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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1981)
Pag« 2 Portland Observer May 14.1881 EDITORIAL/OPINION Ask Boise community 7th and 8th grade students have. They enter high school w ith a handicap. If Boise is retained as a Pre-K-8 school, it is o n ly a m a tte r o f tim e u n til its u pp er grade stu d e n ts are sip h o n e d o ff. C e rta in sch o o l board m em bers have long s o u g h t to send them across the river to the W est side. Tuesday m orning, around 1:00 a.m ., Herb C a w thorne suggested th a t Tubm an M iddle School be placed at the Boise building rather than at the Eliot building as promised. In its desperation to adopt an acceptable desegregation plan the board co m m itte d to place the middle school at Eliot, even though the building is too small and the property is in s u ffic ie n t. The board is now having second th o u g h ts abo ut spending the estim ated $3 million to add more classrooms. U n fo rtu n a te ly , the Board has n o t com e back to the com munity to discuss the pros and cons of locating at Eliot. Perhaps other a c ceptable arrangem ents could be made if the board were w illing to explore the possibilities w ith Tubman parents and com m unity m em bers. Joe Rieke suggested that Tubman go to the J e ffe rs o n b u ild in g and C a w th o rn e suggested Boise. The Boise o p tio n does have som e p o s s ib ilitie s , b u t it should go to the Boise co m m u n ty before it is a d o pte d. The upper grade students at Boise w ould ben efit from assignment to a middle school. They currently are deprived of the science, shop, music, art, languages, and other programs that other 6th, If the Tubman middle school were to go to Boise, the Boise 6th, 7th and 8th grades would go to Tubman. The lower grades would go to Eliot - w ithin walking distance. But Boise is not just another school. Its im portance to the com m unity goes beyond the education of its children - it is the symbol of a com m unity's struggle to maintain its identity. By Fungai Kumbula The last half o f the seventies and the beginning o f the eighties have set a procedent which we all sincerely hope w ill continue and eventually engulf the whole African continent. One o f the salvoes frequently leveled at the various A fric a n governments that took over from colonial regimes throughout Africa have been that in more cases than one, those governments have tended to be just as repressive and to ta lita ria n as their predecessors. There has been a decided lack o f fundamental freedoms as evidenced by the continent’ s disproportionate share o f dictators, autocrats and one-man governments; that Id i A m in , Macias Nugemas, Jean Bedel-Bokassas, Ian Smiths’ and the like to mention just a few. In the second h a lf o f the 70’ s, there was a decided shift away from this sad state o f a ffa irs to a more e n lig h te n e d p a r tic ip a to r y dem ocratic system in several A frica n countries. The fo llo w in g are worth bearing in mind as we ex plore this encouraging s h ift in African politics. It was Jonathan Newman's unwise decision to in terfere w ith Boise th a t led to the C om m u n ity C o a litio n , the BUF b o y c o tt and the new desegregation plan. It was over Boise that the com m unity finally decided to say "s to p .” The proposal to move Tubman to Boise and make Boise upper grades a part of Tubm an U ganda: A fte r almost a decade should be explored ca re fu lly w ith the Boise o f rentless plunder o f the people, com m u nity and the Black U nited Front. It is pillage and rape o f the n a tio n ’ s not a decision that can be made hastily. A lot economy, one Idi Am in Dada was finally toppled by a combined force is at stake. Talking to the police The Observer has held a series of forums on police/com m unity relations designed to allow com m unity persons to express their concerns d ire c tly to those w h o have som e p o w e r to make changes. Am ong the participants have been Deputy Chief S m ith, Captain McCabe, the director of Internal Affairs, Stan Peters of the police union and police officers. A m ong the conce rn s discussed are e x cessive force, harassment and abuse; racist language; deficiencies in the citizen process; excessive patrols; to relationships w ith youth. Democratization of Motherland The next step will be to rqake recommenda tions in response to these co n ce rn s and to present them to Commissioner Charles Jordan and Chief Bruce Baker. Am ong the issues to be addressed will be police hiring and training; policing methods to insure the public's right to peacefully use the parks and to be safe from police harassment on the streets. We hope the Comm issioner and the Chief, w h o have been in v ite d to the m e e tin g , w ill take this as an honest a tte m p t of citizens to im pact city governm ent and to participate in the decisions that effect their com m unity. WHAT ABOUT OUR. morale ? o f Tanzanian troops and Ugandan liberation forces collectively called the Uganda N ational L ib e ration F ront. A belated, ill-advised attempt at rescuing the belagured dictator by the ever unpredictable Muammar Kaddafi o f Libya back fired when A m in was routed nonetheless. Last December, Ugandans went to the polls to choose a government for the first time in almost a decade and they elected M ilto n Obote whom A m in had overthrow n nine years previously and who had been Uganda’ s firs t elected President some nine years prior to that. N ig e ria : A fte r almost thirteen years of successive military regimes, Nigerians went to the polls in Oc tober o f 1979 and elected A lh a ji Shchu Shagari head the co u n try’ s first civilian government since the overthrow and subsequent assassination o f Sir A bubakar Tafawa Balewa way back in 1966. So far, the civilian government o f Shagari has performed much better than skeptics had thought it would: a healthy sign that democracy can work. Ghana: For almost a decade, Ghana, the standard-bearer o f the decolonization struggle, toyed with one m ilita ry regime after another. The first civilian govrnment headed by Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah who had led the nation to independence in 1957, was toppled in 1966. The civilian adm inistration o f Dr. K ofi Busia that took over for a while was very short-lived and Busia himself was soon on the outside looking in. Central African Republic: 1979 also witnessed the fall o f Idi Am in’ s com rade-in-blood, Jean Bedel- Bokassa and his subsequent flight from neighbouring Ivory Coast. He was replaced by David Dacko whom Bokassa had overthrow n in 1965. This past year, C entral A frica n Republicans voted for the first time since 1965 and returned Dacko to office by a rather slim margin. In Equatorial Guinea, only a lit tle removed from the C entral A fric a n R epublic, another notorious dictator, Macias Nguema Biyogo, was overthrow n and executed. The general who took over has promised elections for later this year. Botswana: One o f the few truly m ulti-party democracies anywhere in the w orld has just completed another round o f elections. A fte r the death last year o f the country’ s first President, Sir Seretse Khama, his successor, D r. Quett Masire, sim ply inherited his system and carried on as his predecessor had done. Tanzania’s Julius Nyerere who has led the country since indepen dence in 1961 has indicated this is his last term in office. He will retire when his term expires in 1985. S en eg al’s Leopold Sedar Senghor has, however, beaten Nyerere to the punch. He retired last December after leading the country since independence in 1961. His hand-picked successor, form er Prime Minister Abdou D iouf, has been stam ping his own brand on Senegal’ s p o litics in the past few months. There is talk that the Ivory Coast’ s 76 year old President, Felix Houphet-Boigny, may be retiring soon. U nlike Senghor, he has not nominated a successor but irsaid to be preparing the country fo r the changeover. Then there is Z im b ab w e: the elections that last year swept com rade Robert Mugave and ZAN U in to power have continued their clean sweep. In m unicipal elections this year, for the firs t tim e in almost nine decades, every town and city in Zimbabwe has a Black mayor. The one exception is Bulawayo, Z im babwe’ s second largest city where m unicipal elections were put o ff following the bloody uprising o f last March. Former dictators, Ian Smith and Abel Muzorewa, though not im prisoned, have been th orough ly humilated by being completely over whelmed in the municipal elections. In the words o f one foreign correspondent, they have become “ non-persons.” Zanzibar. Kenya. Mozambique have also had elections recently and a wide diversity o f opinion was ex pressed in all three countries. In some cases, candidates backed by the government were ousted by in dependents. These are only a few selected examples of the wave o f dem ocratization that has been sweeping A frica lately. I t ’ s almost safe to say that the age o f one-man regimes is just about over. The good tidings mentioned above seem to be having a domino effect and causing most African leaders to relax their once total control on the reins o f power. This will have a tremendous boost on the fig h t fo r lib e ra tio n o f Namibia and South A frica because no longer will it be argued that most A frican countries are “ ju st as repressive.” It is also a healthly sign o f the coming o f age o f A fric a n politics that divergent opinions can now be more openly expressed and African leaders no longer feel they alone have the divine right to rule. In a manner o f speaking, A frica is getting back to where she used to be before the Europeans came to "civilize” the Africans. Welcome back, Africa. Letters to the Editor Explore advantages of college education 43 Dear Editor: After reading the latest edition of the Portland Observer, I had to re spond to Ron Sykes’ "Sport T alk” colum n. R on’ s observation that Ralph Sampson should have “ taken the money and run” is distressing in terms o f what it says to the youth of the com m unity, Ron raises the question as to the reason fo r o b taining a degree. While we can agree that a degree is not for everyone, his statement raises some questions re garding his interest in the improve ment in the lot of youth in the com- munitv. Granted, Ralph could have become the highest paid rookie in the N BA; however, the list is long o f those who did take the money and ran, faded out in the first year, I'*', * O^CCrOM ¡TOuRVLAt- Soá. PhftVA POLICE MOWUV S IN K S ..- 0* "IT p O S S U I« f • p o R T L A N D '5 I s e c ow ? ? 7 t(o ^ç---- • phoney s e a rc h u .A r m n ( s \ • officers s fe a lin ^ pr/sooeri £ (T r7 ° ',or 4! p ro p e r ty • • e^'dence "'"‘ »W ed ■ and were near poverty not long after. Additonally, the playing life o f a professioal player is limited at best. Wise money management, wise investment, and careful plan ning insures that after their playing days, a player can continue to live in the style to which he has become ac customed. Education helps facilitate this process. Another point Ron makes is that the University o f Virginia would not have been interested in Ralph if he had not had his basketball ability. This is a given; however, the University does not maintain him as a student s tric tly on his playing ability. Consequently, he is benefit ing from the total learning process. I felt a need to share these com ments w ith you, since many times we hear our young people stating ideas (hat indicate they can “ play” Iheir way out o f poverty. While this is possible for some, the stark reality is that less than 1 percent o f them obtain com fortable life styles through this means. 1 encourage Ron to present a bet ter balanced opinion and positive direction fo r our youth. A d d itio n a lly , I challenge him to acknowledge the fact that Ralph had a d iffic u lt decision and to respect him fo r making the choice he feels is in his own best interest. Sincerely, Mattthette R. W illiams Assistant Personnel Manager State Farm Insurance Companies ! Stealing our water Portland Observer The Portland Observer IUSPS 969 6801 « published every day by Exie Publishing Company, Inc.. 2201 North Killings 0re9° n 97217 Pos> Office Box 3137. Portland ( 9/208 Second class postage paid at Portland, Oregon Subscriptions »10.00 per year in Tri County area Postrr Send address changes to the Portland Observer, P O Boi Portland, Oregon 97208 The Portland Observer was founded in October of IS Alfred Lee Henderson The Portland Observer is a champion of (ustice, equali liberation, an alert guard against social evils, a thorough and critic of discriminatory practices and policies, a senl warn of impending and existing racist trends and practices defender against persecution and oppression Bruce Broussard Editor/Publisher 3 ■ The real problems of the minority population will be view« presented from the perspective of their causality unrestrain Chronoically entrenched racism National and m tern i MtMMR Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association ~ 1 I " MEMtiR MMM™ arrangements that prolong and increase the oppression ol World peoples shall be considered in the context of th ploitation and manipulation by the colonial nations, includi United States and their relationship to this nation s hu tr©®tm«nt of its Black p o p u la tio n 283 2486 N ational Advertising Representative A m algam ated Publishers Inc N ew York 1st Place Community Service ONPA 1973 1st Place Best Ad Result ONPA 1973 5th Place Best Editorial ONPA 1973 Honorable Mention Herrick Editorial Award NNA 1973 2nd Place Best Editorial 3rd Place Community leadership ONPA 1975 3rd Place Community leadership ONPA 1978 3rd Place In depth coverage ONPA 1979 To the Editor: I f the United States is to be con sidered a second-rate nation in the world it is because of the sorry state our economy is in, not because we are weak m ilitarily (we have enough highly sophisticated weapons to destroy the world several times over and intercept whatever the Soviets might send over). One reason the United States economy is in such a sorry state is because o f government over spending. One such proposed (over) expenditure is the M X Missle system. It would cost more billions and billions o f dollars than any o f us can really imagine and deal another death blow to the U.S economy. Besides the negative affect the M X Missle program would have on the economy, we don’ t need it m ilita rily . Seventy-five percent o f our T rident missies are on sub marines at sea and are undetectable. The missies can take care o f anything (he Soviets (or any other nation) could throw at us. and are undetectable. These missies can take care o f anything the Soviets (or any other nation) could throw at us. There is another reason for citizens o f the Northwest to object to the proposed M X Missle project. Those missies ( if the proposal is passed by Congress) would be housed in U tah, an area w ith very little water. A recent news item reports that the state o f Nevada senate has passed a resolution calling fo r the federal government to divert Colum bia River water to Nevada to be used on the MX Missle project. This is getting mighty close to home, folks. Please, senda postcard(s) to your elected officials calling for a no vote on the M X missle and all other fu r ther nuclear weaponry develop ment. Betty McArdle Portland, Oregon HO M ES FOR RENT REMCO PORTLAND I l bdrm, 1 bath, all new paint, full[ Ibsm t, pantry, $195 NET per (month. |2 bdrm, 1 bath, hdwd floors, 1 close in, newly painted. I per month. $295 NE t | 12 bdrm, 1 bath, separate diningj Jrm, yard, 1 car garage, w-d hook- lup, $295 NET per month. J5 bdrm, 1 % baths, 2-story, com p le te ly REFURBISHED, hugel ■close in spacious. $350 NET per| |month. Ml homes located in the Nortl (Northeast Area. 297 5675 REMCO PROPERTIES Real Estate Mgmt. Maine it the only state in the United States whose name hat one syllable. I 1