Portland Observer, December 1, 1982 Page 5 Washington Hot Line NAACP ELECTION by Congressman Ron Wyden On November 29, members o f the House and Senate will return for the so-called lame-duck session o f Con­ gress. Although there is a lot o f unfin­ ished business still on the table, it is unlikely that much o f it will be com­ pleted. For one thing, time is limited (to approximately three weeks). For another, there will be a lot o f pres­ sure to wait until the new Congress convenes in January to take up a lot o f the controversial measures. For example, although Social Se­ curity has been in the news a lot late­ ly, I don’t believe Congress will en­ act any significant changes in the system during the lam e-duck ses­ sion. Not only is time too short to properly consider such a complicat­ ed issue, but House leaders w ill want to wait until the new Congress is assembled to help ensure they have the votes to prevent massive cutbacks. I also think it is unlikely— though possible— that Congress w ill ser­ iously consider a rew rite o f the Clean A ir Act in the lame-duck. U n­ less members o f the Energy and Com m erce C om m ittee are able to agree on a short version o f the bill— which they have shown little p ro ­ pensity for to date— I just don’t set how it can be done. There are, however, a number o f issues that will be considered— if not resolved— during the lam e-duck. Following is my best guess as to ma­ jor issues that will be debated during that period: Jobs legislation: Congress almost assuredly will take up proposals for a new jobs p ro g ram — most likely one that will aim at providing jobs in road and bridge repair and other endeavors that will help rebuild Am- e rica ’s in frastru ctu re. There have been various proposals as to how such a program would be paid for, including a 5 cent-per-gallon tax in­ crease on gasoline. formulations include a direct subsi­ dy or a long-range stimulus bill such as one I have introduced that would open up pension funds for housing. Tax cut acceleration: Despite warnings by Congressional leaders that he doesn't have the votes to get it passed, the latest word from the White House is that President Rea­ gan intends to go ahead with plans to ask Congress to speed up the 1983 incom e tax cut from July to Jan­ uary. Although this move would in­ crease the federal deficit, the Presi­ dent claims it would help provide the econom ic shot in the arm the country needs to begin moving out o f the recession. Opponents claim it would only make matters worse. Housing: Legislation to shore up the hard-hit housing industry is still a possibility— though not a certainty E n viro n m ental: A lthough I ex­ pect Congress to defer consideration o f the Clean A ir A ct during the lame-duck session, I am fairly cer­ tain it will take up legislaiton to es­ tablish a process for identifying the best possible perm anent nuclear waste disposal sites. Congress has put o ff making a decision on this matter for too lo n g — and the health and safety o f the American public have been jeopardized as a result. The lam e-duck Congress is also likely to consider legislation to pro­ tect existing and proposed w ilder­ ness areas by prohibiting further oil and gas drilling and leasing in those areas. — for the lame-duck. Possible r ^ P2 ? 2 nd ^ran^ ’5 f,Lh? N8t'on®, Association for the Advancement OTColored People will hold ita annual meeting and biennial elections of 1?7 1982 814k°° p m at the Vancouver Ave. Firm Baptist Church, 3138 N. Vancouver Ave. Anyone 17 years or over "who appears on the roll o f the branch as a bona fid e member o f the branch at least thirty days p rio r to the elec­ tions” is eligible to vote. Lucious Hicks IV, President Betty White, Secretary brought to you every week by Rewriting American History A M ER IC AN STATE BANK by Dr. Manning Marable “From The Grassroots” W hy has Reagan repeatedly a t­ tempted to “ rewrite” the history o f the black freedom struggle? The most immediate and obvious reason is that the trend toward racist ran­ dom violence against blacks has continued unchecked in the 1980s, and that blacks o f every socioeco­ nomic class and political persuasion are becoming more militant. A lm ost d aily throu g h o u t 1982, there were a fresh series o f racial atrocities in virtually every corner of the country, as reported in the A t­ lanta-based publication, R acially- M o tiv a te d R andom Violence. On December 19, 1982, and January 16, 1982, the of rices o f a black newspa­ per, the Jackson Advocate (Missis­ sippi) were firebom bed and shotgunned, and s ta ff members were threatened. On M ay 3, 1982, Chester Reems, a black man in Dur­ ham, North Carolina, was attacked by a racist for “ walking with a white w om an.” The white man drove his autom obile into Reems, throwing him more than 80 feet. Reems was pronounced deal on arrival at (D ur­ ham's) hospital, having suffered a broken neck and multiple fractures. On May 26, 1982, one young black man was killed and another serious­ ly wounded by a gun-weilding white man in F ra n k lin to n , N o rth C a ro ­ lin a . Black fam ilies in Boston’ s H yde Park neighborhood exper­ ienced assaults, racial slurs, and had their homes vandalized during July and August, 1982. Much o f the racist violence came from white teenagers and young adults. White students at Chicago's Bogan High School harassed and at­ tacked young blacks. Between 55 and 73 black teenagers were arrested in the interracial righting, but police arrested no whites. W hite youths in D orchester, Massachusetts, fire - bombed an apartm ent building in which black fam ilies had recently moved. On August 8, a black family driving in downtown Boston were pursued by four young racists. The youths got out o f their car, covered their license plates and, while hurl­ ing racist epithets, began smashing the windows o f the fam ily’s car with chains and clubs. Fo rtu n ately the fam ily escaped with only^pinor in­ juries. The most pubjjbized “ lynch­ in g " occurred in B ro o k ly n , New York, on June 22. A gang o f young whites stopped an automobile con­ taining three black men. Two o f the men were cut and punched, but managed to escape. The third black man, W illia m Turks, was brutally beaten to death. The violence against blacks can be explained only through the prism of history. Immediately following the Compromise o f 1877, and the end o f the First Reconstruction, A fro - American people experienced a wave o f murderous race hatred and vio­ lence. W ith the demise o f the Sec­ ond Reconstruction, many whites have returned to the bloody A m er­ ican tra d itio n o f the a u to -d a -fe , mob violence, and crim in al beha­ vior towards peoples o f color. What we now are witnessing is “ the spirit o f the mob” ; a desire to inflict pun­ ishment at random ; to terro rize small children and their families; to force black people ever backward, into the darkest and most obscure corners o f p o litical discourse and economic life. The mob hates the black man and woman, because it fears the poten- tial strength o f united black political power, the danger o f being replaced on the jo b by a black person, the threat o f blacks living next door and underm ining property values. As W .E .B . DuBois suggested, the mob believes " th e Negro an in fe rio r ra c e ," and that " th is in fe rio rity must be publicly acknowledged and submitted to .” Leaders o f the “ mob spirit,” from the hoodlums in Bos­ ton, the rirebombers o f Mississippi, to the President himself, will distort the lessons o f the past to ensure ra­ cial inequality in the future. The black elite now cries in the face o f Reaganism, yet it too bears indirectly a share o f the blame for the present “ mob spirit.” The black elite w ill promulgate an economic program which m irrors the right- wing tendencies o f Social D em oc­ racy in most o f the Western world’s nations, but beyond that invisible boundary, they will not go further left. In short, the black elite calls for federal in itia tive s to p rovide em ­ ployment for the poor, but they will not advocate a clearly socialist agenda which would severely restrict the prerogatives o f private capital; they denounce the growing trend o f racist violence, without also seeing that such violence is a manifestation o f a more profound crisis within the cap italist p o litic a l econom y. The elite has no viable solutions to ad­ dress the proliferating and perma­ nent black reserve army o f labor, or the deterioration o f the inner cities. They are simply prepared to admin­ ister the crisis, but not to resolve it. Their failure, in brief, is one o f vi­ sion. The Old Guard constantly ma­ neuvers, responding to minor politi­ cal crises, but they are hopelessly in- ept in projecting a constructive pro­ gramme to transform the larger so­ ciety. The react, ra th e r than act; they imitate, rather than create; they plead, rather than demand. As the decades o f the 1980s progressed, it has become obvious that their lim ­ ited vision has created a temporary yet quite real b arrier between the black majority and their goals o f bi- racial democracy, economic justic, and freedom. W ith DuBois, I must agree thtt many critical failures o f both Reconstructions were the result o f the blacks* leadership " b y the blind. W e fell under the leadership o f those who w ould com prom ise w ith tru th in the past in order to make peace in the present and guide policy in the future.” A French in ventor patented th e first practical syn­ thetic fiber in 1884. He called it artificial silk. W e know it today as rayon. • The firs t w h ite road m a rkin g s fo r tra ffic c o n tro l, called "center line safety stripes," were painted on the surface of River Road, near Trenton, Michigan, in 1911. • The Egyptians learned by abo ut 1500 B.C. h o w to make w rought iron. They used a bellows made o f goat skin to force air into their iron-making furnace. • We do not do business w ith South Africa. American State Bank AN INDEPENDENT BANK Head Office 2737 N. E. Union Portland, Oregon 97212 Street Beat by Lenita Duke and Richard Brown Last week the Portland C ity Council engaged in a dog fight over police dogs. The Street Beat team asked Portland­ ers, “ Do you th in k the C ity C ouncil should spend money to acquire police dogs?" Debt counselling available Free professional counseling is being offered local residents whose fam ily income can't keep up with debts incurred when the economy was better. Consumer Credit Counseling Ser­ vice o f O regon, In c ., (C C C S ), a Portland-based non -p ro fit oigan- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ization, is already helping almost 100 North Portland-area residents find ways to make financial ends meet. The door is open to others. " W e ’re seeing people today who have never had a money manage­ ment problem in their lives,” says Lawrence W in th ro p , president o f 1 Abortion: A woman's choice Abortion is safe and legal in a clinic setting the Portland Utxnen's Health Center offers abortion services up to 19 weeks from the last rrKTistru.il (XTirxl The abortion procedure used up to I? weeks is vat uum aspiration w ith minimal dilation Dila­ tion and Fv.it nation (an adaption of the six non methodl is used fix abortions 13 to l9 w rT ‘ks Abortions are performed with optional local .friestfietic Medicaid. insurance and major credit cards are accepted Other referrals available r all for furtfier information Fees rw^D-n AMrA '<> to M weeks LNMPS18000 I I 14 weeks I N M f’ $?t5O0 FEMINIST W O M E N 'S HEALTH CENTER 15 19 weeks I NMP $10000 I FJK I L A N D 65,0 FOSTE* « oad 5OV777-7O44 97206 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I the 15-year-old service. He says CCCS services are avail­ able to anyone, regardless o f income level, who c an ’ t pay his— or her— bills. CCCS counseling alone is free. If more help is needed, there’s a debt management program for which a nominal charge is made (or waived in serious hardship cases). In these programs, counselors work with cli­ ents and their creditors to arrange mutually satisfactory programs for getting debts paid— usually by ex­ tending repayment periods and re­ ducing the amount o f monthly pay­ ments. Appointments for counseling may be made by calling 232-8139 (in P o rtla n d ). T h e re ’ s no o b lig atio n and advice alone is free. The service is funded prim arily by private con­ tributions and governed by a volun­ teer board o f directors. Don S w att Service Station Attendant No, 1 don’t. I believe it should be le ft to the C o un ty to take care o f instead o f the City. The public should decide whether we want police dogs or n ot. In some respects police need the dogs. In others the dogs aren’t needed. Wendy Rogers Student No, 1 don't like animals. I do not like dogs. I d o n ’ t think we’ve gotten to the point where they need police dogs. Michael Reif Salesman N o . The police sho u ld n ’ t have the dogs. They should im ­ prove the manpower instead of getting animals. This would be too much. Jay Hinshaw Machine Operator Carl Buchanan Security Officer ALL YOU NEED FOR MINOR ITCHES AND RASHES. I d o n ’ t thin k police need dogs. The police arc likely to let them go more on blacks than on whites. The dogs remind me of when Bull Conner sic’d the dogs on M artin Luther King. No. W e’ve had three friends who’ve gotten bit. The police sic the dogs on them. In court my friends c o u ld n ’t get any re­ course. Kevin Coyle Stock Clerk No! There are more im p o rt­ ant things than getting police dogs. They can borrow dogs from another precinct. I think Ivancie is out o f his m ind. We should go with Mildred. She has her ideas together.