economic in*t»tuiieM.to fit their own needs. Black p o w er a t the palls Guest Editorial Christian Science Monitor Jimmy Carter's victory is politically significant for many reasons. But perhaps none more significant than the fact that it is America's Black community that put him over the top. Clearly Blacks now have new strength. They will look to the President-Elect to give them fair representation in the high reaches of the administration, and most important, to live up to his promises to strive for economic and social justice for all minorities. Throughout the campaign AAr. Carter was more deliberately attuned than President Ford to the Blacks' struggle for equal rights. His active wooing of them, combined with a vigorous drive to register tens of thousands more Block voters, paid off royally. It is estimated that Blacks provided the margin of victory for the former Georgia governor not only in the South, where M r. Ford won a majority of the white vote, but in such crucial states as Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Missouri. In Ohio, for instance, AAr. Carter won by just over 7,500 votes, with 285,000 Black votes. The Joint Center for Political Studies in Washington also reports that ho captured more than 90 |oer cent of the Black vote in AAaryland, 90 per cent in Missouri, 96 per cent in Texas, and over 91 per cent in Louisiana and Mississippi. These huge Democratic majorities are not surpris­ ing in the light of Black frustrations over the slowed pace of progress since the advances of the 1960s. Although Blacks are better off politically today, Black economic power has not kept pace with political progress. Problems of high unemployment, poor education, and discrimination linger. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the median Black family still earns only 60 per cent as much as a typical white family. It is such disparities which it is hoped AAr. Carter will seek to redress - not through government handouts but through policies that remove road­ blocks to self-help and individual achievement. The President-Elect would please his Black constituency by appointing Blacks to such posts as Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare and of Housing and Urban Development. It goes without saying, how­ ever, that the Black community as a whole will benefit most by the selection of the most qualified individuals for the right job. There are indeed many of them, among the most prominent being such name: as Barbara Jordan, Andrew Young, and Vernon Jordan. The President-Elect might even consider retaining William Coleman in the Cabinet; he has been an excellent Secretary of Transporta­ tion. In any case, AAr. Carter now has an opportunity to bring Blacks more fairly into the executive branch of government so that decisions affecting all Americans can be worked on cooperatively. We welcome this opportunity. With a sympathetic ear in the White House — and with a reinvigoration of such institu­ tions as the National Association for the Advance­ ment of Colored People, which has named a new executive director - Blacks should be able to look forward to a new era of economic and political progress. That will spell a healthier society for all Americans. Urban Renewal on the horizon Remember those urban renewal pro­ grams of the 1950s that plowed up central cities, destroying homes and neighbor hoods of poor people to make way for speculative projects that benefited the better-off? Well, hold on to your hats because those days are on the way back - at least if numerous housing experts, city plan­ ners, and urban theorists have their way. Typical of the new thrust in city planning is the recent testimony, before a Congressional committee, of a man des­ cribed in news accounts as “a theorist on the recovery of American cities." He urged that the urban poor be moved away from center-cities so that the areas could be redeveloped to attract middle income suburbanites back to the cities. That sounds to me like a theory for the destruction of American cities. .* <1 a I But it’s typical of the mounting support far that kind of thinking that his testi­ mony was taken so seriously. I t fits into what is becoming known as the "triage" theory. That's a battlefield term far medics faced with a situation in which they’ve got to provide fast medical aid to casual­ ties under battlefield conditions. Let the dying die, the theory goes, and eoncen trate your scarce resources on those who might pull through. Translated into the urban environment by planners, the theory says, in effect, that poor neighborhoods can't be saved so just let them deteriorate while providing services to neighborhoods in better con­ dition. Ultimately property values will fall and the areas will be ripe for developments like shops, offices and middle and upper income housing. As for the poor who live in those neighborhoods - tough luck. Help them relocate to the outskirts of town. Out of sight, out of mind. The adject failure of the urban renewal programs of two decades ago ought to be a warning against this approach to d ty officials, but they're blinded by arhat they see as the attractions of increasing the city’s tax base. Run-down slums are full of non-taxpaying properties and aban­ doned buildings. Redevelopment means increased property taxes and wealthier residents who can spend more. The joker in the deck is that supporters of this approach think it can be effected smoothly. Large scale emigration to the suburbs somewhat eased the urban hous­ ing crunch in the sixties, and they think redevelopment can be accomplished without too much pressures on the housing market. But suburbanization has slowed and housing prices have sky-rocketed The slack in the housing market isn't there Transkei is bom The «0 visitors from South America wore Osar expenses paid by 8outh Africa, to tbs midnight ceremony that marked the birth of the nation of Tran skat I t was lucky they came, no one else did. A t the stroke of midnight a 101-gun salute marked the moment. Tribal danc­ ing, fireworks. feasting and bonfires continued the celebration. New construc­ tion marked the landscape. $12 million worth of asw paved highways, a $14 million airport and a $2 4 million Holiday Inn. Yet the only distinguished visitor who came was South Africa's President Nieolaas Diederiehs. More than 40 African nations have become independent in the last two decades. Yet, for Tranakei, the diplomatic boycott of its independence ceremony was almost complete. For good reason. Tranakei is the first of nine historical tribal homelands, called bantustana, that the Republic of South Africa to grooming lor independence in an effort to perpetu­ ate the rule of its own white minority. Tranakei to about the aixe of Massa ehueetta and New Hampshire eoobined and inhabited by 1-8 million members of the Xhosa tribe. Included also in the dtiaenship of Tranakei are 1.8 million Xhoeas who live permanently in South Africa. They live In places like Johannes­ burg’s Soweto township which has been the scene of rebellion and violence. By this act of political sleight-of-hand. the Xhoaas who live in South Africa become foreigners and are stripped of their dtiaenship and political rights. By continuing thia pattern in the other eight bantustana, the South African govern­ ment hopes to give 70 per cent of its population political power in only 18 per cent of its land area. The whites will then claim control over the rest of the country. In New York, U.N. Secretary-General K urt Waldheim said, "The world com­ munity will never accept the establish ment of the Tranakei or of any other so-called bantustana as separate political entities. They only viable solution In to turn rw *7 from the policy of apartheid and allow all the people of South Africa to exercise fully their basic human rights.” Tranakei is surrounded by South A fri­ ca on three sides. Though the Indian Ocean to the fourth boundary, Transkei has no p o rt As a matter of fact, until now, it had no phone book. Tranakei was included in that of East London, the nearest South African dty. Don't look for Tranakei in your travel book. The only mention to under “bantus tans, segregated housing quarters of Africans. who are not allowed to live within the d ty and must commute great distances to work." The travel book goes on to say that non-Africans may not visit bantustana without special government permit. However, with independence and a new Holiday Inn. I suspect outsiders will be more welcome. Furthermore, though the reported gross national product ($120 million) and the per capita income ($180) exceeds those of a dosen independent African states, the figures are misleading. Three-quarters of Tranakei's annual operating budget to contributed by South Africa. Added to that, 70 per cent of its national income consists of remittances from Xhosa« who work in the mines, factorial, and farms of white South Africa. Independence to making some welcome changes on the local scene in the sleepy capital of Umtata Blacks and whites will be allowed to mix socially and compete for jobs. The whites only municipal swimming pool will be open to all. A t the town movie house, films will be viewed by mixed audiences. I t to expected that 3,000 whites will remain in Tranakei. Chief Minister Kaiser D. Matanzima. who heads the Tranakei government is one person willing to accept indepen donee. His National Independence Party swept the territory's parliamentary elec tiona last month, partly because the entire leadership of the opposition party had been jailed. Now Matanzima, a lawyer-farmer, to looking forward to moving into a new $345,000 mansion under construction. What to the conclusion of this sorry tale? The future to truly troubled. South Africa must be stopped from proceeding with its plan for independence of the homelands. The independence of Bophu that-Swanna to scheduled next. This travasty must stop. The question to how and by whom. Affirmativ« action (Continued from p. 1 col. 6) with regional hearings. The National Coalition to Defend A f­ firmative Action feels that effective af firmative action regulations must provide for: 1. Strict and expedient enforcement mechanisms, "not Department of Labor proposals lor endless hearings, adminis trative procedures and acceptance of mere ‘good faith* statements by employ ere." 2. Cutting red tape by providing employers with specific criteria for achieving affirmative action which are uniformly enforced, “not Department of Labor proposals which delete essential employment guidelines and programs effective in achieving affirmative action.” 3. Development and monitoring of goals and timetables, not as quotas but as benchmarks in a plan of action, "not Department of Labor proposals (or un monitored programs which rely on 'good faith' efforts by employers.” 4. Government accountability and public disclosure of all aspects of the contract compliance program, “not the Department of Labor proposals which limit public access to enforcement pro- ceedings and departmental operations.” The National Coalition to Defend A f firmative Action asks that concerned persons and organizations contact their Senators and Representatives and Law­ rence Z Lorber. U.S. Department of Labor. 200 Constitution Avenue. Wash ington. D.C. 20210. The Federal government spends over $50 billion a year in non-construction projects and at least one-third of the labor force is dependent on federal expenditures for their jobs. Political power (Continued from p. 1 col. 6) VEP for fifteen years. Now, in a larger sense, we also have to take stock of the health of our democracy, which has the lowest rate of voter participation of any democracy in the world." " It may be that the Voter Education Project can play a larger, more vital role to the entire country by spearheading a national effort to eliminate restrictive, bureaucratic barriers and make of our- any more so that if poor neighborhoods are destroyed for redevelopment, the poor who live in them will have no place to go. That means the developers and the speculators will run into a stone wall of anger, frustration and bitterness from the people they're trying to dispossess. Anyone who seriously believes that poor people, Black people and brown people locked into ghetto areas can be shovelled out of their neighborhoods to make way far white middle does people whenever speculators think the market to right, to dead wrong. And anyone who thinks that urban and social problems, whose causes are moot often found in exploitation and discrimin ation, can be solved by even more extreme exploitation and discrimination, to as a disaster course. Thio oo called "triage" approach has bean encouraged by the abandonment of federal attempts to formulate a compre­ hensive urban strategy and the vacuum that withdrawal left, a vacuum filled by local interests hootile to the poor. The way to eave the cities isn't to abandon them to the mercies of specula tors. The cities will be revitalized through programs that help the poor, preserve and improve their neighbor hoods, and ensure their participation in decisions that affect their lives. Spare us the solutions of self-styled urban “experts” and other social quacks who prescribe policies that will only lead to tragic confrontations and strife that to further deterioration of our Portlond O b server eratic idea.” The Voter Education Project, based in selves a nation of voters with a participa­ tion rate equal to or higher than any other democracy.” said Lewis. "It should be America's goal to achieve this demo Atlanta. Georgia, has traditionally oper ated its programs in the I I southern states from Virginia to Texas. It is supported by the tax -deductible contri­ bution of foundations, corporations, unions, refigwi» o rg a n iz a tiM ^ n d v,duals. . . If ws don’t who will? $2.50 of yosr bow sobscriptbH to The Portlmd Observer w ill go to Published every Thursday by Exie Publishing Company, 2201 North Killingswortk, Portland. Oregon 97217. Mailing address: P.0. Box 3137, Portland, Oregon 97208. Telephone: 288-2486. Subscriptions: $7.50 per year in the Tri-County area, $8.00 per year outside Portland. r's official position is expressed only in The Portias 'e I See The World Through Black Eyes). its Publisher's column (We Any other material throughout the paper is the opinion of the individual writer or submitter and does not necessarily reflect Herrick Editorial Award NNA197S the opinion of the A L F R E D L. HENDERSON Editor/Publisher Nam« New York ONPA 1975 MEMMR I Oregon Newspaper Publisher* I Association Oregon Black History Project Tri-County a rea $7.50 other arecs $8.00 Address A IA N e J I p A per CHy Mail to: Portland Observer P.O. Box 3137 Portland, Oregon 97206