Page 3 Portland Observer SEPTEMBER 21,1989 NEWS FROM NEIL by Gov. Neil Goldschmidt Over the past ten years, this slate dropped its guard-andour law-abid­ ing citizens look it on the chin. But now the largest prison construction program in Oregon’s history is under­ way. In March, we opened 792 new medium security beds at the Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution (EOCI) in Pendleton. Just this month, we broke ground on a new 400-bed prison on the Columbia River in Portland. On September 1st, the legislative Emergency Board gave the go-ahead on the new 200-bed maximum secu­ rity unit at the Oregon State Peniten­ tiary, further expansion of the East­ ern Oregon Penitentiary, further expansion of the Eastern Oregon Cor­ rectional Institution (EOCI) by an additional 176 medium security beds, and building the new 200-bed me­ dium security intake center onto the Clackamas County jail. Siting is also underway for a new medium security prison, that may eventually hold 3000 inmates. Bv this November, 150 mew minimum security beds will open at the new Powder River facility in Baker. In total, over 1800 new prison beds are in the pipeline; and w e’ve brought 850 new beds on line since 1987. these beds aren’t meant for a good night’s sleep-they are meant to restore our power to punish. This year, Oregon’s Legislature also gave law enforcement officials new punch in their fight against crime­ passing sweeping new laws to help catch and convict crooks in Oregon. Laws are now in place that will improve our ability to combat gangs and punish serious juvenile offend­ ers, allow police officers to carry Ur xping devices and use wiretaps in c 7 cases, and provide for joint trials News Around Town of drug paraphernalia, to increasing fines for marijuana use, to a state­ wide drug house law that will allow law enforcement officials to shut down such houses as nuisances. Also, every Oregon middle school, high school, public college and uni­ versity must now develop and imple­ ment policies to combat drug and alcohol use, and provide education programs for all students. Finally, Oregon is getting back in the ring again in the fight against crime. Together, these new cells and new laws will give Oregon back its one- two punch in its fight against crime. PORTLI® B « e RVER O R E G O N L O T T E R Y S P O R T S A C T IO N O FFIC IA L PROGRAM Event Dates: SEPTEMBER 24-25,1989 Underdog Point Spread * Selection Pacific Time Favorite Underdog* Sunday 9/24 10:00 A.M. 10:00 A.M. 10:00 A M. 10:00 A.M. 10:00 A.M. 10:00 A.M. 10:00 P.M. 10:00 P.M. 10:00 P.M. 10:00 P.M. 1:00 P.M. 1:00 P.M. 1:00 P.M. 1. Minnesota 3 NEW ENGLAND 5 PHILADELPHIA 7 Chicaeo 9 New Orleans 11 INDIANAPOLIS 13 Washington 15 NEW JERSEY 17 HOUSTON 19 ANAHEIM 21 SAN DIEGO 23 MIAMI 25 DENVER MONDAY 9/25 27 CINCINNATI 6:00 P.M. 2. PITTSBURGH 4. Seattle 6 SAN FRANCISCO 8 DETROIT 10 TAMPA 12 Atlanta 14 DALLAS 16 Phoenix 18 Buffalo 20 Green Bav 22 Kansas Citv 24 New York 26 Los Angeles +9 +3 28 Cleveland +4 0 ±fi +3 +8 +6 +8 +4 +11 +2 +5 +7 * If the team you select beats or ties the other team's score after adding the "Point Spread" to the UNDERDOG'S score, your selection is a winner. Oregon Lottery Sports Action is NOT associated with, authorized by, or sponsored by the NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE. Get current Sports Action information by calling 1-900-646-5686 (Toll ca ll.5 0 per minute) MEN! If you have had a male sexual contact you may be at risk for AIDS. Call the Oregon AIDS Hotline at 223-AIDS for confidential informa­ tion on how to avoid getting AIDS. The Hotline can also answer any other questions you might have about AIDS. No one will ask for your name. Call now and ask for information about the “ Safety Plan” (we will know you are calling because of this ad.) You’ll get information you can use to avoid getting AIDS. Call now! 223-AIDS. y g in w y ir i h ■ him uu n -in m n m rin iñ rig c Perspectives McKinley Burt Right on folks! I can well under­ stand the interest expressed in last weeks article on the difficulties in the implementation of Lesson Plans. One response has been that several parent groups have requested some weekend workshops to inable them to do some “ home-leaching” in a structured manner. Also, I may once again be doing evening graduate classes for teachers in the C ontinu­ ing Education mode (Winter term). Letmeclarify a term I used, “ con­ sultant continuity” . In a recent reply to an R.F.P. from a southern school district (Request For Proposal), I emphasized the need for an interac­ tive process with continuous feed­ back to the consultant who designed The Lesson Plan Model (Is it work­ ing? If not, why not? What modifica­ tions arc needed?) Can you imagine a manufacturing company placing a new product on the market without a similar loop back to the design engi­ neer? Of course not. Further, we assume the same experience-based background in the consultant who designed the lesson plan model as to be found in the ac­ knowledged experts who created the Base Line essays. “ Given these facts” , I went on to say, “ A firm commit­ ment to the success of the project dictates a full utilization of the de­ signer to assure a successful implem­ entation of the initial classroom models where everything and everybody is on stage, this would include pupils, teachers,parents, the District and the public” . I put it that these tru th s are self- evident, especially given an educa­ tional situation of te rra incognito (a strange land) that deals with a most controversial subject matter. One thrust of my argument here is that it takes more than a couple of after­ noon workshops with unwieldy groups for multiple crimes committed by a single offender. In June, voters approved an amend­ ment to the Oregon constitution al­ lowing the State Police to seize the assets of drug pushers and kingpins and use them to fund further drug enforcement activity. In addition, the Legislature in­ creased penalties for parole viola­ tors, and adopted sentencing guide­ CALENDAR lines that will ensure that the time a Members of the Northwest Afri­ crim inal is sentenced to by a judge is the time actually served-and there can American Writers will be fea­ tured reading from their new anthol­ will be no early release. Oregon also has new laws on the ogy, Voices of Kuumba, on talking "C J ' s that will help us fight drug and earth, KBOO radio (90.7 FM). at 11 alcohol abuse-from banning the sale PM on Thursday, September 21. Bar­ bara La Morticella hosts. of teachers, 100 a ta time, to structure a feasible delivery system for the classroom. Another reason.Jdr main­ taining the continuity of the consult­ ant designer is that of the human factors presented by the teacher corp. I mentioned last week that the idea of major contributions to the culture and technology of the world by Blacks is simply “ mind boggling” to many of them, whether white or Black. It is to be remembered that most teachers themselves came through an educational system which taught that all civilization began with the Greeks, and never mentioned the docu­ mented fact that before they estab­ lished their own universities, they attended the Egyptian Temple Schools in Africa (Eudid, Archimedes, Hero, Erastofhenes, Pythagoras, etal) and boasted of it: “ Something new is always coming out of Africa” . Nor did those school systems cite the Black inventors, engineers, famed novelists and composers, statesmen, generals and so forth; Dr. Carver and Frederick Douglass were the limit. Now, it is true that there is an oversight group involved in the proc­ ess, the Desegregation M onitoring Advisory C om m ittee. But these are volunteers who meet monthly to lis­ ten to progress reports from district personnel, review and assess per­ formance by the district as indicated by statistical information furnished by the district, and issue analytical evaluations of the Desegregation Process! Again, these are volunteer monitors-not funded-and in no way represent the continuous structured intervention at the classroom level such as I have detailed earlier. There is, o f course, no doubt of their com­ mitment or responsiveness. I have had both parents and stu­ dents ask why more hasn’t been done in Portland-or earlier? My answer has been that earlier on there were attempts at change. Some were by dedicated teachers who risked their job^in the sixties and seventies, and some by community activists. In 1971 1 attended a workshop put on by Dr. Julius Hobson in Washington, D.C. He had just won a precedent-shatter­ ing lawsuit against that school district(Hobson vs Board of Educa­ tion). An outraged parent, and a master organizer, this black economist en­ listed the aid of disgruntled parents, disaffected teachers, sociologists, anthropologists, lawyers, potential employers, and taxpayers in general in a successful effort to compel the school district to deliver the product they were paid for. Hobson even had the Black janitors to photograph the out of date science equipment in the 95% Black schools for comparison with the upscale technology in the white schools. The same comparison mode was instituted in respect to the years-behind texts and curriculum. In 1974, as head of the Minority Teachers Association, I attempted to launch a similar attack here, Lets put it this way. When I was elected there were almost a hundred members on the rolls. After I came forth with this proposition for a Hobson-type law­ suit, there remained about six active members plus the poverty attorneys who were going to file the suit. As an example of how ready Portland minorities were for drastic remedy for an intolerable education system, let me cite this. My sergeant-at-arms intercepted one Black teacher at the door, carrying a complete list of all teachers present for delivery to to massa school superintendent. What it is! : t r o n ic s is e n e r g y s e r v ic e s COMMUNITIES CAN STOP DRUGS by John E. Jacob Stopping the drug plague is going to take action on a wide variety of fronts.Govemment has to get serious about ending the flow o f drugs into the country. That will take more than rhetoric. It will mean committing military resources to close our borders to drug importers, along with diplomatic negotiations and economic inducements to exporting countries. And government will have to fully fund drug treatment centers. It is shameful that drug abusers who want to kick their habit must wait many months before a slot opens up for them at a treatment center. Expanding those centers’ capacities has to be at the to[p of any serious anti-drug campaign. But the war on drugs also has to be waged on the streets and in our neighborhoods. This is a national problem affecting rich and poor, suburbs and inner cities. But it is African American communities who bear the greatest burden of drugs, and we’ll have to take the initiative in making our neighborhoods drug-free zones. For too long, people have been making excuses for drug abusers, reciting a litany of social pressures and racism that drives some people to take drugs. That won’t wash any more. If we wait for society’s ills to be cured to end drug abuse and other anti-social behavior, w e’ll lose the battle for our communities and become subjects of the drug dealers and drug lords. The brutal fact is that drugs are taking over many o f our communities. Drug gang wars have turned many of our neighborhoods into combat zones. Little kids are out hustling for drug pushers and people are terrorized into silence. Our future as a people is endangered by the drug plague that saps ambition, pulls young people away from school and jobs, and sends our infant mortality and AIDS statistics sky-high. The drug dealers represent the biggest threat to African American communities today. They’re killing more African Americans than the Kian ever did, and our communities must mobilize to drive them out. Citizens have to join together to work closely with law enforcement officials to identify dealers, gather evidence to convict them, and ensure they are incarcerated. Too often the drug lords intimidate and overwhelm neighborhood protesters but they won’t be able to do that if people band together and join forces. That’s the way you win wars, and we are definitely at war for control of our lives and our communities today. People will have to get tough on users, too. African American commu­ nities, which have been subjected to the intolerance of others for so long, tend to be too tolerant But wc have to stand up for the values that enabled us to survive, and that means making it very clear to drug abusers that they and their drugs are not wanted in the community and they should either kick the habit or get o u t Local community institutions need to be in the forefront of the fight against the drug dealers. Urban Leagues, churches, social and fraternal organizations, and the press, need to come together to mobilize citizens and publicize ant-drug activities. If we don’t win the war against drugs, we can forget about winning our war for equality. involving computers. "The building is also home for ccording to oceanography researchers at OSU, Pacific’s Marie Wilson is a real wizard. Maybe not the kind with a wand, but certainly the kind who can make problems disappear. Her story, on the right, is a good example o f how we can help solve a wide range o f problems with inno­ vative energy-related solutions. Today, we can help you discover new ways to ex­ pand opportunity, reduce costs, and improve efficiency with a growing number o f energy products and serv­ ices. How can we help you? A some less sophisticated equipment like refrigerators. When they kicked on, computers and other research equip­ ment would often go haywire. Data would he lost along with valuable time and money. "We looked overtheirsitu- ation and recommended power protection using our Vanguard devices. We even loaned them some for a trial period. “As a result, over lOOunits have been installed. And, important work is no longer PACIFIC POWER ENERGY S E R V IC E S at the mercy of unexpected power fluctuations." Expect More From Us. CI*IW P if« ftnwrr A PMifrt orp ('ampwy m Marie Wilson