iM M k " 2 p e r . ooai on L i b r a r y VOLUME XX NUMBER 8 FEBRUARY 21,1990 Hawaii Update: Who Pushed The Fast Forward Button On History By Professor McKinley Burt While the media seeks to keep our attention riveted upon Russia and East­ ern Europe-and upon ephemeral Peace Dividends which will surely turn out to be as bankrupt as trickle down prom­ ises of the past-perhaps we should focus our attention on last week's eco­ nomic model, "Hawaii ...Parking Lot." This historic 'learning machine' has serious implications for our own North­ east Portland. The model was not presented as simply another recitation of past Afri­ can glory, or to be viewed as sort of a titillation segment of a nineteenth cen­ tury "Lifestyles of the Rich and Fa­ mous"—but as a critical lesson addressed to those who seem determined to learn nothing from history. What's going on in those Pacific Islands right now? Noth­ ing different at all from what went down 'yesterday' in the lands formerly owned by African Americans in the Coliseum/Convention Center areas in Northeast, nor from the Emanuel Hos- pital/Taylor Act caper that cleared out a vast acreage of Black land equities. At this moment the City o f Portland is attempting the same "Eminent Domain' technique in order to acquire title to property still vested in a major down­ town church. Can you believe another "Queen Lilliuokalani-Parking Lot" acquisition? Now, given a more perceptive mode of thinking some readers may cry, Eu­ reka! I can see right through the latest recruits to the merry band of 'Dump Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.' enthusi­ asts (Columnist Jonathan Nicholas in his Monday's Oregonian piece). Mr. Nicholas, "me thinkest thou doth pro­ test too much." You appear to voice your personal opinion, masked in what might be taken as a direct quote of Park Commisioner Charles Jordan-which I seriously doubt-"Union Avenue, an empty-storefronted, garbage-strewn, hooker-patrolled, drug-infested avenue is merely a symbol." That 'symbol' is the stuff from which millionaire's dreams are made. The area is just as valuable as that of the Coliseum or Convention Center, and if not, it is a tale told by idiots who were paid millions of dollars by Model Cities and other federally-funded agencies to develop commercial plans and projects for Northeast (still viable); and whose expertise has been successfully imple­ mented on similarly expropriated Black properties in many American cities. We ask, who is waiting in the wings for the right, 'cheap', disillusioned moment? What banks, savings and loans, or California and Jap an ese inves­ tors, of pension fund planners, or politi­ cians seeking a payoff in campaign con­ tributions? 1___ It is a given that many "downtown" do not want Union avenue to gain a new name (and direction) around which community leaders and nieghborhood residents could focus Black (and white) efforts to create economic development for "their own local benefit," largesse for the peons, no less. But, then let us look again at those Pacific Islands. Right now, thousands of miles west of Albina, there is an ongoing and vi­ cious corporate struggle to further ex­ ploit and decimate lands of the indige­ nous Hawaiians. The Rain Forest vs. Geothermal Electrification confronta­ tion on the island Palau-site of the famed Kilauea Volcano-is over the plan to de­ stroy the ancient Wao Kele Puna forest. There is no difference at all between this scheme and similar European- and U.S.-sponsored projects being launched throughout the world in those lands still occupied by peoples of African de­ scent. The Hawaiian fiasco has already resulted in the 'transfer' o f 27,000 acres of the people's valuable inheritance to a privately-held corporation, in exchange for 25,00 acres of 'volcano-devastated lavaslopes.' There is a similar electri­ cal generation scam in progress in the South Sea Island of'Palau', a U.S. Trust Territory. For years at Portland State Univer­ sity, no one could distinguish between my Black students from Palau', Samoa, Tahiti, Fiji, etc,-and the African Ameri­ cans (except as white University staff and local chapters of International Friend­ ship Organizations diverted the former to westside housing and fraternization). It would take no anthropologist or phe- notypist to perceive that which Dr. W.E.B. Dubois documented 70 years ago, that you were looking at one and the same replication of the prehistorical African diaspora that spread out all over the Pacific Rim, so-called Middle East, The Americas, and over to India. Even the racist linguists recently have had to abandon their white-centered "Indo-European Language Thesis", and NEW REHABILITATION PHYSICIAN JOINS EMANUEL STAFF Dr. Sharon Loomis nas joined the staff of the Emanuel Rehabilitation Center at Emanuel Hospital & Health Center in Portland. She is a Rehabilitation spe­ cialist with a special interest in spinal cord injuries. Dr. Loomis graduated from the Uni­ versity of Montana and received her medical degree from the University of Washington School of Medicine. She did her internship at Swedish Hospital in Seattle and completed her residency at the University of Washington Depart­ ment of Rehab Medicine. At Emanuel, Dr. Loomis plans to de­ velop a team to work exclusively with spinal cord injury patients, and develop ¡ an outpatient clinic for comprehensive spinal cord care. The spinal cord injury program at the Emanuel Rehabilitation Center has re­ cently received new accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF). The Emanuel Center is accredited for six major program areas, making it the most highly accredited physical rehabilitation center in the northwestern United States. In addition to her medical experi­ ence, she has been active in a rape relief center, helped organize a Hospice chap­ ter, was a high school science teacher, and even built her own home in Mon­ tana. in the face of overwhelming evidence have had to retreat to a southerly ori­ gin" of European languages-to parallel the development there of all the rest of mankind's culture and technology, from mathematics to agriculture^ well- rounded idiot could have told them that). See related articles in the past year's issues of Scientific American Magazine; especially the latest (March). At this moment I am watching a video tape mailed to me by a former student who is back home in Palau. I wish to compare it with a documentary on that situation which was aired last year on Public Station KOAP; for rather obvious reasons, and before providing more details in next week's final "Park­ ing Lot" monograph in this series of Black History Month Specials. Do you get the same feelings from this series that others have remarked upon? Marshall McLuhan's "Global Village" may be closer at hand than we think. We must consider the demographics and world resource analyses available in the computerized data banks at the international banks and investment houses based in Europe and America, and at the U.S. Think Tanks' financed by our government. And don't leave out South Africa, whom the F.B.I. dis­ covered to be the hidden owner of sev­ eral Southern Cotton plantations where Black sharecroppers were freed from a new slavery as late as the 1940s. What do they own in Northeast Portland? Meanwhile back on the island of Hawaii, I didn't mention that the 'Parker' cattle ranch there is the largest in the world, 225,000 acres, 400 horses, 276 paddocks, 347 miles of pipelines, 9 res­ ervoirs, 162 water tanks, 437 water troughs, and three dams- for openers. A standard corporate brochure will tell you o f a 'John Palmer Parker I', "a white seafarer from Newton, Massachusetts who settled down to raise a herd of "Wild' cattle he rounded up." The truth o f the matter is the first cattle on the island were a bull and five cows given to Black King Kamehameha by ex­ plorer CapL George Vancouver in 1793. We already have learned of the naivete of this ruler, and by some manipula­ tion, John Parker, the penniless adven­ turer, "acquired both the King's wife and his cattle." Espanolas (cowboys) were brought in from Mexico and Spain, and today their descendants trade at the company store, live in company hous­ ing, and if they are "industrious, are given ten pounds of beef every month." "The pictures here feature the naviga­ tion modes of those who peopled the Pacific Islands and the Americas as early as 8000 years ago." □UnULAhönlr DEADLINE High school students who are Interested In applying fo r $1,000 college scholarships should request applications by M arch 16,1990 for Ed ucation al C om m unications Scholarship Foundation, 721 N, M cK in ley Road, L ake Forest, I ll i ­ nois 60045. To receive an applica­ tion, students should send a note stating th eir name, address, city, state and zip code, approximate grade point average and year of graduation. Slxty-flve winners will he selected on the basis o f aca­ demic perform ance, Involvement in extra-cu rricu lar activities and need fo r financial aid. White Women: Attraction or Distraction by Ullysses Tucker, Jr. The first tim e that I was approached by a w hite w om an for a date in college totally shocked me. A junior at the U niversity o f P ortland at the tim e, the incident caused me great confusion and stress. As a high school student in W ashington, D .C., dating W hite w om en was never an issue because there w ere none around. All of the cheerleaders, band m em bers, school clubs, sports team s, and people in m y com m unity w ere black. T here w ere nothing but black w om en all around me. Like many inner-city youngsters, I was active sexually at an early age and fortunately, 1 did not becom e a teen parent like m ost o f my friends. U ltim ately, this gave m e greater m obility after high school and for m ore options or less responsibilities than m y peers. M any o f my friends dropped out o f high school to take low paying jobs or turned to the quick m oney life of the streets. I w ent to junior college. Nebraska was a rude aw akening for m e considering my prom iscuous city lifestyle. It was a total culture shock to say the least. I w ent from having my choice o f w om en in the neighborhood to being culturally isolated as a college athlete in a rural en v iro n m en t It was tough em otionally, psychologically, socially and sexually because I equated m y m anhood with my sexuality. We w ere “ taboo” or bad new s to the w hite fem ale students. M any o f them had never seen a black m an and they feared the dam age an encounter w ith one o f the six brothers w ould cause to their sm all town reputation. So, they kept there distance. Learning to do w ithout sexual intercourse was a real character builder for me, but that w ould have never happened had it not been for the rejection by w hite w om en in N ebraska. It also gave m e a greater appreciation for black w om en and believe m e, trips hom e at C hristm as and sum m er break w ere m ore than w elcom ed. Lastly, I becam e a better student in N ebraska, m ore reflective, and a deeper thinker. T here was nothing else to do except study and play basketball. I felt like the biblical legend L ott when I departed for O regon from N ebraska. Portland w as different com pared to race relations in N ebraska and W ashington, D.C. Inter racial dating and m arriages are very com m on. I was actually surprised w hen I cam her thirteen years ago, the first, at how open people w ere about it and how it w as ju st a natural part of the lifestyle. T here use to be a tim e, according to Eldridge C leaver (Soul on Ice), where the w hite w om an w as the “ sign o f the hanging tree and the burning cross . . . ” Now, brothers, to a great degree, free to date w hite w om en w ithout any threat or fear o f danger. 1 ike N ebraska, I again had to m ake em otional and psychological adjustm ents. W hat is the attraction? Som e black m en say that it’s about money, that v-hite w om en are m ore subm issive, and put less pressure on them than black women. O th e r' black men, especially those w ho grew up in culturally isolated environm ents alw ays fantasized about dating w hite w om en, but never had the opportunity or feared the social repercussions. M any o f these brothers had never considered dating white w om en until they arrived to O regon. She was the forbidden fruit in their old neighborhood or com m unity. M yself included. T hen there is the W ilt C ham berlain excuse o f old. The excuse states that black m en who exist on certain econom ic levels m eet m ore w hite women than they do blacks in the business/ socialization process. W hen you look at the A m erican standards o f beauty on television com m ercials, all you see are blond and blue-eyed w om en, white w om en, or very light com plexion blacks (a w hole another issue— check out the new Ebony M agazine). Som e brothers chase the illusion. B efore you ju m p to any conclusion, let m e confirm that I am not advocating against inter­ racial m arriages. Som e o f m y best friends exist in this capacity. All I ’m asking for you to do is check your reasons or m otives for w anting to interact w ith the w hite w om an. Should a black m an date a black w om an for the sake o f dating a black w om an? S hould race even be an issue? Is it real love, curiosity, just a stage you are going through, or are you ju st killing time until you m eet a sister like one black m an m entioned? A ctually, it is a personal choice and no o n e’s business w ho you m ight decide to date. However, w hen you consider that black men are 43% o f the prison population, and that 98% o f all blacks k illed last year were by other blacks (m ost m ales), and consider that we lost a generation o f black m ales to the 1960s / Vietnam or reflect on the current one to crack / drug-related violence, or one m ight conclude that he has a m oral/social obligation to help stabilize the race. A t som e point, we need to get our black m en to assum e m ore responsibility for their children, be m ore positive role m odels, take on leadership, and help direct our com m unities forw ard. I com m end those w ho are com m itted to the m ission. Be it genocidal, political, or econom ic, brothers are in short supply. Personally, it is my opinion that a black m an is but h a lf a m an w ithout a black woman in his life, com er, or by his side— Yo black m an, com e hom e, wake up and be whole. ### JORDAN, LEARY DENY OREGONIAN QUOTES Charles Jordon Portland Parks Superintendant Charles Jordan, and Self-Enhancement co-founder Ray Leary both adamantly denied statements attributed to them in an article published in Monday's Ore­ gonian. The article, written by Oregonian columist Jonathan Nicholas, titled "Fight for King Blvd.? Forget it", quotes Jor­ dan as saying "that the Portland City Council made a dumb mistake in re­ naming Union Avenue, and should have had the courage of its lack of conviction and reversed its decision." Nicholas also quotes Jordan as saying that the Council should let "this sorry business run its course". In a statement released to the Ob­ server today, Jordan claims his com­ ments to Nicholas were, "If I were on the Council today, I would propose to the Council that we reverse our deci­ sion to rename Union Ave. before it goes to a vote. Reason being, a vote to change MLK, Jr. Blvd. back to Union Ave. could quite possibly signal once again that Portland is a leading propo­ nent of racism." Jordan cites the murder of Mulugeta Seraw, the recent visit of Mississippi racist Mike Barrett to re­ cruit members for his racist movement and the veto of the MLK, Jr. holiday in Arizona as examples of how a city acquires its racism stigma. Jordan states Blacks should invest in the acquisition of property on Union Ave. and then they can name it anything they want to. Hat s o ff to the m em bers o f O B P (O regon B lack Professionals) for their netw orking function last w eekend at M ontgom ery Park. It w as nice! It takes quality functions like yours to get people out o f the house . . . keep up the good w ork. H aving outlets, socially, is what life is all about. KOIN-TV, T h e Private Industry C oun­ cil and Portland Public S chools announced this week the creation o f “CELEB RA TIN G YOUTH, CELEB RATINGYOU!-AFESTIVAL OF POSSIBILITIES FOR YOUNG PEOPLE.” This m ajor com m unity ev en t w ill take place 10am-4pm Friday, M arch23,1990, at Portland's Peninsula Park. The purpose o f the festival is to c e le ­ brate the com m unity’s young people by helping them learn about the array o f p o ssi­ bilities that lie before them . M usic, food and recreational activities will share space w ith booths show casing inform ation about sum m er jobs, alternative academ ic program s, and post-high school vocational and college opportunities. P res­ ent at the event will be accom plished pro fessionals to talk w ith young people about how to enter various fields: business, trades, m edicine, law, education, entertainm ent, m edia, the arts, governm ent. In addition, festiv al goers will have access to inform ation on pertinent social issues ranging from drugs to parenting. “CELEBRATING YOUTH.CELEBRAT- ING Y O U !" is sponsored by KOIN-TV, T he Private Industry C ouncil and Portland Public Schools. K O IN -TV is a division o f Lee E nter­ prises, Inc. Lee publ ishes directly or through its affiliates daily new spapers in 18 cities and ow ns five television stations. Lee E n­ terprises also is involved in graphic arts systems through its affiliated company, NAPP System s (U SA). YWCA HONORS OUTSTANDING WOMEN IN THE PORTLAND- METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY .In keeping with distinguished tradition, the YWCA of Portland will honor 11 outstanding individuals whose career and volunteer achievements have benefited the Portland metropolitan arts, education, science, volunteer and minority communities. The fifth annual women of Achievement event is underwritten by seven statewide and national corporations. Ray Leary Jordan s statements are substantiated by Leary who claims he too was mis­ quoted by the Oregonian on two sepa­ rate occasions. According to Leary, the article described S.E.I. erroneously by implying that the program serves pri­ marily low-income youth. Leary states Self Enhancement serves a cross seg­ ment of youth including high income some of whom may need certain chal­ lenges to broaden their career develop­ ment. According to Leary, the article described S.E.I. erroneously by im­ plying that theprogram serves primar­ ily low-income youth. Leary states Self Enhancement serves a cross seg­ ment of youth including high income some of whom may need certain chal­ lenges to broaden their career devel­ opment Both Jordan and Leary expressed regret that Nicholas took editorial lib­ erties to express his own personal points of view. A