Page 4 Portland Ofa—r v r , Dacambar 8,1962 Music Maker EDITORIAL/OPINION by Herb L. Cawthome NAACP faces crucial choice The N A A C P faces its most important election in a decade and the membership has a very clear choice. Since the early 1970s the Portland Branch has been largely inactive. It has sold memberships, held fundraisers, hosted conventions, but has not been on the cutting edge of the struggle. The N A A C P did not participate in the Coali­ tion for School Integration and did not lead the struggle to bring equity to P o rtlan d 's black school children; the N A A C P did not lead the fight to stop the d ilu tio n o f black votes; the N A A C P did not lead the fight against police b ru tality and to keep the police out o f the schools. The role o f the N A A C P , Portland Branch, for the past 10 years has been to remain silent or to support other organizations who are taking the lead. There is a great need for an N A A C P in Port­ land. The work o f the N A A C P is far from over —quality education, fair housing, jobs, justice, voter education. Hazel G . Hays has a history o f activity. She has been on the picket line, in the boardrooms. She is aggressive, intelligent, articulate. She can negotiate and she can fight. She can work with other organizations such as the Black United Front or the U rban League. She can support and she can lead. With Hazel Hays at the helm the N A A C P will make news again. The N A A C P will come to life and take its rightful place in the community— in the forefront o f the civil rights/hum an rights movement. Require professionalism Herm an W ashington, principal o f Tubman Middle School, is under fire from his staff. High among their complaints is Washington’s desire that teachers dress professionally, his opinion that jeans and tennis shoes have no place in the classroom. W e agree with Washington. Last spring the Observer was invited to make a presentation to a class. W hen we arrived in the early afternoon, their teacher was dressed in shorts, T-shirt and tennis shoes. He apologized to us for his appear­ ance, saying he had gone jogging at noon. We wondered if he had apologized to the children. The classroom was in complete chaos, with no discipline and no respect. We d id n ’ t wonder why. Teachers arc important role models for chil­ dren; their job is to help pass on our culture to our children. A teacher’s slovenly appearance tells the child a lot about that teachers opinion o f himself and his profession, o f the students and his community. I f they had any pride in their profession and any regard for the example they present to their students, teachers would act and dress profes­ sionally in the students’ presence. Last weekend, 1 heard life coming out of a horn. The mind, body and spirit—all working in harmony for one purpose: to make music. Thara M em ory is a musical won­ der. W ith every clement o f his being he plays. His trumpet seems a natur­ al part o f his an ato m y. W hen you listen to him b lo w , you w onder if the soft breeze o f a summer origin­ ates in the horn o f T hara M em ory. The cool wind wisely steps aside to a superior force when he makes (hat trumpet sing. A t D e le v a n 's , the place where good jazz can be heard consistently. M em ory produced his "sounds full o f life .” A t the trum pet sang, you could see that his eyes actually wrote out the music. In the expression, you could tell that he was in love w ith the music he made. H is love seemed consuming and private. A ll listeners were welcome, yet distant observers, free to enjoy w hatever pleasure they could, but fully aware that they would never know the true intim acy o f the bond between this man and his lady. W e marveled at the love affa ir, even at a distance. I f this man and his lady can make such p o w e rfu l music, w hat d iffe re n c e does it m ake that we cannot know the inner workings o f the relation ­ ship. One wonders why such a talented musician remains in Portland, o f all places, a dry desert o f jazz apprecia­ tion. Here he's not respected nor re­ w arded fo r his a rtis try . N ickles here, dim es th ere, he can h ard ly keep body and soul together. Maybe it's not important where he lives. All that matters is the lady he loves. Wherever they go, so long as they go together, they make music. And the music sustains them, together. We should all be so luckyl As I watched him do his thing last Saturday night, I recalled that sever­ al months ago, T h a ra M em ory did som ething th a t a t firs t glance seemed o u t o f c h a ra c te r. H e a p ­ peared before the Board o f Educa­ tion. T hat scene was also unusual. The Board was meeting in a tiny se­ cluded room upstairs in the A d m in ­ is tra tio n B u ild in g . D o w n s tairs , members o f the black co m m un ity were occupying the regular Board meeting fa c ility , loudly protesting the decision to reverse a fo rm e r agreem ent on the lo c a tio n o f H a rrie t T u b m a n M id d le School. The atmosphere was a circus o f con­ fu sion . It was tense, as the Board pretended that the disruption would not prevent it fro m co n du ctin g “ business as u su al.” S till, T h a ra , like his music, seemed composed, confident in his own world. Thara had come to argue for the Jazzm in C o m m u n ity M a rc h in g Band. “ There are no A fr o -A m e r i­ can children in the symphony. W ith 7 ,5 0 0 students in the c o m m u n ity and most o f those in the pub lic schools, there should be 400 or 500 in the music programs. Music is an im portant part o f the A fro -A m e ri­ can cu ltu re. I f you take away the music, you have taken away a vital part o f the com m unity." T h e questions fro m the Board were insulting, demeaning and in questionable taste. The Board mem­ bers did not necessarily intend to be mean and in s u ltin g , but they just c o u ld n 't help them selves. T h e blacks d ow n stairs w ere creatin g havoc. T h e ir r ita tio n show ed, a l­ though the issue was completely un­ related. The discussion proceeded like a cross-examination, as though Thara was on trial. Is it true that you criti­ cize the District's music programs, he was asked. D o you tell black chil­ dren to stay away from some music teachers? Is (his p ro gram just fo r black students? Som eone to ld us that you went into a classroom and wrote “ this is c r a p " on the b la c k ­ board o f one o f the music teachers in the district, is this true? Thara re­ mained cool, handling the questions as though each was simply the chal­ lenge o f a difficult series o f notes in a new tune. In fa c t, he was o u ts tan d in g : A teach er, w eaving bits o f c u ltu ra l perspective, history, and advocacy fo r a p ro gram to gether lik e he weaves the notes o f his horn in to beautiful music. F in ally the Board agreed to "lo a n " the Jazzmin C o m ­ m unity M arching Band "s u rp lu s ” instruments. Thanks to this e ffo rt, the young people could now get to work learning the techniques o f the famous Southern M arching Bands. Thara M em ory was now in a better position to pass his love on to the younger generation. The moral o f the story is simple: Love, true love, makes music. And Thara Mem ory is a music maker. Letters to the Editor Racists not needed at Tubman MS Parents support Tubman principal As parents o f students at Harriet M r. Washington also has the sup­ port o f parents in demanding that the s ta ff dress ap p ro p riately. It is Tubman Middle School, we would the oaivc auumpticr. on the part of tike to voice o ur support o f the school's p rin c ip al. H erm an W ash­ ington, and to protest the public at­ tack made against him by a small group o f teachers in last Sunday's Oregonian. M r. W ashington has the support o f most o th e r parents as w ell as teachers, but none o f those persons was interviewed by Kathy Durbin. As parents, we have specifically requested that the principal tighten up the discipline in the classroom. It has been the co n ten tio n o f many parents that some teachers refer too many students to the o ffic e on the slightest p ro v o c a tio n ra th e r than learn to manage their classrooms e f­ fectively. many teachers, especially the young, inexperienced ones, that the way to relate to poor or minority students is to dress the way they perceive those children dressing. Nothing could be further from the truth. W e realize that M r. W ashington may be d ifficu lt to work fo r. H e is idealistic, h ard -w orking and cares forem ost about the children under his care. But teachers, i f they are professional, should learn to w ork under people who make demands on them. It is unlikely (hat the complaints o f a sm all group o f em ployees in another school or in any business would warrant all the space and at­ tention that was given to (he T u b - man story. A ny in s titu tio n has its To the editor: group o f malcontents, who would love the attention and publicity that the T u b m a n group was accorded. They arc seldom given that oppor (unity, however. The recent dismis­ sals o f principals o f C a tlin Gabel and H ille l, both p riv a te , upper- income, west-side schools, was giv­ en little or no a tte n tio n . O ther schools that have had similar inter­ nal problem s are not given w id e­ spread, one-sided stories. Tubman does not need further negative pub­ licity when so little is given to the positive things that are going on there. Fin ally, the credibility and judg­ ment o f the teachers w ho would damage their school by cooperating in such a public attack on the person they w ork under must be scru tin ­ ized. A concerned Tubman parent Herman Washington provides role model To the editor: In mid-September a friend had a ch ild in fo ster care placed in her home. Becaue of my background in w orking w ith school aged children and developing m ulti-cultural, non­ sexist p ro g ram s , she asked me to find a good m iddle school to place the child in. As a m other who had vowed never to place my child in a public school I expressed my bias and checked out schools. Based on in fo rm a tio n about the cu rricu lu m , the racial m ake-up o f the s ta ff, and reco m m en datio n s from people I know in academ ia I chose H a r r ie t T u b m a n M id d le School. O n the day I enrolled the child I met with the counselor, the adminis­ trative assistant and the principal. A fte r m eeting w ith the three o f them, I not only felt like I had made the right choice fo r the ch ild o f a frie n d , but hoped th at when my child reached middle school age the three o f them would still be at Tub- MHMI * man. What W ill Fletcher identifies as a co m m un icatio n problem between the tw enty w h ile teachers and the p rin c ip a l in the a rtic le , “ R ift Develops at T u b m a n Between Teachers and Principal,” is a cultur­ al d iffe ren ce , better know n as ra ­ cism. A ttitu d e s about black c h ild re n like Ron Evans "Rewards should be provided to counteract stress, Tub- man is a m inority school which has more severe educational problem s," is what makes me fearful o f putting my black child in a public school. O th e r than his paycheck I c a n 't im ag ine w hat o ther rew ards M r . Evans and those who support his at­ titude think they're entitled to, com­ bat pay perhaps? I w onder i f M r . Evans were working in Beaverton he would expect additional "rew ards." Evans and the other white teach­ ers at the school who oppose M r . W ash in g to n ’ s discipline policies, ideas about professionalism in how teachers dress, exemplifies their ig­ norance about black cultural histori- cally relevant to effectively teaching black children. The very attitudes and style they are opposed to in M r. Washington's ap p ro ach have been used to give people lik e M a r tin L u th e r K ing, Z ora Neal H u rston , Roy W ilkin s, Barbara Jordan, M alcolm X , Phyl­ lis W h e atley and m any o ther fa ­ mous blacks who have made contri­ butions to this country. T h e O reg o n ian has a responsi­ b ility to its readers and the black c o m m u n ity , to present w hat the black co m m un ity feels about M r. W ash ing to n's approach (a fte r all Tubm an was created for the black com m unity) as well as the point of view o f the s ta ff members who d o n 't agree w ith the other twenty (which Ms. Durbin neglected to in­ clude in her article). T he role m odel and im age M r. Washington portrays for black chil­ dren is long overdue in P o rtlan d Public Schools. Elizabeth A . Waters Portland Observer ,0«” " • » I . . The P n n lt n d O b e re re r IU S P S 959 SSOI la p u b ln h a d «vary Thursday by I n a Publishing Company. Inc . 2201 North Killings w orth. Portland. Dragon 87217. Post Ottica B o i 3137. Portland. Oregon 97708 Sacond class postage paid at Portland. Oregon l«l IBM Subscriptions S10 00 par year in the Tri C ounty sres P o s t m a s te r Sand address changas to tha P m i l i n i l Observer, P 0 Bos 3137. Portland. Oregon 97208 At McGilberrv, Editor/Publisher ^ tiu c'fWon - Founded f 0M Al H'llhams, Advertising Manager 283-2486 N a tio n a l A dvertising R ep resentative A m a lg a m a te d Publishers Inc N e w York To the editor: It is very u n fo rtu n a te that some teachers at Tubm an are dissatisfied and ready to te rm in a te th eir em ­ ployment. I as one parent want it made clear to you, when you want to be else­ where it's probably best for every­ one concerned that you are. State­ ments m ade to the press help to point up the problem s we all face every day we live— racism. T o the teacher who made the anonymous statements as to her feelings about the students (" T h e w hite stuuents have no respect for M r. Washington and the black students say man, 100 fights and no suspensions"), you're a racist and should go teach where you feel safe, secure, unchallenged and where everyone you see from m o rn ing to night is o f a race you d o n 't d islike. I as a parent resent your statement and hope surely you are one, along with M r. Evans, who has resigned. A women such your­ self cannot be trusted to be fair with my beautiful daughter who is black, there to be educated and not judged by bigots upon seeing her face. M r. Evans, I'm hoping you w ill find a school where leach in g is easy. Judging from your statement to the press you should never have taken your position at Tubman which you knew had a high percentage o f m i­ nority students. You feel stress be­ cause o f it, you feel teaching black students should be rewarded above the usual. The severity o f the educa­ tional problems are o f course caused by minority students only and as the teacher who stated "w h ite students have no respect for M r. Washington and the black students say man, 100 fights and no su sp e n s io n s ," you must also feel white is right so please before taking your next jo b , make sure (here are no m in ority students present or y o u 'll have another ex­ cuse to cause havoc there also. I wish you w ell in some new jo b where h o p e fu lly yo u r views w ill never have to touch another m inor­ ity student. M rs. K o b litz, it is often stressful to deal with disciplinary situations in the class but where else should they be dealt w ith? Teachers who c a n ’ t handle problem s in th eir classes have for too long sent stu­ dents to the office. This has resulted in students being branded and sus­ pended for trivial matters and if you are honest, you’ ll admit it. I ’ m sorry to see you go but if it is as you say adm inistrative m atters branded as racism why did you not keep them ad m in is tra tiv e and out o f the pa­ pers. I p erson ally know o f w hite principals whose s ta ff did not like th em , were happy as larks to see them leave the p ositio n but they never did what you have done. You talk about being there for the stu­ dents, not w anting to w ork in the c o m m u n ity any lon g er because some say in te g ra tio n has not worked. But let's face it, M rs. K o ­ blitz, if things are not on your terms they’ re no good— that is wrong it ­ self. Integration , o f course, cannot work if white people who don't get their way are always willing to turn and ru n . Teachers have w orked hard to m ake the school w o rk . Teachers are not the only ones. I fought fo r T u b m a n eight years o f my life. O ther people, even longer. But you should know what I know: the princip al runs the school, w ith the help o f teachers, parents and students. Please don't take all your frustration out on M r. Washington. Rem em ber, there have been three other principals before him which helped to cause this dilemma at the school. I f I have concerns, it is that the students have not helped to m ake school rules as they should have. T o those teachers who are stay­ ing, thank you— you are appreciat­ ed very much. It would also help if you who don’t feel the school is h or­ rible would speak up. Sherrian H agg arW arrcn Wants NAACP presidency To the editor: The purpose and aim s o f the Portland Branch of the N A A C P shall be to improve the political, educa­ tional, social and economic status o f minority groups; to eliminate racial prejudice; to keep the public aware o f the adverse effects o f racial dis­ crimination; and to take a lawful ac­ tion to secure its elimination, consis­ tent with the efforts o f the national organziation and in conformity with the articles o f incorporation o f the Association, its constitution and by­ laws and as directed by the national Board of Directors. The national priorities, and there are many, here in P o rtla n d , under my leadership ( if I'm elected), w ill focus on political action, economic d evelopm ent and m em bership. These are a few issues approved at our national convention this year in Boston. I am seeking the o ffic e o f the president of the Portland Branch of the N A A C P At present I am employed as the Director o f C ivic Relations, Public A ffairs Department, Portland G en­ eral Electric C o. A t present, I serve as a com m ission m em ber o f the Slate o f Oregon's Juvenile Services Com m ission, vice-president o f the Board o f D ire c to rs , T ri-C o u n ty Youth Services C onsortium , mem­ ber o f the U rb a n League o f P o rtlan d , co o rd in ato r fo r the Lou Rawls Parade o f Stars (a fund-rais­ ing special) to b en efit the U n ite d Negro College fund, member o f the N A A C P Board C o m m ittee on en- ergy and economic development. O n Sunday, December 12, 1982 at 4 p.m. at Vancouver Ave. First Bap­ tist C h u rch , the P o rtlan d Branch, N A A C P w ill hold its biennial elec­ tion o f officers. I seek the office of president to carry out the purposes and aims o f the N a tio n a l Associa­ tion fo r the A dvancem ent o f C o l­ ored People. Bernard Richardson Receive your Observer by m a il— Subscribe today I Only $10°° per year. Mail to: Portland Observer Box 3137 Portland. Oregon 97208 Name Address City-------------------------- _--------State____________ Zip