• • • January 15, 1966, Portland Observer, Page 7 Today's Black leaders demonstrate King's philosophy AdsAorfa. will be published in the fall It is based on extensive research into previously unused sources in France, Ethiopia and the Sudan. In addition to King: .4 Biography (1970). I ewis is well known for M hen Harlem H us in I'ogue. a highly readable account of the Harlem Renaissance ol the 1920s. Now in the research stage is his biography ol W I B . DuBois. Future biographers of Martin 1 uther King, Jr will continue to treat him favorably, I ewis predicts. "The more carefully King is scrutinized, the better he looks. Even those things that allowed the FBI a season of delectation and voyeurism do not diminish the man's character." Black leaders today are demonstrating one ol Martin I uther King. Jr "s lesser known legacies by speaking out on U.S. foreign policy issues, says Rutgers University authority on Afro-American history. Dr Das id l evering I ewis, one of the foremost biographers of the slain civil rights leader, says that King's willingness to stale his views on foreign policy “ modeled a stand that is being revived today as leading Blacks go on record against the Reagan adm inistation's position on South Africa and its handling of crises in the Middle East.” King saw the clear connections between global problems and national issues, the Rutgers historian notes. "H e was among the first to oppose the Vietnam War, and he paid a vers high price tor that departure Although he won the Nobel Peace Prize, he was persecuted for the rest of his life by the justice department under President 1 yndon Johnson." ; . “The more carefully King is scrutinized, the better he looks. ” As America prepares to celebrate the first national holiday in honor of King, Lewis points out that although disturbing conditions still exist for Afro- Americans. King solidly succeeded in his forem ost goal of overcoming segregation in this country. Problems today are quite different from those that existed w hen the Southern Baptist minister led the march on Selma and preached his dream of an integrated America, noted 1 ewis, a scholar of international distinction who is Rutgers University's Martin I uther King, Jr. Professor of History. "Segregation was outlawed in the South,” he states. "Afro-Americans gained voting rights. Affirmative action programs have shown surprising resilience at the state and local levels, despite the so-called ‘color blind’ policies of the national administration. Our basic civil rights gains are probably irrever­ sible." Bui, I ewis maintains, if King were alive today he might seem out of touch with the times. “ He would probably risk appearing irrelevant by remaining ; -faithful to his large vision of a transformed society." Some ol King's heirs in the civil rights establishment, the old guard leader ship of the NAACP and Urban I cague, are "hopelessly shortsighted and mat ! tentivc to the new shape of problems," l ewis contends. “ They have disserved us all, particularly Black Americans, by continuing to focus solely on white racism." Lewis agrees with those Afro-American scholars who maintain that in spite of historical oppression, the crime, violence, illegitimacy and school ; dropout rate within Black underclass communities are determined more by social class und family instability than racial discrimination And. this group of scholars contends, government handouts, alone, cannot solve the crisis. 1 ewis, however, notes that while the government programs of the 'NX and <-'7(X may have overreached themselves and were marked by abuses, they did ; -.work. "Head Start and the Job Corps did help equip people for schooling and S helter jobs," he declares. * * Economics and class increasingly divide Black Americans, I ewis says, and pose particularly severe problems for young Blacks. Special ( )bsen ance of Rutgers University historian David Levering Lewis, a foremost bmlgrapher of the late Martin Luther King, Jr., says that Black leaders today are reviving a lesser known legacy of the stain civil rights leader w h e n they speak out on U.S foreign policy issues Lewis, an internationally known expert on Afro American history, is the State University’s Martin Luther King. Jr. Professor of History and is a resident of Jersey City. NJ " I he national pattern of declining minority enrollment in U.S. colleges and universities seems to come from a social psychology at work," he explains "D isenchanted? I hat’s a euphemism for the attitude among minority young people today With R) percent unemployment among Black youths and with even very bright youngsters unable to get jobs, many teel that there is no use going tocollege Il's a grinding situation." Characterized as "one of the most talented, productive and wide-ranging scholars ol Ins generation," I ewis joined the faculty of New Jersey's State University in September I his semester he will teach a course on the impact of European im perialism in A frica His book on that topic, titled Race to Martin Luther King, Jr. Birthday Black History Month The Afm-American Heritage liiceatennial Com m em orative (Juilt w ill l x on d isp la y at the ORIX,ON HISTORICAL CENTER I 2 AD SAX Park Ave , Portland, OR V 2 D S ID .t nt to t »5 p in . Monday through Saturday ADMISSION I R I I » * We remember him as a « ». - drum major for justice. •z • * % •j t’ £ « V t •/ WE SALUTE Oregon Department of Transportation . .. ■ r* jut ; >>v- Tfeaafc« . . - ». r n c \ ar-. ■ ‘ **’ e t * * • ‘ • 7* / , , fc" . . 4 • T