Page 2 -T h e Portland Observer - December 26,1990 R S ...And Justice For All by Angelique Sanders Mama, You Ought to See All the Xmas Trees Out Here! J J / \ lhe lawns stay green all JL year.” That’ s what I wrote home wr n I first came to the Pacific North-. ?nage high school drop­ out fro ciiis, M issouri, the adven­ ture ha.l begun w orking as a track n hand for the South­ ern Pacific Railroad. High up in the W illam ette National Forest above Oak Ridge or Eugene, the m ile post read ” 8;' ’ : lies • San Fransisco.” (Time: Late 1930’ s). (.)!' the “ Perspectives” col­ umn is -.’i out in the “ boonies” (boon- docks This period was a prelude to the acUvit ■ 1 described in the previous co l­ umns. A t ‘home’ one could work across the M ississippi River in Decatur, Illino is during summer school vacation for $18 a five and a half day week on the Wabash Railroad - w hile if you shipped out to Oregon you could make the fantastic sum o f $32 a week. And during the want« - i . r . el snow drifts, twenty- hour e you sending home as mu«.h a> $500 in a month. Y o u would have to emerge from a trap door in the ro o f o f the little cabins furnished for quarters - coal stoves to cook on and huge tin tubs for baths and washing. The ice boxes were fashioned to the porches o f the cabins w ith log chains - but, s till, hungry bears would sometimes come up at night, rip them loosr C. ... -y the works down into the canyon to break open and feast. A t the end o f a shift o f clearing snow from the switches o f a ‘house track’ it could be d iffic u lt getting home. W alking on top o f the drifts you had to sweep newly- fallen snow from the roof in order to find the trap door. W orking on the track in winter was a very hazardous a ctivity, for falling snow m uffles almost all sound. You cannot hear a train w histle (steam) or the clarion blast o f a streamliner diesel. A ‘ safely man’ would stand beneath the warning semaphore (which could not be seen through the driving snow). When he heard a warning click (barely) he would plod down the line o f men, slap­ ping each on the back. It would seem only seconds later that a 70 m ilc-an-hour passenger train would swoosh by, bound down grade for Portland. (Interestingly, a black man from Iowa invented a sig­ naling device for use IN S ID E TH E EN G IN E C A B , so that a locomotive engineer could determine i f the track ahead was clear o f trains — even if snow or rain obscured the semaphore. There is one thing I wish to bring to your attention, for it relates to the em­ ployment situation o f young people to­ day - and to many social traumas from education to gangs. L ike most late teen­ agers o f those days, I knew how to oper­ ate several dozen types o f machinery and equipment. And because o f a thor­ ough grounding in the basics (math and language), I could read and interpret detailed instructions - and could carry out many tasks unsupervised. This back­ ground was rather typical o f the times - even for many who went no farther than the 8th grade. I totaled up this ‘equipment savvy’ at one time: back hoc, welder, truck driver, leather cutter, steam cleaner, freight handler, chicken pluckcr (smiles), com­ pressor operator, push cart delivery o f coal and ice, freight checker, landscaper assistant, grinder, clerk, porter, bellhop, dishwasher, pinsetter, miscellaneous equipment in foundries, and much else. ational Council of Negro Women Marks 55th Anniversary with Unusual Dinner The National C ouncil o f Negro women :• ma king their 55th A nniver­ sary A« nonth o f December w ith using dinner many w ill da Icon, re lie f to the usual fare. Y e rei ently mailed invitation promises “n iwded reception, no hairdo, no no rubber chicken, no ;: iu in for speaker, no concerns where your contribution w ill go, no child care...” and so on. the nationally-based organization rep­ resenting over four m illio n women has organized a “ Stay-At-H om e-dinner” in honor its t ending in 1935 by legen­ dary eA ator i civil rights leader mary M A ■««'3. dm , Mrs. Bethune founded hile serving as the first Vriean-American advisor to a U.S. Presi- lent. then Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Through activities such as The Black Family Reunion Celebration, the NCNW is regarded by many as the prim ary advocacy group w orking on behalf o f African-Am erican women and families. The Black Fam ily Reunion Celebration has attracted over three m illio n partici­ pants during annual weekend gatherings in six m ajor U.S. cities. The contribu­ tions raised through this campaign w ill aid in funding the five year old public event dedicated to fostering self-help solutions and positive images o f Black fam ilies. A d ditio na lly, programs relat­ ing to leadership training for women, human rights advocacy, child care, health, assistance to women in developing A f r i­ can countries and other fa m ily activities w ill also benefit. A ll by the age o f seventeen. It m u s t.> realized, o f course, that in those days child labor laws were weakly enforced, and that many employers had none o f the applicable insurance. But you were always busy after school and on weekends - little time for nonsense or mischief. Back to the mountains and forests o f Oregon. Another thing that you wrote home about was, “ You just think we’ ve got mountains back there in the Ozarks - those arc hills, believe me.” On the mountains there was both tragedy and comic relief. Men secured a ‘ grub stake’ for the future, and others died. Some went on to become craftsmen and pro­ fessionals and other stayed on the job until retirement — or ‘ fell in their traces’ , the railroad often burying them up when no relatives could be located. I remember the time wc sent "P e te ” down the mountain to get some liquor at Oakridge, 70 miles away. Hopping freights was the usual means o f transpor­ tation and when he did not return the same evening, we went looking for him early the next morning. Pete had gotten to Oakridge all right, but had gotten drunk in town before hopping a freight back w ith a big sack o f wine and whis­ key. We found him where he had fallen o ff a flat car, his leg cut o ff just below the knee. He had stuck the stump in the snow and packed it in lightly. And there was Pete, stoned, singing at the top o f his voice, ‘ ‘ What took you so long” he ex­ claimed. Relieved somewhat, we de­ manded, “ What happened to the booze, man?” (he survived). And then, too there were the “ happy g irls ” who rode freights to the railroad and logging camps on paydays - b ring­ ing ‘ happiness’ and, sometimes, fa m il­ iar ailments. In later years I was to meet several in Portland or Los Angeles — proper, sedate matrons with respectable holding in rental units and/or a “ good man. ’ ’ A quick w ink or smile and then to pass on in the play o f life. A ffirm ative action and non-discrimination before its time. “ People who keep their word are trusted and ad­ mired. People who do not are regarded like garbage. Those who break their word often never get another chance.” L. Ron Hubbard, one of the most acclaimed and widely read authors of all time McMurphy's Buying Appliances Working or Not 288-3233 PORTL ERVER Joyce Washington Operations Manager Gary Ann Garnett Business Manager Leon Harris Editorial Manager The PORTLAND OBSERVER is published weekly by Exie Publishing Com pany, Inc. 4747 N.E. M.L.K., Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 P.O. Box 3137 Po; land, Oregon 97208 (503) 288-0033 (Office) FAX#: (503) 288-0015 The Portland Observer can be sent directly to your home for only $25.00 per year. Please fill out, enclose check or money ordr, and Mail to: Subscriptions Portland Observer PO Box 3137 Portland, Oregon 97208 POSTMASTER Send Addr««« Changes to: P ortland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, P ortland, OR 97208. Second class postage paid at Portland, Oregon The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions Manuscripts and photo­ graphs should be clearly tabled and will be returned If accompanied by a self addressed envelope All created design display ads become the sole property of this newspaper and can not t>e usee in other publications or personal usage, without tho written consent of the genera manager, unless the client has purchased the composition of such ad 1990 PORT1AND OBSERVER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, REPRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PART WITHOUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED. Subscriptions $20. OO p er year in the Tri-County area; $25 00 all other areas. The Portland Observer - Oregon's Oldest African-American Publication - Is a member of The National Newspaper Association - Founded In 1885, and The National Advertis­ ing Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc., New York, NY. address city, state zip-code Thank You For Reading the Portland Observer as several other states) a letter, telling them my proposals for rcfonn, and hoping it makes a difference. I never expected my column would result in a clean, happy, just, non-racist environm ent for Portland: my hope is that it has caused people to T H IN K , and to FF.F.I.. Outside o f m y colum n, I have had the opportunity to enter your house via my articles, and to share various experiences o f mine, many that I ’ m sure you were present at yourself: from the Janet Jackson concert, to the N ike con­ troversy (when PUSH came to town); from reviewing albums, movies, con­ certs, and books, to meeting (and loath­ ing) Tom and John Metzger, from the school district's meeting on abolishing the CBES test, to the current Portland Public Schools boycott; from the vio ­ lent demonstrations when Bush and Quayle came to town (on separate days), to the peaceful antiwar protests. Justat- tending these events wasn’t what made this year so rich and fu ll: it was being able to bring these events to you, and share the emotions present, so th a t- w hile you couldn’ t always be th ere-yo u could always feel as though you were. Thank you, once again, fo r lis­ tening and sharing in m y life. I wish you the best o f luck in 1991...I w ill be there w ith you. • • * • * I see a parallel between those picketing B ill’s K w ik -M a rt and the boycott in Brooklyn o f the Korean markeL Thumbs up, picketers! Its’ Time To “Heal Our Land:” African Americans Must Build for a New Tomorrow Jonathan Bulter, the popular South A frican guitarist and vocalist, in pre­ scribing a cure for the pain and agony o f the apartheid system, sings the compel­ ling lines, “ we must heal our land.” Since Africans arrived in Am erica we have faced the challenge o f building com m unity out o f deverse peoples up­ rooted from our original cultures by slavery. The ever present reality o f ra­ cism and brutal economic exploitation has always complicated the vital task o f forging a common peopleness and com ­ m unity as Africans in America. We have never quite been welcome here, but somehow, Africans in America have taken the basic strengths that we brought w ith us from our ancestral homeland and struggled to survive and sustain ourselves as a people. Whether it was the Black church and the mutual aid and benevolent so­ cieties which grew out o f the black church;” the “ A frican Free Schools” which wc evolved to educated our own children when white society refused to do so; the organizations o f resistance which we crated to fig h t against slavery, segregation and discrim ination; or the Black press as an independent voice to articulate our own interest and needs; the magic o f our music; or their enormous strength o f the African fam ily, A frican Americans have engaged in a perpetual struggle to survive and build/sustain com­ m unity. O bviously the struggle to build com m unity has been ongoing given the nature o f the United States as a racist and exploitive society. The horrendous depth and m agni­ tude o f the crisis we now face makes it imperative that A frican Americans con­ sciously focus on the need to continue the vital process o f com m unity build­ ing. A frican Americans arc s till largely unwanted, unwelcome and increasingly not needed in this country. Witness the recent increase in im m igration quotas which w ill allow 400,000 skilled (mostly w hite) and wealthy people to come into the United States. The U.S. s till prefers to bring in people from foreign lands instead o f investing the resources required to up­ grade the “ s k ills ” and “ w ealth” o f Africans in Am erica. W ith the excep­ tion o f a small number o f acceptable or sym bolic Blacks who are included so that the masses can be excluded (in clu ­ sion for exclusion), this is s till incon­ venience to be tolerated. O nly our exer­ cise o f POWER prevents our total o b lit­ eration in this country. We are s till or own best hope for the survival and de­ velopment o f A frican Americans. So we too must heal our land, our people, our comm unity. A frican A m eri­ cans must counter the abuse and neglect Reese’s Oil Company POCTlflftjtte«YK Name Deadlines for all submitted materials: Articles: Monday, 5 p.m. -- Ads: Tuesday, 5 p.m. jo y , and what they would like to see in my column in the future, as well as how they felt about an event, o r even what’s going on in there lives. This column is fo r you, and for it to be complete, it helps to hear your perspective. This year has been a rich one for me at the Observer: I ’ ve experi­ enced a wide range o f events, and met a wide range o f people. M y column “ This Week In H istory” at the beginning o f the year (fo r the new readers, that col­ umn traced the history o f significant m inority events, for the particular week o f the issue) brought me much joy: plowing through old newspapers (I found, for instance, the first-ever issue o f the Portland Observer, dated December 16, 1938) and literature was not only fasci­ nating, but 1 learned a lot more about black history than I could ever have found by sim ply reading books: mostly, because it gave me an actual feel o f the times rather than sim ply stating what happened. “ ...And Justice For A ll” has provided me w ith the opportunity to pursue anything that interests me, and that I think w ill interest readers, to truly pursue justice fo r all. The vision that * ‘keeps me at it ’ ’ is symbolized by a p ic­ ture by m y desk at work: it is o f M arlin Luther King, Jr., and it reads: “ I f a man hasn’t found something he w ill die for, he isn’ t fit to liv e .” And I would die fo r justice, so I fin d my column more than suitable: it is my soapbox, it is my way o f w ritin g the entire comm unity (as well Wish You A Happy Holiday Best Price In Town 7 Days Service 287-2121 (USPS 959-680) OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 Alfred L. Henderson Publisher Though 1 try to express my love all year long to those who mean a lot to me, sometimes I s till manage to neglect to thank everyone enough for the jo y they’ ve brought m e-how ever, at the end o f the year, I try to make up fo r these shortcomings. Now, I ’d like to tell my readers (though I try to respond to those who write me) “ thank you” for taking the time to share my thoughts and feelings throughout the year, by reading my column. The bond I have shared with this com m unity w ill never be broken, nor w ill I forget it. A t the happy mo­ ments, like covering rallies and celebra­ tions, and other com m unity events, to covering the tragic moments, such as witnessing the g rie f at pickets and murders...and sharing my g rie f or jo y with my readers: you are all my c o n fi­ dants, my unseen friends. Being a re­ porter, to me, is like being a doctor: I ’m there at birth, I ’m there at death, and I ’ m there in-between. I share in the happi­ ness and sadness, trying to find the line between legitimate public interest and exploitation. And when you, the mem­ bers o f the com m un i ty , can ’ t be there fo r a certain event, I am happy to know that I can go in your stead, and show you these events through my eyes, as I saw it and felt it. Thank you fo r listening to me and sharing my emotions, as w ell as w riting me and calling me. I enjoy hearing from the com m unity and fin d ­ ing out what people enjoyed/didn’ t en­ Oregon’s Minimum Wage Increases January 1,1991 Oregon’ s m inim um wage w ill in ­ crease from $4.25 an hour to $4.75 an hour on January 1,1991. This is the third o f three m inimum wage increases ap­ proved by the 1989 Legislature. The two previous increases took place on Sep­ tember 1,1989 when the m inim um wage went from $3.35 and hour to $3.85 an hour and then to $4.25 an hour on Janu­ ary 1, 1990. Commissioner o f Labor and Indus­ tries M ary W endy Roberts notes that the passage o f this 1989 legislation e lim i­ nated the Federal Fair labor Standards A ct exemption under state law. This meant most employees in Oregon must be paid the higher Oregon minimum. The Bureau o f Labor and Industries en­ forces Oregon’ s m inim um wage law. The federal minimum wage increases from $3.80 an hour to $4.25 an hour on January 1, 1991. Federal provisions for a subm ini­ mum “ training wage” for teenagers who have not worked before and a “ tip credit” as an offset fo r the m inim um wage do not apply in Oregon. “ M y advice to employers is to as­ sume that your workers are covered by state law requirements o f overtime and w orking conditions, and the $4.75 m in i­ mum wage,” said Roberts. “ Employers w ith questions should call our technical assistance unit in Port­ land at 229-5841. We want employers to gel the inform ation they need to comply w ith the law .” S till exempt arc students employed by a prim ary or secondary school that they attend, casual babysitters and some domestic workers. Oregon w ill have the highest m in i­ mum wage o f any state in the nation until Alaska’ s $4.75 m inimum wage kicks in A p ril 1, 1991. Right now Washington DC has an array o f industry specific m inim um wages ranging from $4.25 to $5.85 (dry cleaners) an hour. o f the racist exploitive state in the U.S. w ith a passionate com m itm ent to have concern, compassion and tender, love and care fo r our people. W e cannot leave the children unattended, unedu­ cated and detached from fa m ily. We must overcome the recklessness and callousness o f a w ild ing generation o f young people by demonstrating w ith deeds o f care and kindness that we are absolutely w ild about them. They are our future. We cannot leave the flo w e r o f our manhood and womanhood to waste away in American’s’s prison warehouses. They are the victim s o f the violence that be­ gets violence, the crimes that beget crime. They are our brothers and sisters, our fa m ily and we must fig h t fo r their re­ lease and prepare a H O M E fo r them when they return. Finally, we must heal our land, our community because we must prepare to fighL America must be put on notice that we w ill not fa ll prey to her schemes o f neglect and genocide. W e w ill not die or go away. It is a decadent Am erica which must die and out o f its demise must rise a new nation. A nd it is we, who have suffered most, who must lead the resurrection o f a new and humane society. Africans in Am erica must heal our land, our com m unity so that we m ight live to build a new tom orrow. Tobacco Co. Launches New Initiatives to discourage Smoking Among Youth R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and its fellow members o f the Tobacco Institute today announced new initiatives to dis­ courage young people from smoking. ‘ ‘We don’ t want young people to smoke, and we don’ t market our products to young people,” said James W. Johnston, chairman and ch ie f executive o ffice r o f R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. “ The T o­ bacco Institute’ s new program w ill make it more d iffic u lt for children to have access to cigarettes, and we support it wholeheartedly,” he said. The new initiatives expand the sys­ tem o f voluntary restraints the tobacco industry has adhered to for nearly 20 years. “ Time and again, studies have shown that young people cite the influence o f friends and fam ily as the reason they began sm oking," Johnston said. “ The Tobacco Institute’ s new programs w ill help parents counter those influences, and w ill make it more d iffic u lt fo r c h il­ dren to buy cigarettes. “ They w ill also demonstrate what we as an industry have said fo r years: that we don’t market to children, we don’ t advertise to children and w e’re w illin g to put into place voluntary pro­ grams that w ill help keep children from smoking,” Johnston said.