Kr« Trances Schoen-’Iewopaper Toon U n iv e r s ity o f Oregon L ib r a r y cugene, Ora^sn 97403 Do your favorite entertainers olav in South Africa? See below Refreshing summer salads Will blacks protest 1984 Olympics? ( / Ç Ç ) Herero Danzers spirit in motion See Page 6 See Page 2 See Happenings, Page 8 ¡PORTWND OBSERVER U *P S 959-680-855 © to r pw N o A«.» Volume XIII, Number 40 July 20, 1983 25$ Per Copy C o . tot I9U Civil rights leader pans Reagan record by Ralph G. Neas. Executive Director. Leadership Conference on C ivil Rights First day customers find fresh bargains at the naw Farmers Market. Every Saturday through October, local farmers and home gardeners will sell produce. The Farmers Markst Is located on the corner of North Williams and Knott, Just south of Emanuel Hospital. (Photo: Richard J. Brownl Recent statements by the Justice Department constitute an astonish­ ing misrepresentation o f the Reagan Administration’s record on civil rights. For the Administration, un­ less it change, course dramatically, will be remembered for its repeated attempts to weaken the civil rights laws enacted over the past two dec­ ades and to restrict the remedies presently available to Blacks. Hispanics, women, and other m i­ norities who have been victims of unlawful discrimination. T o combat its deserved reputation for insensitivity, inactivity, and un­ fairness in civil rights matters, the Administration has launched an ex­ tensive public relations campaign. In addition to highly publicized "field trips,” the Justice De­ partment has been maintaining that the only real substantive d iffe r­ ences between the Administration and the civil rights community is a disagreement over the use o f busing and quotas. Such an assertion is absurd and defies the reality o f the Adm inistra­ tion's performance on civil rights over the past two and one half years. Indeed, a case can be made that the Administration is using these two controversial issues to mask the absolutely abysmal record it has compiled in virtually every area o f civil rights enforcement. A brief review will amply demon­ strate the nature and the extent o f the Administration's lack o f com­ mitment to civil rights. The A dm in­ istration: • led for many months the opposi­ tion to a strong and effective ex- tensionof the Voting Rights Act; • tried to reverse the well estab- Portland group gives aid: Salvadoran refugees tell their stories by Robert Lothian Part two o f three parts Flight from army scorched earth campaigns has meant an almost un­ imaginable survival struggle for Salvadoran and Guatemalan refu­ gees, say refugees in Portland and representatives from C A M IN O , the Central Americans in Oregon Refugee Support Committee. "They have had an incredibly hard hie, barely escaping with their lives. "T h e y have incredible survival skills," said Don Barnhart, pastor o f Centenary W ilbur Methodist Church in S.E. Portland. Barnhart said he met one Salva­ doran couple passing through Port­ lan d who fled after discovering their names on a death list dropped over their village by airplane. The couple spoke o f widespread and indiscrimi­ nate repression, o f bodies floating in the river near their village. One local church fam ily is sharing their home with a young Salvadoran, and they are also providing him with a part-time job. Through an interpreter, he said he left his homeland because he felt that union activism made him sus­ pect. H e feared for his life, he said, because 200 people from his neigh­ borhood had already disappeared. " N o one can say whether they are dead or alive, they’ve just disap­ peared." he said. Entering C alifornia illegally, he was picked up by immigration au­ thorities and detained for a year. W hile awaiting deportation, he ap­ plied for political asylum and was bailed out by a local church. He then came to Portland, has been here two months and hopes to stay. His asylum application is still pend­ ing. " T h e whole situation in El Salvador since 1930 has been very bad.” he said. W ar, repression, and outrages perpetrated by the secret police and right wing death squads, are aimed at trying " to stop the movement for a better way o f life ,” he said. “ A lot o f people think the Central Americans come here for economic reasons, but that's not tru e ." El Sal­ vador is a poor country, he said, but it is still possible to eke out a reasonable living, in spite o f the war. " T h e principal reason is p oliti­ c a l," he said. Now , after w ork, he combs the streets looking for refugees who need help, and ha, met about 20 Sal­ vadorans and 10 Guatemalans that way. " T h e people on the street have nothing. I t ’s hard living under­ ground, but the Latin person is a l­ ready used to living a kind o f under­ ground existence in the U .S .” “ The people on the committee have done everything possible to make sure there is help," and, he said, the Medical A id for El Salva­ dor campaign headed by Ed Asner and other aid programs organized in Europe and North America are greatly appreciated back home. Even though he finds it "cold all the time here,” he likes Portland. He desperately misses the warm weather o f his homeland, he said, however, also soccer, swimming in Lake Uopango near San Salvador, playing drums called timbales and black beans cooked the way he likes them with garlic and onions. Portlanders have also contributed "thousands" toward meeting the basic living expense, of a Guatemalan fam ily as they start a new life here. Through an interpreter, they said they barely escaped an army cam­ paign during which relatives and friends in their village were m ur­ dered. " I always say that I am not political and neither is my fa m ily ," said the woman. "B u t now, people suffer in Guatemala whether they are political or n o t." "T h e poor people who stayed behind, somejutve disappeared for­ ever. They died innocently. Some are still alive but have been tortured and can never work again. " M y mother is being persecuted and followed by the army. They have tortured and killed many o f my relatives. "T h e government is concerned with murdering people and getting more arms. The government ha, given permission to kill, it doesn’t matter if it’s a fam ily,” she said. Now , said the woman, " I want to take the fear out o f my children." Medical care, household necessi­ ties, and clothing have been donated to the fam ily, and volunteers act as translators and are teaching them English, and also helped them learn to use T ri-M et and look for work. In addition, new Portland friends invited them on outings to the country and to the zoo. " T h e refugees have a really deep need to be self-reliant, support themselves and not have to go pick up free bags o f fo o d ," said Terry Rogers, C A M IN O coordinator. "T h ey're dealing with heavy duty poverty,” she said. "T h e y ’ re putting out their best effo rt to get on their own feet. But often it just isn’t possible, so money is neces­ sary," and also "s a fe " housing, clothing, food and employment "o n a limited basis," she said. Rogers said that Portlanders have responded warmly to the refugees, and the committee is looking to ex­ pand. “ There’s been a really positive response by people here once they realize who the refugees are, that they’ re here, and that they can contribute personally to their sur­ vival,” she said. For more inform a­ tion contact the American Friends Service Comm ittee, 230-9427. • • • • • • • lished federal policy o f denying tax exempt status to schools which discriminate on the basis o f race; has opposed the Equal Rights Amendment; has threatened the independence and integrity o f the federal judici­ ary by supporting legislation which would strip the Supreme C o u rt’s jurisdiction over certain constitutional issues; has jeopardized the independence o f the Civil Rights Commission by trying to fire every member o f the Commission; has repeatedly sought to impose an "in te n t" test in discrimination cases; has refused to endorse the W omen's Economic Equity Act, legislation to eliminate sex dis­ crimination in key economic areas; has been unable or unwilling to enforce vigorously the law with respect to discrimination in hous­ ing, in education, and in employ­ ment; has tried to lim it the coverage o f civil rights taws by narrowing the definition o f "federal financial assistance" and by prohibiting discrimination only in those pro­ grams and activities for which federal funds are given directly. In the coming weeks and months, whether it is in the context o f de­ fending President Reagan's unprec­ edented actions regarding the U.S. Civil Rights Commission or his dan­ gerously weak fair housing bill, we can expect much more rhetoric from the Administration on quotas and busing. But we must reject this transparent attempt to deflect atten­ tion away from the Adm inistra­ tion’s terrible record on civil rights. Indeed, we must demand that the Attorney General and the Assistant Attorney General for C ivil Rights start enforcing fully all our civil rights laws, including those with which they disagree. O nly then can they faithfully uphold their oaths as the champion o f the victims o f dis­ crim ination, rather than being per­ ceived as their adversary. And only then can they begin to undo the per­ ception o f unfairness that best char­ acterizes the Reagan Administration policies regarding Blacks, Hispan­ ics, women, and other minorities. The 1 eadership Conference on C ivil Rights is a coalition o f 163 national organizations representing Blacks, Hispanics and Asian A m eri­ cans, women, labor, the disabled, the aged, religious groups and m i­ nority businesses and professions. aaHMaBBaaMBMBBBMNMaaHaaaMaHMBBBaBBaaMaaMMaMaaaMBaaaaaaHaaBBaaa Entertainers join South Africa ban By M ichael Beaubein. A frica News N E W Y O R K — The movement organizing a cultural boycott of South A frica continues to grow in the United States despite the lack of national coordination and despite the absence o f an authoritative list of artists in violation o f resolutions adopted by the United Nations Gen­ eral Assembly since 1968. New York has evolved as a focal point for the cultural boycott, and activists here recently mounted demonstrations to encourage boy­ cotts o f the performances of Ray Charles, Lou Donaldson. Dakota Stanton, Chick Corea and Frank Sinatra, all o f whom have per­ formed in South Africa. In some cases this type o f protest has brought immediate results. A f ­ ter pickets virtually shut down her concerts in New York and New Jer­ sey, for example, M illie Jackson joined with Stanley Turrentine and pledged never again to perform in apartheid South Africa. The demonstrations here have been led by two community-based organizations: the Unity in Action Network, sponsored by the Patrice Lumumba coalition and the African Jazz Artists Society (AJASS); and the Coalition to E,nd Cultural Col- laborajion with South A frica, which was formed by the National Black United Front (N B U F ). The lack o f national coordination for the movement will soon be ad­ dressed by the lobby group Trans- A frica, which is now promoting the boycott as one o f its priorities. The campaign was launched on June 4 at TransAfrica's sixth anniversary meeting with a press conference fea­ turing the O'Jays. In addition to their pledge to sup­ port the boycott, the O'Jays an- nounced plans to underwrite the costs o f the TransA frica Entertain­ ment and Apartheid Symposium to be held in Los Angeles during 1983. The symposium is designed to in­ form the entertainment industry about (he United Nations-sanc- tioned ban on tours o f South Africa. The problems that activists have encountered due to lack o f an authoritative list o f boycott viola­ tors will soon be a thing of the past. The United Nations Special C o m ­ mittee Against Apartheid has an­ nounced plans to compile and pub­ lish a register of cultural contacts with South Africa. The register will be compiled by the United Nations Center Against Apartheid in six-month intervals. The first register w ill cover the per­ iod o f January through June o f 1983 and will be distributed in (he fall. Artists who visited South A f ­ rica during this period, however, can escape inclusion by pledging to respect the boycott in the future. Activists have been heartened by a growing list o f cancellations in 1983. Among those artists who have turned down contracts and an­ nounced their refusal to perform in South Africa are Barry W hite, the Commodores, Third W orld, the Jacksons, Tony Bennett and Odys­ sey. A t the same time, however, Peter Braham, a South African promoter, boasted to the A frican Capetown Times late last year that he had signed M artha Reeves and the Van- dellas, Harold M elvin and the Blue N o es, the Stylistics, the Shilites, the Three Degrees, Edwin Star, the Temptations, Hot Chocolate, and the Drifters for South African tours.