Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, February 02, 1994, Page 10, Image 10

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    F ebruary 02,1994 • T he P ortland O bserver
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PCC Celebrates Black History Month
at 7 p.m.
O ther activities for the month
include a “ Rap Forum ” that fea­
tures local RAP artists (LOVA,
U-CREW and LEE DOG PR O ­
DUCTIO NS). The forum will a l­
low for discussion on how RAP
m usic influences culture. The a rt­
ists will be involved in the discus­
sion and copies o f their lyrics will
be provided. A RAP forum will
take place on the Rock Creek
Cam pus, T hursday, Feb. 10 at
noon in the Town H all, 17705
N.W . S p rin g v ille R d., and at
Sylvania, 12000 S. W. 49th Ave.,
On Friday, Feb. 11 at noon in
STA-1 of the CC B uilding.
A n o th e r h ig h lig h t o f the
month will be the “G ospel E xplo­
sion” on Saturday, Feb. 19, at
V ancouver Avenue First B aptist
Portland Community College
celebrates Black History
month districtwide during the
month of February. A number of
events are sponsored on PCC cam­
puses and in the community. (Please
see the accompanying schedule for a
listing of events.) The Theme for
1994 is “UMOJA.”
PCC will sponsor a panel
d is c u s s io n led by P o rtla n d ’s
C h ie f o f P o lic e, Dr. C h arles
M oose, on “ Personal Solutions
to V iolence in the C om m unity.”
on W ednesday, Feb. 2. C hief
M oose will be joined by Halim
R ahsan from the P ortland Youth
Gang Program and Harold W il­
liam s, chair of P C C ’s Board of
D irectors. This event is set at the
C a s c a d e C a m p u s , 705 N.
K illingsw orth, T errell Hall 122
C hurch. 3138 N. V ancouver, 7
p.m. G ospel music has been the
foundation o f A m erican m usic,
and its roots trace back directly
to A fr ic a . D o n ’t m iss th is
celebratory event!
A t the C a sc a d e C am p u s
Gym, PCC will host the Fifth
Annual “ Black B usiness E x p o ,”
Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 12
and 13. This event features b u si­
n e sse s from re ta il, s e rv ic e ,
w holesale, m anufacturing, c o n ­
struction and other industries
tied to the A frican-A m erican
com m unity. The expo is sch ed ­
uled from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m . on
S aturday, and 10 a.m . to 4 p.m .
on Sunday.
Contact Sonia Key-Fender, 244-
6111, ext. 4360, or Ken Adair, ext.
4535, for more information.
Immaculate
Heart Parish
Mardi Gras
Dance
Wednesday, February 9, 1994,
Immaculate Heart Church, invites you
to attend a Louisiana style Mardi
Gras Dance, at its Parish Hall located
at 2926 N. Williams, featuring San
Francisco’s Zydoco Flames. Come
and hear this tight young quintet with
its feet in the East Bay and it heart in
Lafayette, La. Also to be noted, quite
a few of Immaculate Heat’s members
are from Lafayette, La., and they know
how to get things going. This evening
prom ises to be a very authentic Mardi
Gras celebration, for those who have
never been able to attend the famous
celebration in New Orleans, La., we
promise you a bit of those festivities
right here in Portland, Oregon. The
evening will not disappoint those who
want to dance to Zydens music or
learn the Louisiana two step and other
Zydeoc dances. Come out and have
some fun with us!
The band fronted by a couple of
guys who really love what they do,
accordionist Bruce Grodoan and the
washborad man Lloyd Meadows.
Come, bring the family, wear a cos­
tume, get in the Mardi Gras Mood.
PO ETR Y IN H O N O R OF B L A C K H IS T O R Y M O N T H
WORDS OF WISDOM
N ot a day passes by without me looking
at the sky and thinking, why did Dr. M artin
Luther King have to die?
Some people wonder why
people had to sit back and sigh,
but for m e, I will always know why.
Then they cried as the night went by
and the Black people wondered if they
were going to die.
A t their surprise, Dr. King came
and said, “O ur race will never die."
But all who think Dr. M artin Luther King
was the first one to speak ... well, you’re
wrong. H e was just the first one to be
heard.
Jillian Murphy
age 13
Portland, Oregon
February Emerge Features
The Quest For Justice
As the accused murderer of civil criticizing my personal and profes­
rights worker Mcdgar Evers prepares sional com petence, which I felt
to stand trial in several weeks, the weren’t being properly refuted by the
February cover story of EMERGE: State Department or the White House.
“In retrospect, when you look at
Black A m erica’s Newsmagazine
the
initial
news stories which were
chronicles Myrlie Evers’ 30-year
done
on
my
appointment, the press
struggle to see Byron dc la Beckwith
said,
'H
e’s
college
president and corpo­
convicted for her husband’s murder.
In “ T ra ils and T rib u la tio n s ,” rate executive, but he has no foreign
EMERGE contributing edi­
tor and Los Angeles Times
columnist Karen Grigsby
Bates recounts the tragedy of
Medgar’s death and the de-
tcrminationofhis widow not
only to build prosperous lives
for her remaining family,but
to bring the accused mur­
derer to justice. Bates writes,
“her 30-year journey to bring
Byron dc la Beckwith, Evers’
accused killer, to justice has
helped to transform how
Mississippians - Black and
White - view the adminis­
tration of justice in their
state.”
Bates reports that de la
Beckwith is being tried a
third time - the first two
trials ended in deadlocked
juries in 1964 — because of
Evers’ tireless quest for evi­
dence and insistence that a
reluctant state attorney gen­
eral reopen the case. “I’d
promised Medgar that I will Myrlie Evers co n so les son, Darrell, during
go the last mile of the way M edgar’s funeral.
with him,” says Evers. “I
can’t say I will have done that until policy experience,” ’ Wharton recalls.
“They did not look further than
this trial, whatever the outcome.”
Also this month, former State that because they were thinking that
Department Deputy Secretary Clifton here is a stereotypical minority ap­
R. Wharton Jr. gives his first inter­ pointment, not the appointment of an
view since abruptly resigning his post individual who has any international
in November. “I believed my effec­ experience. But the press made up
tiveness had been comprom ised and I their minds that mine was a ’token’
was not willing to stay and watch it be appointment, and that was the way
further eroded,” Wharton tells Lee A. they wrote about it.”
In another ground-breaking
Daniels, a former New York Times
reporter who conducted the interview story, Cincinnati Enquirer columnist
for EMERGE. “I would not say that Trevor W. Coleman reveals a Black
mine was a 'forced’ resignation. It conservative conspiracy against the
was a conscious decision on my part, NAACP. According to the article,
due primarily to the fact that there several Black groups and individuals
were successive leaks circulating, with right wing agendas are organiz­
ing to undermine the NAACP, the
nation ’ s oldest and largest civil rights
organization. One activist, Jackie
Cissell, says, “The NAACP, without
question, is outside the mainstream of
the Black community on a lot o f the
important issues, and if they are not
going to represent our people, they
need to quite running around with
that banner.”
NAACP President Ben
Chavis tells EMERGE: “In
fact. Black conservatives get
more attention from White
conservatives. They have
very little impact on the black
community, and m ost of
them are taken as being po­
litical and social deviants -
but they are taken seriously
by White conservatives. It’s
very interesting that a group
that has no support in the
Black community can get
financing out side the com ­
munity to play a divisive role
within the community.”
And Roger Wilkins, a
history professor and a
former assistant U.S. attor­
ney general, comments:
“Conservative White people
are always trying to turn
Black people into ventrilo­
quist dummies. “They want
to pick our leaders, and they
want to determine what is
legitimate and not legitimate
for us to say.”
The February issue of EMERGE
contains several other compelling
articles, including the first extensive
interview with George Haley since
the death of his brother, Roots author
Alex Haley, the last of a 2-part series
on how proposed health care reforms
will affect African-Americans, and
an examination of First Amendment
issues in light of a Black attorney’s
defense of a Ku Klux Kian grand
dragon in Texas.
EM ERGE: Black A m erica’s
Newsmagazine, based in Arlington,
Va.,wasestablishcdin 1989.1thasan
ABC-audited circulation of more than
150,000.
Denise Crittendon Named
Editor Of The Crisis Magazine
First Woman in 84-Year History To Hold Post
Presented bv
■0
BANK.
THE ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS
CELEBRATES BLACK HISTORY MONTH
US Army Corps
of Engineers
Portland District
The
US Army Corps of Engineers
is committed to developing
The Crisis Publishing Company,
Inc. has named Denise Crittendon as
editor of The Crisis Magazine-the
oldest, continuously published, na­
tional African-American newsmaga­
zine in America. She becomes the
first woman to serve as editor of the
84-year-old magazine, according to
the publication’s new president and
publisher, Gentry W. Trotter.
The Crisis, which was founded
in 1910bycivilrightsactivistW .B.E.
DuBois, in previous years has been
considered the official, national news
organ of the National Association for
The Advancement of Colored People
(NAACP). However, in recent years
the magazine has expanded beyond
the N A ACP’s organ status and cover-
age of civil rights news excessively;
and today its coverage includes civil
rights news, music, art, editorials,
health, business, youth news and fash­
ion.
Most recently the Crisis Maga­
zine has been placed on newsstands
in may major cities across the country
as a general African-American news
magazine with an emphasis,
A native of Detroit, Michigan,
Crittendon was recently on staff at
Wayne State University in Detroit as
a journalism instructor before joining
the Crisis staff. She has also taught at
Central Michigan University in Mount
pleasant, Michigan and Olivet Col-
D a u g h t e r s O f S h in in g
S t a r O f U n it y T e m p le
#1379 I.B.P.O. Elks Of The World
Event: Ethnic Disco Dance
When: Saturday, February 19, 1994
Where: 6 N. Tillamook • Time: 9:00 P.M. To 2:00 A.M.
Ethnic Fashions by Sheeba’s
US Army Corps of Engineers • PO Box 2946 • Portland, Oregon 97208-2946
I
i
The Daughters O f Shining Star
Of Unity Temple #1379 arc a one
year old temple in The Billy Webb
Improved, Benevolent, Protective
Order O f Elks O f The World. The
African/Amencan order was first
bom in 1899 with an all male mem­
bership. The Auxiliary, known as
the Daughters O f Elks was first or­
ganized on June 13, 1902. The
I.B.P.O. Elks are the African/Ameri-
can Temples Of Elkdom. The Afri-
can/American Temples added the
‘B.P.’ to the initials I.B.P.O. These
letters stand for Benevolent, Protec­
tive Order and Denotes not only its
difference from White/American Elks
Orders, But defines its place in the
African/Amcrican Community. In
times when no national system ex-
isted. The Elks Lodges through pro­
ceeds from social, cultural and rec­
reational functions: supported the
widow, unwed-mother, or burial of
a community member. With a focus
towards charity and education. The
Daughters Of Shining Star Of Unity
arc carrying forth with the mission,
for the ‘Betterment Of The Commu­
nity’.
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