Portland Observer, May 15, 1985, Page 3 METROPOLITAN Dodds awarded grant / All hough several authors have touched on the subject in incidental fashion, none to date hase concen­ trated their writing in Portland's civil rights movement during its critical formative years from I*M1 to 1953. according to Dr. Gordon B Dodds, professor o f history at Portland State University. Dr. Dodds w ill launch a research project this summer to explain how Portland (and to some extent the stale as a whole) changed during this com­ paratively short period o f lime from what he calls " , . .a very bigoted com ­ munity to one in which almost all legal and inform al harriers to freedom were removed." In late March, the Oregon C om m it­ tee for the Humanities awarded Dodds a $2,000 summer fellowship to help support his professional inquiry. As part o f the funding agreement, the PSU historian has agreed to submit a scholarly article to aprofessional journal for publication, and to deliver public presentations on results o f his work in at least two Oregon com­ munities. "T h is is a period in local history that many Oregonians have regarded like the weather, to some degree. We’ve talked about it, but we really haven't done much about chronicling it , " said Dodds. “ W ith good fortune, perhaps this new research w ill begin filling in the historical blanks,” he concluded. The period in question begins in 1941 with the arrival o f a large num­ ber o f Black war workers in Portland — the first substantial contintent o f Blacks in Oregon's history — and eloss with the passage o f the state’s public accomodations law in 195 J Dr. IXxlds identifies the Iswcal civil rights movement as led by perhaps 30 men and women who worked through grass-roots organizations which ad­ dressed neighborhixxl concerns, the admission o f Black students to local beauty schools, difficulties ol Blacks in securing homes in "w h ite " neigh- borhixxls, employment in sides posi­ tions in department stores and super markets, equitable insurance rales, and discrimination in public accom­ modations. These Portlanders accom­ plished much Uxally through educa­ tion and persuasion. Many o f them also were instru­ mental in securing a state fair em­ ployment practices law in 1949 and a state public accomnuxlations law in 1953, both o f which were among the first in the nation, according to IXxlds Children from Yunnan province in Chine performed native dances for Portland audiences last weekend. (Photo: Richard J Brown) Obo Addy and Candice Goucher at the opening of African Art from Portland Collections at Portland State (Photo Richard J Brown) African art at PSU depicts rich heritage by Nathaniel Scott "Between Realms: A frican Art fro m Portland Collectins," opened with a thump. Ah thumper, thump, thump. The thumper, thump, thump drumming o f Master Drummer Obo Addy brought the feeling o f the A fri­ can continent to the 200 or so people who gathered at Portland State U ni­ versity's (PSU's) opening ceremonies for the school's major art exhibit for the 1984-85 academic year. Thump Ceremoniously, Dr. Candice Goucher, Black Studies assistant pro­ fessor and the guest curator o f the exhibit, with the help o f Master Drummer Obo Addy, poured a liba­ tion and poetically asked our African ancestors to bless the art exhibit. Addy, speaking in his native A fr i­ can language, and Goucher, reading the traditional poem in English, said: “ Departed ancestors, this drink is for you/M other Earth, receive this d rin k / As custom requires we pour this drink for you/W e call on you this Friday evemng/We have gathered to cele­ brate the African continent/Let our meeting be truthful and g ixxl/L e t it be a blessing for the study o f Africa at PSU/Come and drink, all those departed and between realms/Let our energy combined be directed toward easing the suffering o f A fr i­ can peoples/Long life to (African studies at PSU)/Long life to all who have gathered here/I.et us succeed in all our undertakings/Let this work be crowned with success.” And then the doors were flung open to the beauty o f African art. Black sculptured figures aged time’s healing hand o f beauty; masks com­ manding places that streamed long ago into the here and now; knives, arrows, coins and crosses speaking the diversity o f Black craftsmen; showcasing the long and tedxxis hours visions o f reality entailed, and the beauty o f African resounded with ah thumper, thump, thump. To enter the l.ittm an Gallery where the art objects breathe the beauty o f time, is to step into, not back to, Africa. One can almost hear chants o f fertility rites; the asking o f the gods for the abundance o f rain; and the pleads with "departed" ancestors to light the way into the nether world: to hold in abeyance "Between Realms." The oldest piece in the exhibit. The Standing Figure, comes from Dogon, Mali in West Africa. The pet­ rified wood work o f art, "easily is 400 to 500 years o ld .” And bedazzle- ment is the only way to explain the feathered headdress from the Camer- oons in West A frica; whose splendid colors denote the status and the posi­ tion o f the wearer. Most likely, Goucher said, the one who wore it would have been o l political im por­ tance and the circle (how the feathers fan out) represents the circle ol the person's followers. The suggestiseness o f the many ob­ jects; how they How toward natural rhythms and actions; and the continu­ ation o f hues blending tones ol ele­ gance. are spellbinding The art is suggestive o f a people whose visions were visions o f reality. They represent the beauty ol decora- lion and the importance o f function­ ality. The artists' natural adherence to completeness, stirs the envy o f the pixel. And the history o f A frica that has gotten waylaid in the shuffle ol European indoctrination blooms like lilies o f the field. State Representative Margaret Carter, who rushed in from Salem to view the delightful art gifts from the motherland, remarked that: " I came down for the reception because I think it ’s very important. I think (tens) many o f we Black people have lost our identity.” Thumper, thump "Between Realms: African Art From Portland Collections,” runs through June 14 The art objects can be viewed in the l.ittm an Gallery on the second flix ir in Smith Memorial Center And in addition to the art objects, there a;e some stunning black and white photographs by Paul Ge- bauer. in both the While and Silver Galleries, which are also oil the sec­ ond floor. Gebauer's photographs capture the realism o f man's struggle with na­ ture. Anguish, joy, sorrow and the determination to be blazed black as m idnight’s beauty And the tender­ ness o f the artist’s skill lives in the essence o f his work. Truly, it's a sight to behold. A footnote to "Between Realms” is “ Caribbean Culture: The African Presence." which is a three week sum­ mer study abroad program offered in Jamaica and Santo Domingo. The Caribbean summer program is a six-credit course and it will be led and directed by PSU’s Black Studies Chairman, Dr Darrell M illner Par­ ticipants w ill depart from Portland July 13 and return August 4 Addi tional inform ation may be obtained by calling the American Heritage Association, 635-3702, or PSU’ s Black Studies Department. 229-3472. PSU’s art exhibit should be a must on school curriculums and commun­ ity organizations looking for things to interest children; to teach children; to provide children with the incentive to become inquisitive. Those who want to inspire children to understand the birthright o f mankind, should look no farther than "Between Realms: African A rt From Portland Collec­ tions." / 1 / 'J VIK( JNIA SLIMS l0W’»» MXTXO, You've come a long way, baby. Vi>nthol 14mg In M mq nicoln >■ ijN . Wrntho 5 «'.) t i l 0 6 mq nicotine av pet ciqj’ elle I ! f Repntt t eh R5 W arning The Surgeon G eneral H as D e term in e d That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. P h ilip M i* r m lm I '* * '