rage 2 Portlend ObHrver June 21. 1 • EDITORIAL/OPINION Soweto: Four year1 later lly N. F11,,._1 K11mbw/ll T RUT H is Stranger than ST RANGEI Fenwick. "Blanchard aides" really defines the problem. When a new administrator takes over, it is More than 7,000 worken in the expected that he will make edmini1trative Uitenhqe area, the centre of South changes - either of personnel or of structure. Africa's auto induatry were on Ordinarily the top administrators - the right strike this pasl week. they were hand men of the outgoing director - either demandina hiaher waaes: they currently make $1.35 per hour and resign or are fired. they were demandina $3.75 per hour So far, none of those administrators closest minimum. The strike had a ripple to Dr. Blanchard have offered their effect in that other factories not resignations arid they have been assured that directly hit by strikes were still there will be no "hatchet job." One ad - forced 10 shut down for lack of ministrator, for example, is Don McElroy who parts. In all, 1welve companies were forced 10 shut down last Friday, in- was brought to Portland by Or. Blanchard and cludina Goodyear Tires. who had worked with Blanchard in New Jer- Black municipal workers near sey . Many believe McElroy, through his Port Elizabeth in the eastern Cape orQanizational skills and his relationship with joined the strike. Repeated efforts staH. was crucial to Blanchard's functioning . al quellina the school boycott There has been much speculation about initiated by mixed race students in April have so far failed. Far from whether he would, or could stay with the endina, rhe boycott has actually ex- district when Blanchard leaves. panded as Black and white students McElroy's job description has been changed have joined in. At last coun1 six Black universities were closed and -- as will his role. He will not be the right hand there were reports of "solidarity man; he will be one of three right hand men. boycou" even in the Oranae Free Those administrators who were close to and State, the equivalent of your deep loyal to Dr. Blanchard are being given an op- soulh in rhe early "60s." portunity to determine whether they are Last Monday, June 16, was the " Blanchard aides'' or school district ad- fourth anniversary of the bloody Soweto riols of 1976. The reported ministrators. Dr . Blanchard had a full year to decide death toll of I J to 16 year old Blad school children ranged from a low whether he would work with a new School of 575 to a high of 1,000. Damaae Board to develop new goals and new 10 property ~as conservarively programs. He did not accept the opportunity estimated at SI 00 million. One I hina ana now he 1s gone. His "aides" have the Soweto did that nothin1 else could have a~complished was focus atten- same opportunity to become part of the new tion on the v1i.:1ousness of apartheid. era . Mui.:h as the regime tried to hush up This action, although it does not please lhe ~hole thin1, Soweto "as just those who would like to see a "clean sweep, " 100 big 10 be swept under the rua. should allay the fears of those who believe a Judging from e\ents so far, both side\ seemed 10 have learned lessons vindictive Board will reson to firing those who from 1he So~eto massai.:re. The have not supported it in the past. A southern folk tale originating among the 1>reservators of the slave owning culture may c;hed some light on the performance of these tew neQroes who lament the removal of Blan- chard from the position of school superinten- dent. Once there was a slaveowner who upon the ending of the Civil War was dispo11e11ed of his slaves. He became deapondent over losing his wealth and began drinking and gambling. What few resources he had left were soon dissipated and he became a derelict. One day he was carried to jail for failure to pay his debts and a forme, slave witnessed the arrest. The slave demonstrated his loyalty and fidelity by offering to sell himself into slavery again in order to satisfy the debts for which "old mar- se" was imprisoned. This stereotype has remained a treasured memory in the resen,oir of white racism and it continues to furnish the Quidelines for what many whites believe is the responsible negro. However, those among the Black population who are "politically Black " customarily acknowledge that any persons of color har- boring such misplaced attachments are divor- ced from the Black liberation movement and are irretrievable. Blanchard's aides? The morning Oretlonian points out that 'Blanchard's aides" have been shifted into new assignments as part of the reorganization planned by acting superintendent Or. James Letters to the Editor Cuba erases institutional racism I tl rhe l J11or: !\kmhen anJ teai.:hen. tn rhe Portl.and hiui.:a11onal Sysrc:m in PllrrlanJ should atrenJ the: June: .:!Mrh rrogram at the Ktng Neiahbor- hovd •a~1h1~·. Jealina ~,th "Clrltd <. arr 11nd l:.'du,·011on in Cuba. " l uha roday ,s a society ,n 1ran- \lll\lt1 II t\ a 'i\Xtety transformina it• sell .and 1u people. Today free (Jui.:illllln ,~ provided for all aae 11rouJ" from infant\ to adults. Child ,·.ire ,·c:ntcn ha\c: bet-n built all 0\er rhe t)land rnmarily 10 frtt women to r 11r11i.:1rate fully tn the «onomi~ and ,01.·1al lire or the country. They al!oo ,ene "' ;in important first step m the edui.:a11onal process. The ar- ttfa·al di\t\tlltl bet~ecn mental labor and phH1c.1l labor that e'1sls in ..:.1r1tah,1 soctettes ,s being ,\ ,1c:ma111.·all)· broken down, ~ ith the .11m of creatmg a full human bemg \\ 1th the c:mphaSIS on education ,, .1 prerequisite for o,ercomina underde,elopment, a 1rea1 stress ha\ bet-n la1J on teacher trainina. l nlike the L .S. and many parts llf I atin l\menka and the Carib- bean, Cuba toda\' 1s a multi-racial \01.·tel\ ~llh0UI racial srrife. This dot's nor mean there are no \·esliacs 1 ra~1\m rema1nin1 Because of ra,1 d1si.:r111unat1on there are probabh proportionately fewer Blad. doctors, university rrofessor "• enamerrs, etc., than , ucas,lids Also the educational process and natural a11n1ton are slowb but relentlesaly eliminatina ind,, 1Jual mamfestations of racism. or1an1 .111on of contemporary l uban so~1et\ no lonacr support racism, and the 10\ernment itself is elplkitly anti-racist. You ~ill not find the Christian Kniahts of the K.K.K . in Cuba, b«ause they do not represent 1he tn- rc:rests of roor and "orktng dass caucasoids. Where "as the Klan in the last ~ntury when the ~hildren of caucasoid sharecroppers tn the U.S. died from pellaara? Where: "ere they ~hen caucasoid farmers "ere l:'icted from their homes by the bankers? Where ~ere they ~hen caucasoid ~orkers organized mto unions to figh1 for Ii\ ma "aaes? The Klan speak for the rich and powerful ,n Amerika, and 1hey always ha\e. Cuba is 1he only coun1ry tn 1he \\ es, Indies and in this hemisphere ~hil.:h has broken " llh caucasoid po-.er ... ~aucasoid power ,s the ro~er of caucasoids 0\'er Bladts ~11hou1 any participation of the Bla~ks. In Portland, poor and working class people arc: treated like passi\·e spectators of a dis1an1 drama, by lht' Board of Education. like Jamai~a•s Blad people today, they were the poorest and most depressed people on the island, while real power was tn the hands of the U.S. imperialists. Blai.:k Cubans fou1h1 alonaside caucasoid Cuban workers and peasants because they were all oppressed. Black Cubans today enJoy political, t'\.-Onomic and social ri1h1s and opportunities of exac1ely the same kind as caucasoid Cubans. They 100 bear arms in the Cuban Militia as an expression of their basic ri1h1s. In other words, caucasoid power in Cuba 1s ended. The majority of the caucasoid population naturally predommatn numerically tn mo\l spheres of ac- t1-.i1y but rhey do not hold dominion over Blai.:ks ~i1hou1 regard 10 rhe latter', mteresrs. Blacks ha\'c: achie\l:d rower commensurare ~ith their u-.n numbers by their heroil.: self-efforts durina the days of sla\ery , in figh1mg a1a1nst the Spamsh and ,n fi1h1ing aaainst im- perialism. HaHng achieved their rtllhls rhey can tn fact afford to tor1e1 rhe category "Black" and think simply as Cubans citizens, as socialtst equals and as men and -.omen. Contrary 10 much opmton ,n the Un11ed States today, the Cubans are a highly blended and multi-racial people. One is reminded of the people of Puerto Rico or the range tn color and features of old Bla~k communittes ,n Atlanta, Washinaton, D.C., or Baltimore. In addition, -.ith the triumph of the re,olution, many of rhe caucasoid ra~1st Cubans, the comprador bouraeoisie ~ ho served as lackeys ror L; .S. imperialism, fled the coun- try for the conaenial shores of Florida. In terms of U.S. propagan- da. ii 1s significant that durina the days or the Batista reaime, U.S. propaganda, touted Cuba as beina "a aood place for colored people," and rqarded Cuba as ha,·ing a non- caucasoid population. With the revolution, however, the propqan- da hne chanaed and Cuba suddenly became a place dominated by i.:au~1d people, tn ~hkh the non- caucasoids -.ere unequal. Respec1fuUy, Dr. Jamil Clwrov« Field Reprncntati\'e (CORE) OBSERVER 1st Place Community Senne• ONPA1973 lstPtac:e Best Ad Results ONPA 1973 The Pt- ~ Eotor 'c111umn . 5th Place Best Editonal ONPA1973 • ""'°""" o,of . . . . . . . ..,, .. 'llcll"90Pf'on 283-2 - Nenonel Aften111t11 .....,_, .. ti . . A~_,l"\IH-.e Inc ALFRED L. HENDERSON Editor Publisher N-'Yotta ~ N:llfk,,ER 1··, ■ p ............. ,.,.,... ·- . ' ~ Editonal Award NNA 1973 2nd Place Best Ecltonel lrd ~,ace Comm ., ~ LNdersh~ ONPA1975 i~~ studenl~ boycott this 11mc: around is a 101 heller ~oordinated and they \eem to be raking e,tra precautions to keep lhe focus of the boycott on the central ,~sue: unequal education. the polii.:e, supposedly, are exer- Cl\tng "more restraint." So far the dc:ath toll, tn almost three months ol' demonstrations, stands at 42. The students also have been a iot more successful al solicitina 1uppon from 1he worken. Last time around. the police manaaed to use an aae-old trick: pit one aroup a1ain1t the other: 1 he studenu aaalnat the workers and sometimes "different ethnic aroups." Now everyone un- derstands that the students are fi1h1in1 for all of them. Educalion was a loaical choice to focus on in the fiaht aaainst apan- heid because of the inherent inequities. To bqin with, there are four separate and unequal ministries of education: one white. one Black, one Asian and one mixed race. Government upenditures per student is as follows; $905 .00 per white student; $446.00 for an Indian student; $281 .00 per .. coloured" (mixed) student and only $89.00 per African student. In spite of these 1larin1 inequities, the apartheid reaime is still tryina to blame the current s1uden1 unrest on "outside aaitators!" What alarms the apartheid reaime the most is the fac1 1ha1 this school boycott is only a tip of the icebera in whal has become a very sophisticated and broadbased attack on the whole system. Soweto shook apartheid to its very foundations; this new attack threatens to shake even further the now jittery struc- ture. Already Western nations are sending words of warnina 10 Pretoria that "any larae scale repression will jeopardize relations." To a regime that has spent the last four years tryina 10 repair its tarnished imaae abroad, this i.:an only be seen as a major set- back . Beller yet, ir gives the Africans added ammunition to ask for stronger measures aaainst South Africa. Haunting the apartheid reaime are grim reminders of the fallout from Soweto "76." The botched up murder of Steve Biko and the sub- sc:quc:nt inquest; the disarace and forced resignation of Johannes Vor- 1ter, prime arcbJtect of aputbeid; mulderptt acaadal ud the rorcec reeipatJoa or COIUUt Mulder, tbet Minilter of Information, expoeure of South Afrca'1 covert ovtrMU opcratlon1 aimed at manipulatla, public opinion in Europe and tbe United States and the ;,epped up cf. foru of foe1 of apartbtld to economically isolate South Africa. The fear in South Africa ii that the current student boycott1, wave of 1trikes, stepped auerrilla attacks, Black activism could triger another such anti-South Africa posiure around the world, The recent ~II planned and well executed liahtnina auerrilla raid on the SASOL coal auification plants and oil refineries that destroyed eiaht oil storaae tanks could only have further un- dermined white morale. In Namibia, South Africa is farina no better. Previously the SW APO Liberation Movement's at- tacks were reported 10 be limited mostly to the northern areas bor- derin1 on Namibia. Lately, however, the reaime has admitted to clashes takina place as far south as Windhoek, the capital. Recently, SW APO auerrillas managed 10 blow up two power plants that supply the entire country. The result was that for several hours, the whole country was plunged into darkness. In a desperate move reminiscent of one Ian Smith, South Africa raided Angola on what it claimed was a move lo destroy "SWAPO bases" . Fiaures they released (for propaganda purposes) claim 200 SWAPO auerrillas, and 16 South African soldiers killed . Even accep- ting such obviously doctored fiaures, this would be the highest toll the regime has admi11ed suf- fering in a single mission. Everywhere South Africa looks, she seems to be falling deeper and deeper into a tunnel. Conversely, for the Africans, the Light of Liber- ty. so long hidden. seems 10 be edging closer. Notes from City Hall 8.} Charlt':5 Jordan Comm,ssio,wr of Pubhc SD/tty our of every ten -.ould make ii throuah colleae. You said, "Most of you ~on't make: it." Being that I ~as 1n my state of narcissism, I naturally assumed I had 10 be that one tn ren and that everyone ob- \'iously kne-. 11. You -.·ent on 10 say that you challenaed each one there Charles Jordan : to be that one in ten. I resented the I had intended to ~ rtte this letter challenge and played it off that prior to i.:ommencement, but I got )·ou'd mc:ant only the braided 100 m,olved tn finishina finals and brothers to take heed. \\ c:11 anywa)·, freshman year went all. Today, betn1 Father's Da)·, did remind me 10 ~me 11 rhouah . I extremely -.ell; I ~ould take an guess I should 11e1 10 the poml and O\erload and still make the dean's qu11 ~ tth the solemni111es. About list. This reinforced m)· resen1mc:n1 four years ago there ~as a mttttnl of your challcnae. The sophomore (sponsored b)· -.horn, I for101) for year .:ame around and thinas trans- Bla1.·k hiah school 1raduating semor formed. I chanaed schools (from malt's and )'OU ~ere the gues. S.O.S.C. to U. of 0.) and joined a speaker. Ir "as at a ume ~hen I had fratern ity. Ri1h1 away 1hin1s 101 a lot of thinas gotng for me and life touah and m the middle of the year I was pre11y aood I ~ as going 10 "'as ready to quit. This 1s when your Europe for the summer, I had ,hallenae first had applied affects recei,ed a aenerous scholarship, I on me. Because I thou1h1 it was 100 was gelling man)' a~ards from cocky of you to say all 1ha1 prior 10 school and different organizauons I this time, I still wanted to prove you belona 10, and was lookina fdrwaia . "'rona. but then did I realize that my 10 entenna colleae. future ~asn't 1uaran1ced and that I Anyv,ay, at this function, some of "as tn lhe same boat now which I'd the students didn't present them- prece1ved the others -.ere 1n. II was selves "'ith what the sttuation called a rude a•akmina. for, and you addressed this m your I decided 10 stick ii 0UI and messaae You commented on their maybe chanae my maJor 10 weanna braids, Jeans etc , to 1he somethina easter such as An (even- mtttma, and then you proceeded to tually. I didn't because 11 sttmed make the statement that only one like settlina for less than my poten- Our respons1b1li11es a~ adulr s "ho challenae and ~ork 10 inspire youth are \Cry 1mporti1nl ; for 1oday ' s youth arc: tomorro~ 's leaders . I \\OUld hke to share one: such tn· spiratton ~,th you . "Only ont our of tf'n mokt it ... " rial and cheating myself). It made me: realize I wu no belier than the others and that maybe the one with the braids was 1ha1 one in 1en. Junior year was 1he pits! It was hones1ly the "'orst year or my lire. Nor only ~·as school ge11in1 10 me. but other problems had arisen. Alona "ith advice and a lot of prayer. your ~ ords honestly kept me moti\'ated to hana in there. Senior year, I ~anted it bad enouah, but was gelling tired of the fight. I knew I ~ould get my dearee, bu1 often needed a kick in the ass 10 keep me: gomg. A1ain your ~ ords kepi going thro"lh my mind to rid me of the Senior year blues (as they are called). The "'hole potnl I am leadmg up 10 in my round about ~ay 1s to thank you for your unknowmg m- sptratton and your hauntina. help- ful, words. They helped me to sur- Vt \'e. Last Sunday (June 81h) I gradu&1ed from U of O -.,1h a B.A. m Marketina Mostly, l want to thank you for helpina me prove you -. rona. I am one of the one tn ten Also, hopeful!). rhere "'ere others m rhe aroup that made 11 too. I hadn' intended for 1he letter to be so Iona, but I guess I Just aot carried a~ay Before this noHI becomes a part of an encyclopedia I'll stop Once again I 1n1ly am ara1dul, and thank you.