Page 2, Portland Observer, September 8, 1988 EDITORIAL It’s Important To Get Out And VOTE! f this November's presidential election follows the patterns of recent national ballots, barely half of all eligible citizens will vote. A major reason is structural barriers that make registration and voting difficult enough to discourage all but the most determined. Some states purge voter rolls just before an election. Others restrict voter registration hours and require personal visits to registration offices, almost always during working hours when most people can’t show up. It doesn’t have to be that way. Election officials have to see their role as facilitating citizen participation in the electoral process, not discouraging it. Many states have laws that encourage broader participation. Almost half have mail-in registration. Others allow state agencies to register citizens that come to them for other services, such as driveis’ licenses. And some deputize community groups to register voters. This last is an important key to generating citizen participa­ tion, but it is too often neglected by local election authorities wary of aggressive voter outreach programs. The liklihood that the next president will be chosen by a slim majority of eligible voters questions the legitimacy of our political institutions. President Reagan, for example, made sweeping changes in government policies without a clear mandate from the people _ o n ly about a fourth of eligible voters cast their ballots for him. So American democracy needs a heavy dose of glasnost in the form of voting reforms tnat make voting as simple and as convenient as it is in other western democracies. One big step forward would be universal postcard voter registration, in which every citizen could simply mail in a postcard and automatically be registered to vote. Another would be to provide resources to community-based groups to encourage citizens to vote. It takes friends and neighbors to get people to the polls and to educate them to their citizenship responsibilities as well as to their own self-interest in voting. Most of the half of the electorate that doesn’t vote is drawn from the poor, minorities and the dispossessed. Traditionally, they’ve seen politics as a game for the affluent with little in it for them. Many feel hopeless about the future and about the possibility for meaningful change. And many just don’t see the connection between voting and their daily struggle for affordable housing, health care, and jobs. Jesse Jackson helped break through the barriers of hopeless­ ness and get people excited about his campaign, but the big task now is to transfer that interest into participation in the process that elects candidates at all levels of government. People need to see that not voting is in itself a form of voting _ i t ’s a vote for the status quo, for reduced minority influence, for continued powerlessness. The media are pretty good at informing citizens about personality conflicts and some of the big issues in a campaign, but they’re less good at showing the connections between voting and in­ fluencing public policy. Community groups, churches, and neighbor­ hood organizations have to fill that gap, and work hard between now and November 8 to get every eligible voter registered and voting. Creed Of The Black Press The Black Press believes that America can best lead the world away from social and national antagonisms when it accords to every person, regardless of race, color, or creed, full human and legal rights. Hating no person, fearing no person, the Black Press strives to help every person in the firm belief that all are hurt as long as anyone is held back. ERVER PORTLA OREGON'S OLDEST AFRICAN-AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 Alfred L. Henderson/Publisher Gary Ann Garnett Business Manager Joyce Washington Sales/Marketing Director Danny Bell Sales Representative Ruby Reuben Sales Representative Rosemarie Davis Sales Representative Leon Harris/Gen Mgr Nyewusi Askari News Editor/Staff Writer Mattie Ann Callier-Spears Religion Editor Bill Scheider Copy Editor/Photographer Richard Medina Photo-Composition Lonnie Wells Circulation Manager B. Gayle Jackson Comptroller PORTLAND OBSERVER , published weekly by Erie Publishing Company Inc ->5NE Killingsworth St • Portland Oregon 97211 P O Bo» 3137 • Portland Oregon 97208 Phone Humbert (503) ZOO 0033 (Office) (503) 288 1756 (Classified/Display) Deadlines for all submitted materials Articles: Monday, 5 p.m.; Ads Tuesday. 5 p.m. The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions Manuscripts end photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned it accompanied by a self-addressed enyelope Subscriptions $20 00 par year in tbs TrhCounty area The PORTLAND OBSERVER - Oregon s oldest African-American Publication - is a mombor °* The Notional Newspeper Association - Founded in 1885. The Oregon Newopop. JP-Wtshers Association and The National Advertising Representative Amelgemeted Publishers. Inc New York O PINIO N The Other Side À CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNAL Stop The War On Angola! The Green-Eyed Monster by Harold C. Williams w by John E. Jacob, President National Urban League _ / ' e have something in our community more deadly than heroin, crack, or any other drug that one one obtain illegally or legally. It is the green-eyed monster. The green-eyed monster has been with us for the past four hundred years. It has impeded the progress of Black people more than any single factor in our ex­ istence The green-eyed monster separated us as people during slavery and it is separating us to­ day. The green-eyed monster has a resentment against success. It believes success is a disease, and it only takes pleasure when one is down and out. The green- eyed monster cannot stand to see a Black lady or a Black man suc­ ceed. It begins to claw at their basic foundation of pride and dignity. If we could get rid of the green- eyed monster, we would conquer all other problems in our commu­ nity. We wouldn't have a drug problem to poison our systems and destroy our minds. If we would destroy the green-eyed monster, we would have unity, love, and commitment for one another; the world would marvel at our uniqueness. The green- eyed monster is eating us inside like a cancer and we seem to refuse to seek ways to destroy this deadly virus. We have fun­ draisers for everything. We do research for all other diseases, but we ignore the green-eyed monster. The green-eyed m o n ste r’s name is jealousy. Let’s find the cure for this disease and see how much progress we make in the next year. I’m sure we would all be amazed at what we can do when we bury the green-eyed monster. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Prison v. TaryAnne McIntosh In the July 13, 1988, issue of P o rtla n d O b s e rv e r, J a m il Cherovee, in an editorial opinion called "TO Hell and Back ... Prison v. Marian Reid,” dispelled myths concerning the plight which Afrikan-American (Black) women are often forced to endure during incarceration in penal systems of America. Brother Jamil Cherovee said, "Many Sisters/Brothers were under the impression that women’s prisons are relatively “ pleasant’’ places and that any problems they may have are trivial when compared to those of incarcerated men.” Jamil spoke of the conditions at the Maryland Correctional Institution at Jessup, Md. To Brother Jamil Cherovee, we commend you for disputing, dispelling and clarify­ ing some of the myths concern­ ing our Afrikan-American (Black) women in prison. Recently on Aug. 8, 1988, I received a letter from TaryAnne McIntosh, an Afrikan-American (Black) woman incarcerated at the Oregon Women Correctional Cen­ ter (OWCC), asking me for legal assistance on a civil rights action she had filed in the Federal District Court of Oregon against three Correctional employees: Manfred Maass, Superintendent of the Oregon State Penitentiary; Robert Schiedler, Superintendent of the Oregon Women Correction­ al Center; and Gerald Boyd, Educational D irector at the Oregon Women Correctional Cen­ ter, for discriminatorily denying her to attend college classes (sic) here at the Oregon State Peniten­ tiary (OSP). TaryAnne had attended college classes here at OSP in 1987, along with other European fe­ males. Indeed TaryAnne had visited her Brother who was here at the OSP for quite a few months without being considered a secu- irty threat. In early May 1988, TaryAnne, along with several other European women prisoners applied to attend college classes here at OSP during the summer term. TaryAnne, in the early part of June 1988, was called to register as other female prisoners at OWCC and was under the full understanding she would be allowed to attend college classes. However on June 16, 1988, the educational director at OWCC in­ formed TaryAnne that her college class program had been cancell­ ed by the Superintendent of OSP, allegedly because of TaryAnne’s extensive disciplinary reports. TaryAnne has related to me that she asked the educational direc­ tor of OWCC why she has been given the impression she had been approved to attend college classes when registering and then all of a sudden told she could not attend college classes. TaryAnne has related to me, via writing, that the OWCC educa­ tional director changed what he previously said and then told her the decision to deny her was made for the safety of OSP. TaryAnne McIntosh has only had one major disciplinary report during her entire four year in­ carceration at OWCC. I have checked, and many of the Euro­ pean (White) women prisoners who were and are allowed to at­ tend OSP college classes, and still are coming, have had as many, and in cases, more disci­ plinary reports than TaryAnne McIntosh, including disciplinary reports for dirty urinalysis while at OWCC. TaryAnne has never had a dirty urinalysis or refused to take a urinalysis while at OWCC, and in­ deed does not take drugs. TaryAnne is a perfect example why, in contradiction to state­ ments or ideas, the community should not get involved in corrections. The community as a whole, and p a rticu la rly the Afrikan-American (Black) com­ munity, should and better get in­ volved in corrections, and defi­ nitely so when corrections staff blatantly deny “ educational pro­ grams” to an Afrikan-American female attempting to get educa­ tion before release back into the community. I ask the community to ask those in corrections here in Salem why TaryAnne could not attend college classes? Asmar Habeeb-ullah Saleem aka: Clarence Eugene Jones Box 44215 2605 State Street Salem, Oregon 97310 Seattle Black Community Says Thanks Thank you for your interest and support of youth and scholarship in the Seattle Black Community. Your generous contribution to the 1988 Miss Soul Community Festival Oueens scholarship pageant was greatly appreciated. It provided us with the resources necessary to materialize the academic and social dreams of our community’s young people. Once again thank you for your support, and we look forward to working with you in the future. Sincerely, Virgie Harris, Pageant Director Seattle, Washington by Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. fter spending most of the , month of August 1988 in the African nation of Angola, 19 African-American church and civil rights leaders have returned to the United States with a renewed sense of struggle and commit­ ment. We all feel a sense of urgency concerning the Reagan a d m in is tr a tio n ’ s c o n tin u e d military and financial support of the brutal war that is being perpetrated against the People’s Republic of Angola. We saw first hand the effects of the continued atrocities being committed against the people of Angola by the terrorist group, UNITA, led by Jonas Savimbi and supported by the United States and South Africa. Now that South Africa has been defeated by the valiant and co u ra g e o u s c o m b a ta n ts of Angola in defense of their homeland from South Africa’s in­ vasion, the eyes of the world are watching the current peace pro­ cess facilitate a complete with­ drawal of all of South Africa's armed forces from all remaining angolan territory. The recent vic­ tory of Angola has changed the course of African history. The crucial victory won by Angola against South Africa at the battle of Kuito Kuanavale in southern Angola in March of this year set the stage for the current peace process now unfolding. The four nation peace talks be­ tween Angola, Cuba, United States and South Africa will hop efu lly also lead to the withdrawal of the armed forces of South Africa from Namibia. In fact the future of southern Africa hangs in the balance of the out­ come of the current negotiations. Throughout our tour of Angola there was one predominant cen­ tral theme that stood out: Angola's Yearning and Quest for Peace. Angola’s President, His Excellency Jose Eduardo Dos Santos, emphasized to our del­ egation, “ We want peace and we are willing to do all we can to acheive peace." It appears, however, that President Reagan remains more committed to war on Angola than for the cause of peace in the region. Our delegation was shocked and outraged to hear reported in the news while we were in Angola that both President Reagan and Vice President George Bush have stated their intentions to con­ tinue to finance UNITA’s terrorist war against Angola even after South Africa announced a cease fire. It is our belief that Reagan’s current policies and Bush’s inten­ tions are flagant violations of in­ ternational law. These policies are immoral and unjust. These policies are sinful before God. We collected strong evidence that shows the United States sup­ port of UNITA has contributed directly and indirectly to the massacre and murder, rape and torture, and displacement of hun­ dreds of thousands of Angolans. There is a long trail of African blood that can be traced from Angola directly to the White House in Washington, D.C. Presi­ dent Reagan’s hands are drench­ ed in Angolan blood by his con­ tinued support of the UNITA mercenaries. As citizens of the United States who have seen first hand the pain and suffering of the people of Angola as a result of the atroci­ ties committed by UNITA and South Africa, we demand that the United States stop all support to UNITA immediately! We demand an end to Reagan’s war on Angola. Perspectives He (She) Who Laughs Last by Professor McKinley Burt hundred years). But hear this. person may not only “ laugh Daniel Payne, a ‘free Negro’ of last,” but may also be la s t. Charleston, opened his first One may have smirked while school in 1829 — a rith m e tic, reading the recent soliloquy on Playfair’s Euclid, English gram­ curriculum by that guru of educa­ mar, geography, biology, chemis­ tio n , S e cre ta ry W illia m J. try, astronomy and Greek (you’ve Bennet, “ James Madison Elemen­ been peeking, Mr. Bennett). tary School: A Curriculum for No wonder, then, that in 1894, American Students.” ex-slave, inventor and South So what is new about his call­ Carolina Congressman, George ing for “ essential paticulars in H. Murray, was able to deliver a seven basic subjects through passionate, literary gem of a eighth grade; English, mathe­ speech to his white colleagues. matics, social studies, science, He requested Federal support for foreign language, physical and the Atlanta Cotton States and In­ health education and fine arts?” ternational Exposition, Septem­ Well, la-de-da and deja vu, but ber 18,1895. don’t laugh simply because you “ There are still traducers and may have advocated all of the slanderers of our race ... I hold in above from day one. Too many my hand patents ... showing the souls were lost on the high seas inventions that have been made of ’methodology’ that engulfed by colored men ... stoves to loco­ the teacher colleges. motives, steam engines, motive Do you remember my descrip­ power of industrial machines, im­ tion of Los Angeles’ Windsor provements to farm, factory and Hills Elementary School — a 95% railroad.” (92 on the list, eight by Black learning machine, struc­ tured by Black teachers and par­ Murray). Find that in the Congressional ents, and which won top city Record, 53rd Congress, Second honors for excellence with its Session, p. 8382. cla ssic cu rricu lu m (Parent's Now, you can understand the Magazine, 1969)? And I did cite fear and horror that gripped the my own ghetto-based curriculum establishment when it was realiz­ of fifty years ago, structured by ed what Blacks could accomplish the same folk: Again, math, sci­ with schools of their own design. ence, grammar, history, Latin, You 'know' what underlay the fer­ French. Come on! What’s new ociousness of the lashback and pussy cat? re-segregation at the turn-of-the- More pointedly, recall my cita­ century, the Kian, the lynch mob. tions of educational excellence There should be more than a among Black students and teach­ germ of suspicion as to reasons ers immediately following the for more recent degeneration and Civil War. Charlotte Forten and neglect of the inner-city learning other dedicated Black women apparatus — for gangs, dropouts were founding schools in the and non-competitors, no laughing Carolinas and Sea Islands (an­ matter. ticipating Secretary Bennett by a A