U n iv e rs ity o f dragon L ib ra ry n , Or cron 9?403 PORTLAND OBSERNER *’» *S*»O*«# f Volume XVII, Number 28 1^, -w Monday, May 18, at 1 p.m,, Operation PUSH Cleveland and the Ohio Association of Beauticians, Inc. "funeralized" the Revlon Company at the House of Wills Funeral Home. The serviced began with a processional of religious representatives, sororities, fraternities, community leaders, etc Following the "casket" filled with Revlon products, resolutions and an obitu ary were presented. The funeral came about as a result of PUSH'S boycott of the May 20. 1987 25C BOYCOTT REVLON Revlon Company. The boycott was initiated after Irving Bott ner, president of Revlon's professional products division, stated in Newsweek Magazine, "in the next couple of years, the black-owned businesses will disappear They will all be sold to white companies." Additionally, Bottner said, "We are accused of taking business aw.iy from black companies, but black consumers buy quality products Too often their black brothers didn't do them any good This was taken as an in suit to the black community, and a projection of white com panies to eventually take over the black consumer market of hair care and cosmetics, an estimated billion dollar a year busi ness. All persons were asked to come dressed in traditional color of mourning to symbolize their sincerity in the symbolic funeral service Mourners were encouraged to bring their Revlon pro ducts for burial preparations. College President: A Man of Achievement Dr Richard Turner. III. President of Lane C o m m u n ity College by Tiffany Kell During a tim e yyhen very few Blacks got an education, academics were top priority for Dr Richard Turner, III, President of Lane Com m unity Col lege, in Eugene Neither of Turner's parents received a college education, m fact his father never finished high school, quitting in the eleventh grade to become a carpenter There was never any doubt in Turner's parents' mind that he w ould create his ow n footsteps In high school. Turner w a sn 't interested in sports, music was his first love Turner was born and raised in Charleston, South Carolina A t the age of five, Turner began studying the piano Through high school his enthusiasm for music blossomed as he sang w ith the school choir and continued to vigo rously study the piano. On Sundays Turner played the organ at church. " I had the opportunity and good fortune of having a good elementary and secondary sch o o l," said Turner w ho added that, "A ve ry graudates are very well know n throughout the United States " By graduation time, 1952. Turner's heart was set on becoming a concert pianist In fact, because he graduated as class valedictorian, Turner de livered a speech at his com m encem ent about how he w ould pursue such a career Turner stepped directly out of high school and into college w ith a four- year scholarship at Fisk University, in Nashville, Tennessee, where he s tu ­ died music. Academ.cs have never been enough for Turner W hile at Fisk he helped found a music honorary f ratornity. Alpha Phi A lp h a and w axalso a member of Phi Mu Alpha Smfoma fraternity serving as President for a year and sec retary for another Turner's activities were not limited to the University. He served as a stu­ dent deacon at the Fisk Union Church and became a member of the Nation- al Association for the Advancement of Colored People In fact the list of associations and com m unity activities that Turner has been involved in throughout his life reads like a novelette A bout half way through his career at Fisk, Turnei realized th.it there were other valedictorians at Fisk and that "th e com petition was very keen " At this point. Turner, w ith the guidance o, his parents, began taking classes m teaching |ust in case his career as a concert pianist d id n 't pan out. sard Turner Turner's tim e w asn't filled strictly w ith academics and activities He held a number of jobs to help put him through school " I knew w hat w ork was. said Turner Turner and his brother w ould w ork nights helping their father w ith jam torial work in the business district of C harleston At Christmas time, Turner worked as a postm an and durin. • » ty .im m e rs he held a variety of jobs over his college career, including a parking lot attendant, a waiter for the M ilwaukie railroad and a waiter at a local restaurant Exploitation was a way of life, says Turner who worked for $3 00 a week plus tips as a waiter "Summer jobs were not easy to find, especially for Black college students, said Turner There was always a job if you were willing to work at something that was not in keeping w ith your knowledge said Turner A lot was accomplished on the backs of people" in those days In May 1956, Turner graduates from Fisk w ith a bachelor of arts degree and departmental honors A t his graduation ceremonies Turner performed a senior piano recital The summer after he graduated, said Turner, I was encouraged by my aunt in Nashville to continue my graduate studies at Indiana University Turner did so, but only during the summers, because after he had gradu ated, the chairman of the music department at Fisk highly recommended him to the President o, Stillman College in Tuscaloosa Alabama to sue ceed their chairperson of the music department Turner met w ith the Dean of Academics in Louisville Kentucky, for an interview and was immediately offered the jot) Turner accepted, and w orked a, Stillman for 12 years from 1958 to 1968 He acted as an Asso ciate Professor of Music where his starting pay was $3100 a year and after 12 years it rose to $7000 a year During those 12 years. Turner engaged himself in a m ultitude of activi lies. In ,957 he married Deloras, his wife of tw enty years He avoided the draft by enlisting in the active army reserves w hich entailed si« m onths of active duty and five and one half years of inactive duty The army reserves was also another success story While enlisted at the Non commissioned Officer Academy, Turner was the only Black man and finished first in his class of 55 students. Tumor received a letter says that "although I m ight attend it (the graduation ceremony), they were not going to recognize m e ." Turner doesn't look back on the denial w ith bitter re membrance. The im portant part of it all was that he got a letter from his com m andant that prom oted him to sergeant, said Turner Turner said that he enjoyed w orking at S tillm an, because, although it was a "predom inantly Black student body, the faculty and staff w.is well integrated It was a "go o d setting for race relations," said Tumer Turner, himself, was very active in prom oting race integration while at Stillman He founded a college com m unity concert association " It was an opportunity, the concert series, for a com m unity that was strictly segre gated socially, to come together w ithin an integrated setting So it did a lot to improve race relations," said Turner Overcoming racial prejudice is a lifetime goal for Turner, as he has work ed hard amongst w hite professors when the south was in racial turm oil Turner worked to establish good relationships w ith the faculty and staff at the University of Alabama, w hich was an all w hite college From 1963 to 1968 Turner was an active member of the American Asso ciation of University Professors Ho served as the Secretary Treasurer of the Stillman chapter and later o f the state chapter By 1967 Turner had risen to Vice President of the state chapter, serving among m ostly white professors In 1968 Turner was offered the position of the chairman o f the Depart ment o f Music at Fisk. Turner jumped at the opportunity to w ork for his alma mater. Fisk had not been accredited for eleven years w hen Turner began work ing in July, and by December, Turner has elevated Fisk's Music Department to a four year accredited program Not having accreditation d id n 't mean that its music school lacked in qual ity, said Turner, In fact, Fisk was the only Black college that was recog­ nized by the National Schools Association of Music Fisk was also active in bettering race relations, said Turner It held race relations seminars where "Blacks and whites from all over the state came to speak In many cases it was the only opportunity for Blacks and whites to meet on an equal basis," said Turner, "and talk about intellectual topics " W hile Turner worked at Fisk, he also helped to build on Fisk s strong ethnic A fro American music department, creating a Ph D in ethno musico logy the only one of its kind in the U S By ,9 7 , Turner was receiving o ffe rs to w o rk at o th e r colleges A t one tim e he w as o ffe re d the p o s itio n as Dean o f In stru ctio n at H arrisbu rg Com m u n ity College in P ennsylvania A fter extensive in te rv ie w s . Turner was de clin ed the jio s itio n be. ause there was already another Black m an on the s t.iff and the bo ard o f trustee s d id n 't w a n t tw o Black m en at a tim e, said T um e r The racial slap in the face from Harrisburg d idn't squelch Turner's em ploym ent opportunities, however He was soon offered the position of Dean o f Student A ctivities at the Com m unity College of Baltimore Turner a. cepted the position and worked directly w ith students, often as a counse lor, from 1971 1974 lt was a rough tim e for students and faculty said Turner, w ho had to work directly w ith the rampant student unrest A lot of the starch came out of my collar, " adm itted Turner From 1974 to 1979 Tomer worked at the Harbor campus at Baltimore as Dean of Faculty and Provost, and then at the lib e rty campus, after whir h he took on the job as President at South Central C om m unity College in New Haven. Connacht ut. from ,979 to ,985 In 1985 Turner moved to I.m e Com m unity College to work also as President Turnei s journey has been an uphill clim b in higher education Never has he worked below the university level He says that he never really met w ith any personal rac i.il obstacles, outside of the one at Harrisburg, during Ins jirofession.il < areer His qualifications, drive and determ ination moved him right along Ttie obstacles that Turner faced were those that anyone m ight face, re gardless of race W hen one is attem pting to do things well, he creates uncertainties in persons w ho d o n 't want to do as well so you challenge the people you work w ith and for Turner doesn't talk as if fie ever host tated along Ins i limb, but, said Turner, "Som etim es I do feel intim idated " Non-Removal of Black Jurors Passes House by Larry Baker Once again. Rep Margaret Carter marie state history by introducing H B '.1QQ7 and its passage in the House House Bill 3007 prohibits any party in a criminal trail from exercising per om ptory jury challenges solely because the challenged juror belongs to a recognizable group w ith respect to race, color, religion, national origin or sex "T h is bill arises out of the sometimes questionable practice where an attorney may use his or her perem ptory challenges to elim inate from a jury any person or group of persons from serving on juries w hen a like person has been on tria l," says Carter A similar bill during the 1985 legislative session was introduced but never made it out o f com m ittee "T ire practice has been used in some parts of the co u n try most notably to eliminate Black citizens from serving on juries where a Black person is on tria l," continued Carter "T h is bill w ould codify the prohibition of such practices under Oregon law " Carter reminded her colleagues that in 1986, the United States Supreme Court in a number of related decisions struck dow n this practice A |ury should be a body o f peers or equals of the person on trial, whose rights peers are there to de te rm in e," said Carter "The very fact that a per son is singled out and expressly denied, by practice, a right to participate in the adm inistration of justice, and in rights given to fellow citizens to serve on juries, is a despicable practice underserving of Oregon Carter was questioned by some legislators as to the untairness of such legislation It is a practice that has no place in this state or in any co urtroom of law, said Carter "In no uncertain terms, it is a prejudicial practice Carter concluded by saying, "S tereotypes of race, ethnicity, gender and religion do not belong in the justice system It is inappropriate to elim inate a juror for a God given difference " H B 3007 passed w ith a m ajority vote, and not it w ill be a task fo r the Oregon State Senate to tackle