“ - r v ... s Sshoen-r.'ewspaper Poco 1 v c i a î t y o f Oregon L ib r a r y • e , Or 97403 Volume XVII, Number 34 July 1, 1987 25C usps o* P ubiukm g ( Beverly Gates: A Woman of Distinction by Larry Baker When the subject is racism, Beverly Gates no longer remains the shy, charming and graceful lady normally found in the back of the room of a campus classroom or a bench in City Hall. Suddenly, Beverly Gates be­ comes a woman who knows the subject well and is willing to deal with it on any level. Gates, a socialite in the 60's and a peace-maker and model in the 70's, is now a very sophisticated, intelligent Black therapist in the 80's. There is no room for fear in a workshop she designed and titled “ Strategies for Change” . “ My father and grandpa prepared me years ago for the message I will send to you this date,” states Gates, as she prepares any large group of individuals who have come to hear her lecture. Addressing white males in the audience, it would not be uncommon to hear this striking female say, "Deal with my mind and not with my body, then you can learn something of great value about the Black woman and the suffering she has endured in order to survive." Gates' motto has always been, "I don't care if you like me or enjoy me, but you will respect me.” Beverly Gates' grandfather's name was Asa Davis Gates, a very heavy Christian Baptist Bible-thumper in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, who was also a coachman for the railroad. He also had a special knowledge of ani­ mals, which was noticed by many around him. Gates speculates that her grandfather's talents were attributable to the Indian blood that he may or may not have had. Beverly contends that her grandfather's professional know-how of some animals enabled him to develop a somewhat successful treatment for an illness in horses. The illness, called “ epizootic", would force a horse to cough for long periods until its throat would swell up, blocking the air into the lungs, and in most instances, causing death. "This sickness would go through a stall very fast," says Beverly, “ be­ cause it was an air-borne sickness." Beverly states that her grandfather developed a medication which he would have the animals breath, thereby keeping the air passage open. When word got around of Asa Gates' cure, he became somewhat famous, and eventually he was asked to treat the horses of one of the owners of a railroad. "The owner was so greatful, that he gave Asa a life-time job on his railroad. From those years to this date, the hunger for education, intelligence and survival in the upper-class style of living became no stranger to the Gates family. "B ut what did my grandfather do?" proudly says Beverly. "He was not content just being a coachman. My grandfather went on to become a union man." "I don't know if you know the history of the Black Coachman Union, but in 1929, they were the only union that went on to march on Washing­ ton, D.C., in order to get the wages they deserved." Beverly's grandfather died at the age of 93. Her parents, Joseph and Laura Gates, moved to San Francisco, California, from Washington, D.C., where her father went to work for the U.S.O. at Camp Beal near Sacra­ mento. Beverly graduated with honors from an all-white school in Hillsdale, Cali­ fornia, and continued her education at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennes­ see. It was at Fisk that Beverly met and married a white English professor from the University of Oregon named William Cadbury. Cadbury was at Fisk on a two-year Rockefeller Grant. He is also an heir to the Cadbury Chocolate Company. "S o that's how I got to Oregon," says Beverly. "Even though the mar­ riage did not last, my daughter and I remained." "I always had this burning desire to train dogs, and that's what I do to­ day." Beverly continued, "I do it as a profession and it has been reward­ ing." She has won national awards in her dog training profession and is also a model. A few years ago, Beverly Gates started designing her own workshop on "racism ". "It's a workshop that white people can clearly understand," says Beverly. "Being a Black woman who has experienced racism through­ out childhood, marriage and to this day, I feel I have a Ph.D. in racism. She says her family background has given her the techniques to deal with this subject. "Black people have always had the knowledge through experience to deal with such sickness, but this is 1987 and one must be articulate to relay the message." Gates states, "In conducting these semi­ nars, I want to create a trauma-free society." Beverly applauds the efforts of Black men who have set their path toward economics, but it is now time for the Black woman to come out of the kit­ chen and assist in whatever way possible. Gates' latest workshop at the University of Oregon won her state-wide acclaim as a therapist. "She is very beautiful, smooth, understanding and articulate," says Jim Hall, student at U of 0 . "S hw makes me understand the journey many Blacks have traveled and still travel today in Eugene, Ore­ gon." A private source is now preparing Beverly Gates to go on a nation-wide tour with her workshop. "It is something America needs to hear," says that source. "It is something America needs to respect." "I do not care if you don't like me, just as long as your respect me, as a Black woman" here in Eugene, Oregon—a city smattered with racism. Not Charity But Justice by Pat R. Cuda The late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was a rare man among men. His heart was a garden where thought flowers grew. He had dreams and he espoused those dreams. His purport in life was Mankind. And today Man­ kind is richer because of Him! Dr. King, as a battler for Peace and for Freedom of Mankind, said that in the event of his death he wanted all to say "He died to make men Free. His goal was to establish a reign of Freedom and a Rule of Justice. Dr. King loved life, but his yardstick was "It's not important how long you live but how well you live." Dr. King loved prominence, but his yardstick was "Preserving my posi­ tion is of no importance, challenging injustices is very important." Dr. King died to make men Free —not by Charity but by Justice. Dr. King passed through many experiences of suffering and bloodshed that he knew what "H ell" was like, and his thought on that went like this: "I have no sense of fear of a material Hell; the only Hell I am afraid of is that somewhere, sometime in life the € o d of History will look me in the face and say to me, 'Martin Luther King you had your chance; what have you done with it?"' Dr. King was the Champion of the Underdog, the Watchdog of Con­ gress, and his heart and soul were joined in preaching "Justice and Equality for all Men." Dr. King made hundreds of speeches and pleas to rid the United States of Ameria of injustices. Here following is a recap of some of his thoughts and expressions as were captured by this writer: • Civilization is something that is constantly at stake. It demands a daily plebiscite. We have got to think for it, live for it, fight for it and die for it, or else there is no continuing civilization. • Some of our people have said that we are fighting for the four basic Freedoms—Speech Worship, Want and Fear. I think we might say we are fighting for a thousand Freedoms. • For whatever Freedom symbolizes to you and me today, that thing is at stake in America and the World at this very moment. • We have been fighting for Freedom for over 100 years, but we have come to realize that in the broadest sense there can be no Freedom for any people until there is Freedom for all people. • We are living so close to our neighbors and to our enemies that we have got to find out how to live together. And if any group of people de­ cide to become superior and try to dominate any other group of people, then Humanity en masse has got to arise in all its dignity, integrity, honor and manhood, and fight for the further extension of Freedom until it in­ cludes Mankind everywhere. • We are carrying the fight for Freedom into the very heart of every American city, and we are going to battle the opposition until it comes to the realization that if it is going to live in this Nation it has got to live accor­ ding to the laws of decency and justice and righteousness and truth. • Our fight is not an easy one, but fight it is, and we will all measure up to it. This takes courage. Courage is that something that robs a man of a sense of fear. Not by one iota does it change the danger, but it makes a man willing to risk everything he has in order to complete the fight for Jus­ tice and Equality. • We believe in our common cause because it is just —not just for our­ selves, not nationalism — but a cause that is just because it is inclusive of a love that casts out fear and sends us, as fearless people, unafraid of whatever things life can stack in front of us, to risk and to give everything that we have that Mankind might be Free. • The conflict in America is a fight for Humanity, not for special interests or special groups. We are fighting to make Mankind FREE, so that when this thing is over we will stand FREE, FREE people, with Freedom of thought and speech and economic opportunity. Therefore, our cry is "N ot Charity but Justice." I did not know Dr. King personally, but I believe in his final moments on April 4, 1968, that HE quoted Cal. 3:13, to wit: "Continue putting up with one another and forgiving one another freely if anyone has a cause for com­ plaint against another.”