Page 2, Portland Observer, September 24, 1986 EDITORIAL/OPINION The selection of Cleveland "C leve" Williams as Superintendent of the Portland Park Bureau by Commission Mike Lmberg was an excellent choice. didates who applied for the position during a national search for a replacement for William V. Owens, who formerly headed the Bureau. In addition, Mr. Williams is one of the few public servants who is willing to listen to the legitimate concerns of the public, be a repre­ sentative of the community, and has the vision to prepare the Park Bureau for the changes in the future. Overall, Mr. Williams will be a valuable asset to both the Black community and the City of Portland. The former Senior Executive Recreation Po licy Administrator for the city of Oakland, California, is well qualified to run the Park Bureau. Mr. Williams' extensive background in the area of parks and recreation management is the reason he was chosen over 50 other can "Que Sos Nicaragua?" Speakers, Exhibit comes to Portland The Nicaragua Mobile Education Project, a photo exhibit and speaking tour sponsored by the national, intertaith organization Witness tor Peace, will be coming to Portland, October 2 4, 1986 The bilingual exhibit of poems, testimony and 70 photographs is an effort to bring the faces and words of Nicaraguans directly to the people of North America The exhibit will be accompanied by three former Oregonians who lived and worked in Nicaragua as long term staff members of Witness of Peace Dorothy Granada. Charles Gray and Bruce Bondurant will speak at 7:30 p.m , Thursday, October 2 at the University of Portland. 5000 N Willa mette at the Buckley Center Auditorium where the exhibit will be displayed The exhibit will be open to the public from 7 10 p m . October 2; 10 a m 10 p.m , October 3: and 10 a m 2 p.m , October 4 Admission is free Granada. Gray and Bondurant will speak on their experiences in Nicara gua Granada worked for a number of years as a public health nurse with Charles Gray Multnomah County Gray is a former professor at the University of Oregon and co founded the social change funding foundation, McKenzie River Gathering Bruce Bondurant is presently a student at the University of Oregon. Granata, 55, Gray, 61, and Bondurant recently returned from a one year stay in Nicaragua where they accompanied delegations of U S and Cana dian citizens into conflict zones to document contra attacks against civil tans Granada and Gray also worked in a resettlement camp as a nurse and carpenter. The Portland program is sponsored by the University of Portland Cultural Programs office. Catholic Peace Ministry, Portland Central American Solidarity Committee, Portland Corinto Sister City Association, Oregon Fellowship of Reconciliation, Metanoia Peace Community, Council for Human Rights in Latin America, and Portland Clergy and Laity Concerned. Following the Oregon tour, which will include Eugene, Salem an<$ Astoria, the Nicaragua Mobile Education Project will be shown in Moscow Idaho. D orothy Granada Along the Color Line Or by Dr Manning Marable Manning M arable « prolasso! ot socotogy and poetical scianca st Puntos University Along the Color Lata newspapers mtarnationaey appears m over 140 _ _ _ _ _ Reagan in 1988?" President Reagan's recent speech on the crisis of South Africa revealed more about the factors behind his domestic policies and the current state of American race relations than it did about the tyranny of apartheid. Predictably, Reagan urged the South A fri­ can regime to hold fast against the tide of Black liberation: "The South African Govern ment is under no obligation to negotiate the future of the country with any organization that proclaims a goal of creating a Communist state." This statement was a vulgar lie on two levels. The mass democratic movement inside of South Africa, led by the African National Congress, is fully committed to a multiracial, democratic society And the Botha regime in Pretoria has no plans to "negotiate" anything with anyone, so long as its faithful friend in the White House protects and defends its die tatorship. Dimly perhaps, even Reagan recog nizes that his public statements don't square with the actual political conditions in South Africa. But the President's gut faith in white supremacy and ani Communism blurs and dis torts his comprehension of apartheid. Equally predictable was the response of the establishment's media to Reagan’s latest ver bal assualt on common sense. Columnist James Reston continued to praise Reagan's fierce opposition to economic sanctions, but added: "It was a typical Reagan perfor mance — eloquent, hopeful and largely irrele­ vant to the main problem ." Journalist An thony Lewis was slightly more on the mark. "M r. Reagan is on the side of P.W. Botha and the National Party rulers of South A frica," Lewis confirmed. "That was the real message of his speech. . . Reagan knows nothing of realities on the ground in South Africa. He sees South Africa as he sees all the world, through the glass of ideology." But even Lewis failed to understand why Reagan is so reluctant to severe his connections with the apartheid regime. Reagan and botha are ideo logical and political twins. The major differ­ ence between the two is that Reagan is lead ing the fight to crush Blacks' rights in a white majority country. The political forces of economic oppression and racial subordination see Reagan as their best hope to check the political advances of Blacks, Puerto Ricans, Chicanos, and working people. So desperate are our political oppon­ ents that some are even attempting to over­ turn the Constitution in order to give Reagan another four years in power. Conservative Democrat William Keenan of Portland, Oregon, has established a political action committee, the "Third Term PAC", which advocates the repeal of the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution. The amend­ ment, ratified in 1951, prohibits any person from being elected to the U.S. presidency more than two times. The gimmick has been picked up by Republican Congressman Guy Vander Jagt, who is also Chairman of the GOP Congressional Campaign Committee. In a let­ ter sent to 300,000 people, Vander Jagt stated: Ronald Reagan is one of the greatest American Presidents of all time, and I want to keep him on the jo b ." The problems in this hasty maneuver are immense. First, the De­ mocrats control the House of Representatives by a wide margin, and the Congress would have to pass this new amendment by the re­ quired two thirds vote. Second, it would be virtually impossible to get 36 state legislatures to pass a new constitutional amendment by the 1988 presidential elections. Vander Jagt's alternative scheme, however, is to push for Reagan's election in early 1989 as Speaker of the House of Representatives, a powerful post which legally does not require House member ship. The consensus viewpoint from both Black South Africa and Black America is, however, quite clear: Reagan is no friend of ours. Two terms for Reagan was too much. Letters to the Editor B y»- 4M < Is It Open Season On The C o n s titu tio n ? ■ r Concerning Open Season On Blacks?' BY Sister Eva Kutas. Regional Vice President of The National Lawyers Guild, Portland Chapter, it may be open season on those who allow the letter ot the law to de feat the purpose of the law I'm not a student of West ern Jurisprudence, but I do believe the document claims to represent the fruit of all basic political documents governing the Western world. It is a fine instrument, the Constitution. When the Constitution was drawn up by its founding fathers. Blacks were here but the Con stitution was not for us And. at the time that the Con stitution was drawn up, Black (people were swallowed up in Amerika and were called three fifths of a human being Here the political document that Amerika bases A fte r a speech w h e re the fo rm e r ch airw o m an of the U S Equal O p p o rtu n ity C om m ission warned of division created by the w o m en's m o v e m e n t, a fe w w o m e n w h o are progressing and a m ajority w h o are not. Eleanor Holm es N orton m et w ith a group of w o m e n to discuss the out of hand problem of teen pregnancy H olm es w as in Portland last w e e k e n d for the W o m en in The Year 2000 conference held at M t. H ood C o m m u n ity College P hoto by Richard J Brown 1 PORTLAND OBSERVER I 115 »of one y««' $25 for two Bo. 3137 Ponitori OR 97208 ®A3I? 5 X I Sl-SSI 33 < Apt 2 & * — iq CZ) z > i * i C l TV STATE SB Publ'Shers • v Association .f l W C». rw i' N ê WA pe ' w e t » kmb .» aatareatied n 1970 Suhac r p iw n t »15 00 par year m the Tn County area P o tt m aster Sand addreex changes to the Pordssa ( Hnrroer. P O B oi 3137 Portland. Oregon 97708 A lfre d L. Henderson. Editor/Publisher A l Williams, General Manager Association ■ Founded IM S X »I Tba ZSurtenrf O irtrrw r IU SPS W»SBni • putXatwd a w ry Thursday by { • » Pubtnnmfl Company. Inc . 1483 N E XAmp« worth. Portland Oregon 97711. Posi Ottica Bo« 3137. Portland. Oregon 97708 Second risst pottage perd at Portland, frag ori The P itilv ttl Otnrrrrr m em b er > * & ZIP Portland Observer —- -f S3 s 288 0033 N a tio n a l A d v e rtla ln g R ep re s e n ta tiv e Am algam atati Publishers Inc N a w VorX her political life on and her system of law on classified us as sub human Some will say, "Well, don't forget. Brother Jamil, we added to that the amendments, you know. And, we have amended our great document ." So you have. Isn’t it easy to amend a document: but you have not amended the work done by your fathers in destroying a nation of people. How easy it is to write words on a paper that they are now recognized as full human beings, but not one step has Amerika taken to amend the work of their fathers on our fathers What work is that? The work of robbing our fathers totally: the work of taking from us out names, our language, our religion, our God. our basic human rights: all of these were stripped from us and for 300 years the so called Christian caucasoid people of this nation denied us the human right to know When they decided that it was all right to teach Black people, they taught us what they wanted us to know about ourselves and about them, So we are over 100 years up from slavery, yet we are in the same or worse condition today than when our fathers were so called emancipated Yes. my dear Sister Eva, they amended the Constitution but they have not amended or restored Black people to their own mind, so that Black people can think, act and do as other civilized human beings >n the planet When our Black Brothers and Sisters from Afrika and the Third World look at us, they see us as so pitiful. They wonder what, if anything, could be done to restore us to sane minds, to human intelligence, where we would act by OhB another as any oppressed people should Anybody else oppressed can find unity. "Shooting Leaves Man Dead” by Jerry Garner I Port i « « I land Observer, 7 30 86): Here we are oppressed on all sides, and we are battling each other as though we were free with no enemy around us. while beautiful Sisters stroll Union Ave We can and will revive those whorish women and doped up men. They are only in a shallow grave, waiting for the master word, waiting for the mas­ ter grip We know what the Masons and Shriners are referring to when they say that Hiram was hit on the head and brought on a westerly course, and buried in the north corner where there was no light, a little sprig of Acacia coming out of Hiram's grave to show that Hiram, though dead, had the power to live again if only someone could apply the master grip Even though Black People have been evily mistreated in Amerika. you do not find Black people involved in espionage or involved in treasonous behavior against this country. With all we have suffered, Black people remain loyal and faithful to Amerika And even though Amenka's army is full of young Black men and women willing right now to pour their life's blood out on foreign battlefields for this country, Amerika still evilly mistreats the people of those soldiers. As you know. Sister Eva, neither Hitler nor any other man could have murdered six million people without the collaboration of many more or at least their shameless passivity W e must begin to question the right of a might which now murders in cold blood and wantonly smashes out any spark of rebellion in a desperate effort to erase those men/women of courage who dare to struggle for their freedom We are taught in school to honor the slave owner Patick Henry for saying "Give me liberty or give me death", but we are simultaneously mesmerized with materialism and taught to value just about everything else above liberty Those like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who dare to emulate Patick Henry's ultimatum are gladly given death I believe you will agree. Sister Eva, continuous réévaluation and re assessment of all legal institutions, processes and prin­ ciples are required if effective legal strategies are to be employed against inequality, injustice, and racism Since Slavery was nourished and sustained by racism and violence, racism and violence have been institution alized against Blacks, especially in the administration of justice Some of the great provisions of the Constitu­ tion still lay dormant for large numbers of poor people, regardless of color Police Union leader Stan Peters and some of Portland's police may force "Open A Veritable Pandora's Box" by the House Judiciary Committee Dr. Jamil Cherovee