Mra F ré n e o s S c h o e n -’.'ewspaper Poem U n i v e r s i t y o f C r u ’ en L ib r a r y Black Caucus defines election campaign issues The Congressional Black Caucus has adopted comprehensive guidelines which it recommends Black voters use in evaluating Presidential candidates. Following is a summary of the guidelines: I. Full Employment and Balanced Growth Implementation Presidential candidates are asked to endorse strict implementation of the Humphrey-Hawkins Act which requires balanced economic growth to achieve maximum production, full employment and reasonable price stability. Candidates are asked to: - offer alternatives to fiscal and monetary policy which induce credit crun­ ches, raise interest rates, create shortages and promote inflation; - oppose slashing programs that target growth in areas where inflationary shortages are most acute; - support legislation that will meet the 1983 target of no more than 3 per cent adult and 4 per cent overall unemployment and a reduction o f the high rate of unemployment of Blacks, Hispanics, young people and women. CETA The guidelines call for funding of C ETA at the level authorized by law and urge full utilization of Title VI provisions which set up public service em­ ployment programs when the unemployment rate reaches 4 per cent and call for better coordination with local educational programs. Housing Support is asked for expansion of housing programs for low and moderate income families and elderly to increase housin» sunnli« and income families and elderly to increase housing supplies and reduce inflation in housing prices. They ask for a commitment to a minimum of two million housing starts and 500,000 new subsidized units a year. Also endorsement of the Fair Housing Amendments Act which provides H U D with cease and desist powers in housing discrimination. Energy The CBC asks that energy conservation not be brought about through high price of energy and that subsidies help low income persons, especially the elderly, pay utility bills. Oil price control is urged as well as support for legislation making the US government the sole importer of foreign oil. The CBC asks support of legislation requiring energy companies to divest in­ terests in other industrial fields. It opposes the further development of nuclear energy and favors development of renewable energy sources through government subsidies. Health Candidates are asked to make it a matter of highest priority that a national health plan be instituted that provides quality health care equally to all people regardless of their economic circumstances, paying particular concern to those who cannot afford to pay and who are discriminated against by medical institutions. Education The guidelines ask that candidates suport at least a threefold increase in __ __________________________________ federal education funding and call for the continuation o f categorical fund­ ing programs supplemented by block grants. Endorsement of programs in career education, counseling and compen­ satory education is called for as well as the extension o f quality early childhood education to every disadvantaged child in the country. The CBC asks that there be careful monitoring o f the allocation and expenditure o f Elementary and Secondary Education Act money. The CBC guidelines call upon candidates to endorese the constitutional principles enumerated by the U.S. Supreme Court and federal law relative to school desegregation. Urban and Rural Development 1 he CBC guidelines ask that candidates support a comprehensive program of urban and rural development, and that greater participation by small and minority businesses by implemented in the government procurement system. Fedaral Budget Prlorltlee The CBC calls for support of a five percent real increase in the federal budget for domestic programs that provide assistance ot low income persons and minorities. The rapidly increasing defense budget denies money to vital domestic programs that should be considered on the basis of their own merit. I he guidelines call for a reduction in the military budget. (Please turn to page 11, col. 3) N'* I, NATIOW Al PORTLAND OBSERVER & USPS 959 600 Voluma 10 Numbar 8 February 28. 1880 1OÇper copy Two Sectlona Johnson wins union internship The Black Educational Center dance group per­ forms songs and dances of Libera during the Malcom/KIng Day celebration. Thursday Feb. 21, the Community Professionals (CPs) sponsored a program In remembranca of Martin Luther King and Malcom X at the Alberta Theater. The CPs are about providing a platform for events eround Issues and Individuals relative to the Black experience. â 5 i 1 i The program Included talks by Lanlta Duke and Ron Herndon, readings from Malcom X and Langston Hughes by Paul Marshall, Tai Chi demonstration, songs and dances of Liberia by children of Black Education Center and music from a band made up of local musicians. The program was entertaining and educational and en­ joyed by all who attended. (Photo: Richard J. Brown) * A familiar face to youngatara croaalng Albarta Btraat going to Humboldt School la Robart L. Hill. Mr. Hlll’a concarn for tha klda doaa not atop at tha croaawalk. ha a vary upaat about tha poor quality of aducatlon thay ara getting and faala thay shouldn t ba draggad all ovar tha city. If thay atartad bualng those teachers around thay would coma up with a plan to educate thaaa kids pretty feat. (Photo: Richard J. Brown) Minister visits prisoners N ational Council o f Churches President M. William Howard has made the second in a series of visits to political prisoners in the United States, this time seeing Puerto Ricans arrested in a demonstration against U.S. naval war exercies on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques. The were arrested during an ecumenical service protesting U.S. naval bombing of Vieques, 70 per cent of which is owned by the Navy. Island residents hve been fighting for several years to force the Navy to stop its test shelling, charging that it is destroying the island’ s fishing and land and endangering their lives. "These people have felt com­ pelled to make their voices heard on an issue which is clearly of great p- olitical significance,” Howard said after his visit. " I think the length of their sentences indicates that the authorities regard them as political persons, in that under normal cir­ cumstances participation in a demonstration would get someone a suspended or minimal sentence. " W h ile certainly there is a criminal law which they are guilty of having violated, it is really the con­ text o f the demonstration which projects them as political prisoners. "The fact that so many different groups in Puerto Rico have joined together in protest against the military maneuvers at Vieques is in­ dicative of the broad groundswell of support on this issue. I think it should be a suggestion to the US government to rethink its policy about using Vieques in this way.” Gloria Johnson has been selected for an Internship sponsored by the A. Philip Randolph Institute and the Communications Workers o f America. Applying at the suggestion of her union representative and without great hope of being the one chosen, Mrs. Johnson won the nation-wide competition. An employee o f Pacific North­ west Bell for eleven years, Mrs. Johnson is currently a yellow pages clerk. She is a shop steward and has held other union positions. The purpose of the internship is to train in union organization and related areas. In an election year, she will have the opportunity to see politics in action as well as the inner workings of the union. Mrs. Johnson will go to W ashington, D .C . for a week’ s orientation, then will return the end o» March. Her initial station will be Washington and New York, but she will also work in other cities. ” 1 will travel a lot, and actually will be living in hotels - out of a suitcase.” Although on leave from Pacific Northwest Bell, Mrs. Johnson has been assured a position with the union when one is available. Her husband, Robert, will remain in Portland. “ He is a strong believe in unions, and is happy that I have this opportunity to learn ,” Mrs. Johnson explained. GLORIA JOHNSON (Photo: Richard Brown) Doctor warns of Kian danger Dr. Rosalind Cropper, a Black Southern doctor whose practice was the target of Ku Klux Kian violence, told a Linfield College audience that the KKK remains a very real threat. D r. Cropper, whose story was featured in Ebony Magazine, was the main speaker during the College’s Black History Week. Ebony Magazine first learned of Dr. Cropper after the Associated Press picked up her story from a local newspaper. The Ku Klux Kian had burned Dr. Cropper’s house and loosened the brakes on her car, causing her to plunge 20 feet. "The last thing was three o’clock in the morning when they held a rally in my yard. I decided to leave town at that point,” she said. The KKK perceived her as a threat to the power structure, she said. - T h e four white doctors there had been there a long time. This was my first year there and I had twice as many patients a day as they did, forty to fifty . I was really over­ worked,” Dr. Cropper said. “ I was a threat to the whole status quo of their power system.” Dr. Cropper said the condition of civil rights for Blacks in the South today is unchanged from previous years. Blacks are gaining more prestige, therefore being able to demand more as far as their plight is concerned, she said. But, she believes, overall there has been little change. “ It ’s the South with a smile on its face,” Dr. Cropper said. Dr. Cropper, whose lecture was titled, "W h ere Do We Go From Here.’ " said to best further the cause of civil rights, each individual must rid themselves of racism, and learn to deal with people as one per­ son to another. "You can’t deal with me as Black versus white.” Dr. Cropper said. “ You have to deal man to man. Once a man has proven himself, i» speaks tor itself. Racism will not disappear w ithin the next five generations. It has to be outbred.” Dr. Cropper warns that the KKK and similar forces are not limited merely to the South. “ Any time you have a (perceived) threat to the power in force, you are going to get an equal and opposite reaction, be it the Ku Klux Kian or another force,” she said. Dr. Cropper, 27, now resides in Tuscaloosa, A la., where she prac­ tices medicine. She often lectures at colleges and universities, usually once or twice a month. NAACP holds energy workshop f 'f lf r U V .. W n u ; m n z> k Energy-How much will we need? From what sources will it come? Where will we get it? How safe will it be? What are the implications of energy policies on the Black com­ munity? These questions, among others, will be topics of discussion at the Portland Branch N A A C P Energy Symposium, to be held at the Matt Dishman Memorial Center, 77 N.E. Knott Street, March I, 1980, from 8:30a.m. to 4 :!5 p.m. The conference will feature an opening plenary session in the mor­ ning and concurrent afternoon workshops featuring government officials and representatives o f private industry knowledgable o f our n atio n ’ s energy concerns. [ ^ i r r> n r • , Z ,» _ . » Discussion • topics _ for the f four workshops includes "Supply and Demand,” "Alternative and Con­ s ervatio n ," "E m p lo ym en t and Education.” and "Local, State, and Regional Policies and Legislation.” The conference is free to the public; lunch will not be provided. According to President Lucious Hicks IV , the conference is intended to present a basic inform ational package on energy to the Black community, to assist Black Port­ landers in understanding the impli­ cations of the world-wide concern with energy. Keynote speaker at the conference brown bag luncheon will be Clarke R. W atson, chairperson o f the American Association o f Blacks in Energy. Watson is also President Westland Companies o f Denve Colorado. Jackie Winters, Ombudsman f< the State of Oregon, will moderai the opening plenary session froi 10:15 a.m. until 12 noon. In addition, the afternoc workshop moderators includ Lynn Frank, director of the Oregc Department of Energy for "Eneri Supply and Demand;” Roy Brack« o f Golden Colorado's Solar Eneri Research Institute for "Alternativi and C onservation;" Lila Joinei Regional D irector o f the Oppoi (unities Industrialization Center! for "Employment and Education, and Gubernatorial Assistant Pi Amedeo for " L o c a l, State an Regional Policy and Legislation.” >