***** 2 T h e P ortland Observer August 14, 1991 CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNAL By Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. The Truth Revealed in South Africa There is a saying that “ Truth crushed to the earth w ill rise again.” T his is ce rta inly the case now inside the apartheid regim e in South A frica . A fter years o f p ublic denials by the govern­ m ent o f South A fric a that it secretly was funding C h ie f Buthelezi and his Inkatha organization to p o litic a lly and v io le n tly oppose the A frica n National Congress, the truth is now coming out, and it is “ ris in g ” to bring clarity to w hy the violence in South A frica is continuing. It is as i f South A fric a used its own version o f the U nited Sûtes counterin­ telligence program , C O IN TELPR O , to foster and sponsor the enmity and de­ structive hatred o f Inkatha toward the A frica n N ational Congress. We mourn and are outraged at the thousands of innocent women, men, and children w ho have been kille d as a direct result o f the apartheid regim e’s sponsorship o f terrorism . State sponsored terrorism has now been exposed once again in South A f­ rica. H ow can President Bush, who speaks so eloquently against terrorism, not move his “ lip s” to denounce the de K le rk adm inistration in South A frica for its sponsorship o f terrorism against the people o f South Africa? O f course. President de Klerk was quick to defend the ultimate goal o f this ‘ political d e s u b iliz a tio n " in A f­ rica because the United States had given sim ilar financial support to groups like Inkatha in Nicaragua and in Angola. I f there is to b e a “ New W orld O rd e r," it should be a w orld free o f this kind o f arrogant and racist attempt to deny peoples o f the w orld com m unity the fundamental human rig ht to self-deter­ mination. It is ironic that President Bush and President de K lerk are now calling for a renewed sense o f “ confidence” in the apartheid regim e’s intentions to be fair. De Klerk confessed, “ The gov­ ernment accepts that there has to be p olitical confidence in respect to the sensitive issue o f secret funding.... It is a fact that this confidence has been shaken and it is necessary to restore iL ” Political trust and confidence are not matters that can be reduced to rhe­ torical appeal. Yes, confession is good for the soul, yet the problem that re- mams in South A frica goes far beyond “ WIN” Celebrates Second Annual Dinner/Fashion Show Mrs. Frances D. Hooks. National Coordinator, Women in the NAACP (WIN), accepts congratulations from an admiring quartet at WIN's Second Annual Dinner/Fashion Show, held recently during the NAACP's 82nd Annual Convention in Houston, Texas. Standing with Mrs. Hooks are, from left. George L. Knox III, Vice President, Public Affairs, Philip Morris Companies, Inc.; Mrs. Hooks' husband, Benjamin L. Hooks, Executive Director, NAACP; Rev. Jesse Jackson, President of the National Rainbow Coalition and “Shadow" Senator for Washington, D.C.; and Dr. William F. Gibson, Chairman, NAACP National Board of Directors. Sponsored by Philip Morris Companies, Inc., the WIN Dinner/Fashion Show was held at Houston's Hyatt Regency Hotel. Philip Morris Companies, Inc., and its operating companies, the Miller Brewing Company and Kraft General Foods, expressed their continuing support for NAACP programs and scholarships. The companies' involvement also included the hosting of Corporate Exhibits at the convention's trade and industry show. President de Klerk saying, “ We did wrong, but now you can trust us.” Today, Nelson Mandela and m illions o f Africans cannot even vote in gov­ ernment elections because o f their race; but, this is the government that wants the m ajority o f the people it has disen­ franchised to “ trust” iL The anu-apartheid movement in the United States and throughout the w orld needs to call fo r justice fo r all o f the victim s o f this diabolical scheme to stop democracy in South Africa. As long as the present apartheid govern­ ment is in power in South A frica , there w ill be no p o litica l stability. Interna­ tional economic sanctions should be maintained. Buthelezi and his cohorts should be brought to trial along w ith their sponsors for the countless massacres o f innocent people. The transformation o f South A f ­ rica is a monument to the degree to which the forces o f e vil are entrenched in the international body politic. Ra­ cism is an international problem, and as long as it is institutionalized in one nation, no one w ill be free anywhere. Free Health Screenings For Seniors (Age 55+) Offered at Neighborhood Sites September 6, 1991 - Neighbor­ hood House, 7688 S.W. Capitol Hwy., 9a.m . to noon. Please call 244-5204 fo r an appointm ent September 13,1991 -O A S IS ,C ity Center M eier & Frank, 10th Floor, 621 S.W. F ifth Ave., 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Please call 241-3059 for an appoint­ ment. September 20, 1991 - H ollyw ood Senior Center, 1820 N.E. 40th Ave., 9 a.m. to noon. Please call 288-8303 for an appointment. September 27, 1991 - Gresham Senior Center, 50 N.E. Elliott, Gresham, OR, 9 a.m. to noon. Please call 665- 7191 fo r an appointment. Among the services at the screen­ ings are blood chemistry tests which include cholesterol, glucose, and ane­ mia measurements, blood pressure, colorectal cancer take-home test kit, lung function and hearing testing. V i­ sion and glaucoma assessments, n u tri­ tional counseling and foot care evalu­ ation are also usually offered. A ppoint­ ments are necessary and may be made by calling the screening site. There is no charge for the screenings which are funded by Legacy Health System hos­ pitals and health care organizations. More On the “ Drew-Johnson Medical Education Project I would like to expand the scope and add some facts to the inform ation provided in last week’ s front page inter­ view, “ Drew-Johnson Medical Educa­ tion Project Launched.” Again, let me cite the spectrum o f career/education slots available in the medical field, including some that were omitted last week. Readers and students alike have long been aware o f m y obser­ vation (and intervention} where m inor­ ity and low income youth o f a ll races generally are unaware o f the existence o f many positions available in the tech­ nical fields. A t Portland State U niver­ sity, fo r instance, I spent years develop­ ing hundreds o f work/study slots and internships w ith corporations and such agencies as the U. S. Forest Service - mostly in the technical fields. The fo llo w in g relevant list was developed during my two years o f serv­ ice as a volunteer at Providence M edi­ cal Center (w here I had established work? study positions fo r m in ority youth). “ Physician, dentist, nurse, medical i l ­ lustrator, x-ray technicians, optometrist, occulist, epidem iologist, psychologist, actuary, medical secretary, etc.,” as w ell as special areas such as “ sports medicine, industrial safety, consumer project design and labeling, forensics/ coroner, oncology, H.M.O.S, nutrition, geriatrics, pharmacy, trauma centers, long-term care, poison centers, envi­ ronmental hazards (lead paint, toxic wastes/dumps, atmospheric carcinagens) and many others.” O bviously, the project requires a very intensive use o f a computerized data base -- not ju s t for the inform ation and technical material I ’ ve collected 3908 N.E. MALLORY AVENUE Jessie Varner £ PORTL h ND’OBSERVER s* ■ Joyce Washington Operations Manager Gary Ann Garnett Business Manager g The PORTLAND OBSERVER is published weekly by Exle Publishing Company, Inc. 4747 N.E. M.L.K., Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 P.O. Box 3137 Porfand, Oregon 97208 (503) 288-0033 (Office) FAX#: (503) 288-0015 ■' Deadlines for all submitted materials: Articles: Monday, 5 p.m. - Ads: Tuesday, 5 p.m. B P O S TM A STER : Send Address Chsngss to: Portland Obaarvar, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. 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The Portland O b a a rva r- Oregon's Oldest African- American Publication - is a member of Tha National Newspaper Association - Founded in ’ 885, and The National Advert s- ing Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc , New York, NY * 4 .t- » J- : ■* United Airlines Are • The • Proud • Sponsors • Of Reinvestments Will A DropOut Lose Out? by Professor McKinley Burt (USPS 959-680) OREGON'S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established In 1970 Alfred L. Henderson Publisher Jessie Varner moved to Portland in 1943. She worked as a welder at ship­ yards. In 1947, Jessie married Jame P. Varner. She spent 13 years in the m edi­ cal field. In 1965 Jessie became very active in the NE com m unity. She be­ came D irector o f C -C AP (Church Com m unity Action Program). Because o f her comm itment to the fig h t against racism, Jessie Vam er participated in the march in Washington, DC fo r c iv il rights. From 1968-1983 she worked for PPS as a com m unity agent. Jessie made a difference in young people’ s lives by encouraging them to remain in school. She touched the li vesof so many people w ith her positive philosophy o f life. She is survived by her husband, 4 brothers throughout US, 2childrcn,and 2 grandchildren. Funeral services w ill be held at 11:00 a.m., Hughes M em o­ rial Church, Friday, August 16th. We had better get ready to answer this question, and in a hunry. It is not ju st from ou r state legislature (Vera Katz) and newly-energized regional task forces that we have cries fo r sweeping educational reform ; but from the white House, Congress and industry-both liberal and conservative establishments. There seems to be one pervasive con­ cept integral to all their projections and itc o u ld prove devastating for the future o f m inorities in this country. For the first tim e in this century (since Am erica became p rim a rily u r­ ban), very im portant and influential elements o f our society are renouncing the hallowed, egalitarian principle underlying Am erican education and economics. And this is the b e lie f that all have been endowed w ith intrinsic abilities to achicvc-as w e ll as w ith “ certain inalienable rig h ts ." But now, the aforementioned establishment has b u ilt into its European and Japanese- inspired projections the most rig id and structured T R A C K IN G system ever con­ templated. O ur specific concern is that a ll o f these "Y e a r 2000” programs mandate that there w ill be convenient DROP­ O U T S T A T IO N S at the 10th and 12th grades. In lig h t o f the existing situation in respect to the education o f A frican Am erican children it is not d iffic u lt to project w ho w ill be pul o f f the learning *“ 1 Community train at what station. The ‘ defacto’ drop­ out has been w ith us all the tim e so why should we suppose that the establish­ ment w ill suddenly move from rhetoric to structured ‘ upscale basics’ . T oda y’s ’ front page' article ad­ dresses other issuers raised by this “ Year 2000” bandwagon. But, here, I w ould have you note that in the last m onth or so I have consistently cited modes o f ‘parental involvem ent’ that have been proven to equip them to enhance their childrens’ performance in school. The last tw o weeks in particular I have re­ turned to m y ‘ m otiva tion al’ theme, em ­ phasizing the early A frican contribu­ tions to the w o rld ’s culture and technol­ ogy; “ Issac Newton: Black History Student & The ancient A frican Public Library. This technique and the "R o le M o d e l” approach are going to be ever so critica l as a d rivin g force to establish the ‘ ID E N T IT Y ’ mindset that w ill a l­ low black youth to engage in the learn­ ing process. It is strange that we have so many blacks (among others) w ho can­ not understand this, and bewail the fact that their programs are being over­ whelmed by escalating losses-dropouts, gang activities. They don’t seem to com­ prehend that if the schools arc not doing it-and i f there is not a coherent fa m ily structure present to build self-esteem- then their programs must incorporate this thrust as an essential feature. You can’t must ‘say’ this is fam ily. I note that when I was moved from the building which became the site o f the U M O JA Gang rehabilitation Pro­ gram, eight or nine black and white <• »,•> / * «A4«V* ' * teenagers were assigned to pack up an carry the many scores o f crates contain­ ing my library. C arrying on the usual conversation and exchange I always inspire w ith kids, it did not take long to id en tify their interests (or lack o f them). W h ile their m otivational pro file was typical fo r ‘dropouts’ , I was able to get three interested in the role models in m y book, Black Inve n­ tors o f Am erica. They had not the vagu­ est idea that men and women o f c o lo r had invented so many o f the technical wonders around them or that many o f them were “ D R O PO UTS” . One, who abandoned school be­ cause he just couldn’t understand math” , as amazed at the revelation that “ A f r i­ cans developed the binary math used by todays’ com puter” 1 showed him in twenty minutes and he is back in school. Another o f that trio w ill be a freshman at the U niversity o f Oregon this fa ll. I told this incredulous young man that I had entered law school after passing the entrance exam as a “ high school drop­ o u t” . This was follow ed up by showing him the black history models o f early A frican Am erican educational system- in the books on my shelves. He soon realized that he had no excuses. ’ • Next week I w ill cite several exem ­ plary models o f A frican Am erican Sci­ entists who never saw the inside o f a university but who became w o rld -re ­ nown in their field. Perhaps you can use them to m otivate some black youth who has not learned who he is o r to dream. O r who has been “ tracked” by the Year 2000” enthusictists. "Reinvestments in the Community" is a weekly column appearing in AP, publications through out the USA 4 gr*- component. Here I am incorporating the historical and seminal contribu­ tions to medicine by Africans and A frican Americans. These easily docu­ mented achievements began o ver4000 years ago w ith "Im h o te p ,” ch ie f phy­ sician and architect to an early Egyp­ tian Pharaoh. We have it from D. T. Akinson in his "M a g ic , M yth and M edicine,” “ From the firs t dynasty onward Egypt had a system o f m edi­ cine more rational than the w orld was again to see for over three thousand years. African physicians, famous as teachers, visited and taught in Arabia, Persia, and Greece. Hippocrates, grand­ father o f the great physician by that name, was the pupil o f an Egyptian.” I was able to obtain sim ilar (and fascinating) material from the A l-A h - ram Center For Scientific Translations, Cairo, Egypt,” the Physicians o f Pharonic Egypt” (distributed by the National Library o f Medicine, U. S. Public Health Service, 1983). Here we have detailed accounts o f the sophisti­ cated hierarchy o f general pra ctitio ­ ners and specialists that existed in such early times; “ C hief o f Physicians, Inspector o f Physicians,” medical scribes, pharmacists, internists, occu- lists, proctologists, coroners, embalm- ers, surgeons and even veterinarians. There w ill be, o f course, more re­ cent and contemporary material such as you have seen in these columns; like the story o f Ben Carson, the gifted African American neurosurgeon who traveled from a housing project to the very top o f his profession. Itis o u rh o p e that this project w ill enable many more o f our youth to make the trip. MALLORY AVENUE CHURCH OF CHRIST s d > Portland Observer encourages our readers to write letters to the editor in response to any articles we publish. ’<-• * g over the years, but fo r contemporary interactive referencing o f students and mentors w ith training institutions, “ the literature,” jo b market, and the public. Institutional, and public outreach pro­ grams require such a support mecha­ nism. A dditionally, students must have convenient library referencing. A new and most important compo­ nent o f the present project is the design o f an introductory text/curriculum for the students -- a survey or evaluation o f the m inority health services delivery system. W ith the help o f professionals in the field, this material is being devel­ oped in a tw o-tier mode, high school and university. This is a very important consideration fo r what I ’ ve discovered over the years is that young people have to be kept focused - you cannot rely entirely upon your own enthusiasm and presume that structure and m otivation w ill autom atically occur. A case in point is my book “ Black Inventors o f Am erica,” which was first published in 1969. D uring those early years when I was the only one in the country traveling from city to city “ preaching” and lecturing that “ sci­ ence and technological education and enterprise is the future for m inority youth,” this book kept the issue FO­ CUSED. It was used in many colleges and high school courses and was a basis for many successful workshops and grant applications around the country. Hope­ fu lly , our present efforts in the health science field w ill produce the same level o f interaction. Such a ‘,‘curriculum support” for the students must necessarily include a strong motivational and self-image '. VÍT ♦ ” .*.» *•* » - * S* • ••* • «.- • • • » ♦ ■ M V f ASiSrf