Page 8 Portland Observer May 18,1989 THE AFRICAN AMERICAN SUMMIT we must to task when he said. choose interdependency, and the ca­ pacity to act, to unite fo r the greater good o f the A frican Am erican com ­ m unity. We must seek Common SUBMITTED BY WAVERLY DAVIS Attending the A frican Am erican Sum m it ’89 in New Orleans was like watching a bridge being rebuilt, and I was just one o f the priviledged links in the construction o f that bridge, w hich transcended the superficial phi­ losophies and focused on the sub­ stance o f the struggle w ithin the A fric a n A m erican C om m un ity. Thousands upon thousands o f dreams, aspirations, goals and strategies to accomplish those goals, came together during those three days seeking the "C o m m o n G round’ ’ that Jesse Jackson frequently addresses. There was a massive appeal for unity and economic grow th and development w ith in the A frica n Am erican com­ m unity at this conference. An im ­ pressive agenda had been organized, but topics on unity and economic grow th and development were key subjects fo r me. Although the media utilize d a devisive tool by reporting in the local newspaper who did not attend the summ it, I was impressed and encouraged by the presccnce o f such distinguished national leaders and activists such as: M rs. Coretta Scott K ing, Rev. Jesse Jackson. Ron Brown (DN C ) Hon. Richard Hatcher, Hon. Ron Dellums, Rev. Henry Hardy, Hon. Delores Tucker, Hon. Maxine Waters, Ms. Angela Davis, and many other articulate, brilliant, professional leaders both p o litica l, medical, le­ gal, and business. It is these national leaders and ac­ tivists, along w ith others, that must devise an economic and p olitical agenda fo r the 1990’s. Someone m ight say, " w e ’ re doing better eco­ nom ically and are more unified now than ever” , but I conquer w ith a statement made by Mrs. Coretta Scott K ing which is as follow s: “ We have more o f what we fought for, more A frica n Am erican elected officials, More educational opportunities and more access to public accomodations, yet we have less unity than we had during the c iv il rights movement” . She stated that unity is the key to our realizing our long held dreams. The conclusion to be drawn; is that what ever we as an African American people have accomplished thus tar, such as better housing, education, more A f­ rican Am erican p olitical leaders, and better paying jobs, was accomplished through unity, and whatever we hope to accomplish now, and in the future must be done through unity. We must become a true fam ily which shares responsibilities, has common goals, and strategies for reaching those goals. The conditions which support the social and economic failure o f members o f our A frica n American fa m ily are urgent, because those who suffer at the hands o f poverty are a part o f the whole. W hat is our re­ sponsibility? T o maintain the life line which keeps a ll fam ily members viable. How can we accomplish this? Through U nity and Economic Em ­ powerment. Lack o f i nity leads to self destruction and influences every facet o f our lives w ithin the A frican American Community. Lack o f unity allows the poison o f jealousy, con­ tempt, insensitivity and distrust to erode the very m oral fiber o f our com m unity and helps to create a vehicle through which destructive influences such as alcohol, drug ad­ diction and gang violence enter our com m unity and metastasize like a cancer. U nity however, gives us economic and p o litica l v ia b ility . It can restore the social lustre back to our com m unity such as, fa m ily con­ sciousness, spiritual conviction and com m itm ent, and returning to the moral values that are the foundation o f our rich heritage. U nity re-estab­ lishes oureconom ic and political p ri­ orities, i.e., keeping the dollars within the black com m unity (buying from black businesses), and elect p olitical o fficials who are sensitive to our needs and not allow those persons including o ffic ia ls in the broader com m unity, to define those needs for us. U nity also helps to alleviate the "m e , m yself and I ” syndrome that has permeated our com m unity espe­ c ia lly amongst the middle and upper class black professionals and p o liti­ cal leaders. I fe lt that Jesse called us JOBS & CLASSIFIED INVITATION FOR BIDS Sealed bids fo r the remodeling o f 16 public housing units w ill be ac­ cepted by the U m atilla County Housing A u th ority, P.O> Box 107,155 S.W. 10th Street, Hermiston, Oregon 97838 until 3:00 P.M. PDT on Thursday, June 15,1989 at which time and place a ll bids w ill be p ub licly opened and read aloud. Proposed form s o f contract documents including plans and specifications are available at the o ffice o f the Housing A uthority and at the fo llo w in g Plan Centers: Blue M ountain Plan Center, W alla W alla, W A Builders Exchange, Portland, OR Central Oregon Builders Exchange, Bend, OR Construction Data Plan Center, Portland, OR Dodgc/Scan, Seattle, W A Intermountain Contractors, Boise,ID Pendleton Builder Trades C ouncil, Pendleton, OR T ri-C ity Construction C ouncil, Kennewick, W A Copies o f the documents are available at the Housing A uthority s o il ice for a fee o f S20.00 each, refundable upon submission o f bid. A pre-bid conference and tour o f the project site is scheduled for 1:30 P.M. Thursday, June 1,1989. Conference attendance by representa­ tives fo r prospective Prime Bidders is recom m ended. A certified check or bank draft, payable to the Housing A u th ority, U.S. Government bonds, or a satisfactory bid bond executed by the bidder and acceptable sureties in an amount equal to five percent (5% ) ot the bid shall be submitted w ith each bid. The successful bidder w ill be required to furnish and pay for a pcrlorm - ance and payment bond in the amount o f 100% o f contract price and provide evidence o f W orker’ s Compensation and Contractor insur­ ance. Attention is called to the provision for equal em ploym ent opportunity, and the requirement that not less than the H U D determined m inim um salaries and wages as setforth in the specifications must be paid on this project. The Housing A uthority reserves the right to reject any and all bids or to waive any inform alities in the bidding. N o bid shall be withdrawn for a period o f 90 days after the date o f bid opening w ithout the p rior consent o f the Housing Authority. The Housing A uthority O f The County O f U m atilla, Oregon M erw in W. Parker, Executive Director HAP AND SHER­ PERSPECTIVES IFF’S OFFICE “ YOUR TEAM UP DADDY’S RICH, B uilding a safe environment at C olum bia V illa ... that’s what the new Safety A ction Team is hard at w ork doing w ith Housing A uthority o f Portland (H A P ) residents. The team, developed through a jo in t e f­ fo rt o f HAP, C hief Deputy Bob Skip­ per o f the S h e riffs O ffice , and M ultnom ah County C hair Gladys M cCoy, is com m itted to stopping gang and drug a c tivity in public housing. Its main targets are the C o­ lum bia V illa and Tamarack develop­ ments in North Portland, which house more than 1,000 people. Chief Deputy Skipper has assigned one lieutenant, three deputies, and tw o C om m unity Service O fficers to the Safety A ction Team. Each shift o f the Safety Action Team w ill Knock on at least 10 doors to talk to people, fin d out what is happening in the area, and help d i­ rect residents toward services that for each State Chairman who came could help strengthen their fam ilies to the summit to make an analysis o f and improve their liv in g conditions. all public money known to exist in A training program planned for H AP’s their communities, and that we should Resident Aides w ill also help detect carefully m onitor the growth and and prevent crime. The Safety A c ­ distribution o f those funds. We should tion Team w ill act as a support to the immediately investigate with the State Portland police officers, who are still Chairman the use o f pension funds the firs t responders to 911 calls. stored in labor unions and state g ov­ “ N orth Portland is a sector o f the ernment as a source o f investment C ity that’ s been hard h it by the crime capital for com m unity development wave o f crack and gang a c tiv ity ,” projects. The leadership talked about C hie f Deputy Bob Skipper says. " I change in black entrepeneurship. want to respond to its need fo r help. Joshua Smith, an entrepeneur, stated The Safety A ction Team is ju s t one that he was disappointed in the de­ step in our support o f this com m u­ gree in which economic develop­ nity. ment is treated w ith in our com m u­ The team w ill be stationed at 8920 nity. "L e ss than 5% emphasis is North Woolsey Avenue in Colum bia placed on economic development, V illa by late May. Shifts w ill be set which is where we need to be now. ” according to the times o f day that That is going to require a new kind o f have the most a c tivity, such as late leadership w ith a new direction that afternoon into the evening. The Safety encourages A frican Americans to A ction Team w ill also be available make a choice fo r change. "E m p h a ­ to respond as needed to trouble spots sis should be placed on black owned businesses rather than on ju s t secur­ in other H AP developments around M ultnom ah County. ing a job. Black leaders should ac­ quaint themselves w ith the rules o f “ The safety o f our residents is our the market-place that restricts black lop concern,” H A P Executive D i­ entrepeneurship. W e cannot afford rector Donald E. C lark says. “ The to build an economic future entirely success o f the team has already started. upon the principals o f 25 years ago. “ W e ’ ve seen a number o f crimes For w hile we are marching on Wash­ prevented, order is being restored ington, other ethnic groups arc march­ and the confidence o f residents is ing to the bank. The fuel to change is steadily rising. not just talking about the jobs we should have, but about the jobs we should create. Entrepeneurship has fueled this economy from the begin­ ning and it ’ s entrepeneurship that Ground” . The African American leadership that attended this summit have fe lt throughout history, economic devel­ opment has been a necessity fo r so­ cial progress for any group o f people in Am erica. We however, have been kept and have participated in keep­ ing ourselves economically deprived. The leadership in attendance called for the support o f A frican Am erican businesses and for economic devel­ opment projects such as the U.S. Investment Corporation, Buy Free­ dom campaigns, the Power program, and other programs w hich arc based on the principle o f mutual economic support as the prim ary foundation for generating community capital and as the most basic step o f securing large amounts o f capital from others outside o f the African American com­ m unity. The leadership also called How many o f you readers ever caught on to this subtle theme o f ’ ra ce -m ixin g that George Gersh­ w in parodied in his Famous musical com position. Sum m er Tim e? The fo llo w in g three men o f notable ac­ complishment were the legitimate offspring o f Black mothers, and white fathers, It is an ugly irony that, today each w ould need a M in o r ity G ra n t o r Business C e rtific a tio n in order to pursue their careers in Am erica(The anthropologists now say that a p ri­ meval A frican Lucy is the mother o f the human race). John James Audubon: This great naturalist and renowned illustrator o f birds (orinthologist) was bom in 1784 on the West Indies island o f Santos Dom ingo-now The D o m in i­ can R epublic, the source o f so many great Black baseball players. The son o f a French sea captain and an emancipated African mother who died shortly alter his birth, Audubon was raised in Nantes, France in the life style o f the ric h and famous. Though his father remarried in Europe, the A frican connection was maintained when captain Audubon brought a beautiful Haitian nanny from the islands to oversee his son’ s upbringing (The nations o f The D o­ minican Republic and H aiti share the same island base). The young Audubon dodged his tutors as much as possible and spent most o f h is time prow ling the forests and drawing woodland creatures, m ostly birds. A fte r a b rie f and boring stint at a naval academy, he persuaded his father to enroll him at a school o f art in Paris. Even here he found academics too rig id and structured fo r his inven­ tive mind. It was only after com in0 to A m er­ ica in 1803 that Audubon’ s’s real genius took flower. W ith a New England farm owned by his father as a base, the young man spent years traveling the length and breadth o f w ill fuel it in the future. Economic Empowerment has got to be the number agenda item, not ju s t an item sliced up between a ll the other programs. We have got to turn wealth into assets and assets into businesses, so that we set the eco­ nomic policy for the future. ALLEN TEMPLE Allen Temple Church, located at 4236 NE 8th Avenue (comer o f 8th and Skidmore), w ill present the movie, " A T h ie f in the N ig h t” on F ri­ day, May 26, 1989 at 7:15 pm. “ A T h ie f in the N ig h t” is about Bible prophecy. It shows whal could happen when Jesus Christ returns fo r His church. I l is the first in a series o f film s which dram atically depicts Bible proph­ ecy about the end times. Adm ission to the film is free. Re­ freshments w ill be served at no cost. PCC INTERPRETER PROGRAM IN­ VITES PUBLIC TO OPEN HOUSE The Interpreter training program o f Portland C om m unity College in ­ vites the public to an open house May 23 and 24 at the PCC Cascade Campus, 705 N. K illin g sw o rth St. The program trains interpreters for hearing-impaired people. The open house w ill feature demonstrations o f American Sign Language and include visits to the program’s regular classes. A schedule o f events may be ob­ tained by ca lling PCC, 244-6111, N ew W ay to W IN on The Show! » Send in ANY five nonwinning Oregon Lottery instant scratch tickets for the weekly drawing - OR - • Match three TV symbols on a Money Game instant scratch ticket! W atch and Win! Every Saturday at 7:30 PM KOIN (6) Portland KVAL (13) Eugene KPIC (4) Roseburg KTVZ(21) Bend KOBI (5) Medford KCBY (11) Coos Bay KOTI (2) Klamath Falls ext. 5288 or ext. 5209. PORTLAND OBSERVER The Housing A uthority o f U m atilla County is an equal opportunity employer and request bids form small disadvantage, women and AND YOUR MAMA’S GOOD LOOKING” Part I the country developing his innova­ tive and beautiful style o f rendering bird life on canvas. He dismissed the stylized techniques o f his contempo­ raries and when forced to use the stuffed bird o f a taxiderm ist for a model, prom ptly removed the pins and posed the bird in a realistic manner. Today, Audubon is known through­ out the w orld fo r his m agnificent paintings and informational journals. The most famous work is his B ird s o f Am erica, a collection o f 435 water colors finished in 1838. His pioneer­ ing contributions to the fie ld o f orinthology arc the model fo r the tens o f thousands o f members o f the prestigious N atio na l A u du b on So­ ciety. Few this side o f the A tlantic know his A frican origins. Norbert Rillicux: This great chemi­ cal engineer, inventor and Egyptolo­ gist was the discoverer o f the Vacumn Pan C entrifugal Process which revo­ lutionized the making o f sugar (Pat­ ent No. 4879, Dec. 10.1846). The son o f a Frecnh planter and engineer and a Black mother, he was bom in New Orleans at a time when several hundred thousand free Blacks lived in the South. Sent by his wealthy father to France to study, R illieu x taught applied mechanics in Paris and published many scientific pa­ pers by the time he was tw enty-four. The US Department o f A g ric u l­ ture cited his invention a s” the great­ est in the history o f chemical engi­ neering” . R illie u x ’ s specialty was thermodynamics; the transformations o f heat into mechanical w ork and the opposite transformation back to heat.Threc w orld-fam ed physicists (Lord Kelvin, Carnot and R.J. Mayer) arc credited with theories which quite probably were developed by the Black man, R illieux. By age 25 this genius had become head o f the famed Acad­ emy where earlier he had been a student, then instructor (The E ’cole centrale in Paris). Returning to Am erica, R illie u x became the most sought after engi­ neer in Louisiana. But because o f his color sugar plantation owners who sought his advice could not entertain him in their homes. It became the custom to b u ild s ta ff and fu rn is h a special house ju s t fo r R illie u x (sev­ eral s till exist today). He died in Paris in 1894 and the sugar industry hon­ ored him w ith a bronze plaque in the Louisiana State Museum; No scien­ tific literature in America mentions him. • The Eyes and Ears of the Community' 288-0033 m in o rity owned business enterprises. »