F ebruary 22, 1995 • T he P ortland O bserver P age A 2 r .. / M / l he “Rainbow Custom £ | ! Long-Distance Calling Program,” utilizing the quality service of A T& T’s worldwide network, is up and running. By enrolling in the Rainbow “Partners in Power" program a penny (1 cent) of the 15.9 cents will be used to support the Rainbow Coalition and its programs. You save money and help the Rainbow! FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW NATIONAL' / • Regardless o f your carrier, you are paying higher an higher rates it you are among the tens ot m illions o f Americans who have not signed up for a discount plan. • People who make very few ca lls-o r those who make lotsofcalls but have not bothered to sign up for a discount plan-are seeing their cost per minute go up rather than down. Thus, people are advised to pick a discount calling plan. • A person who makes fewer than $10 in calls in a month would pay A T & T 28 cents a minute for daytime calls. MCI would charge 19 cents a minute • Sprint, meanwhile, announced that it was abandoning all o f its var­ ious discount programs and shifting to “ Sprint Sense," a simple set o f flat rates: 22 cents a minute during the day and 10 cents on evenings and weekends. A customer whose b ill is less than $25 for a month pays a $3 service charge. M a kin g sense o f a ll this may be g ettin g a b it easier. A ll C O A L IT IO N Rainbow Phone Plan Compare And Save at & t S p rin t MCI (Regular) (Sense) (Regular) 28 cents 22 cents 19 cents Graphs above are based on dav rates. (Source: three b ig carriers say they are w illin g to take any person’ s c u r­ rent long-distance b ill and ca lcu ­ late w hat the to ta l w ou ld be un­ der th e ir own discount plan as w e ll as those offered by rivals. • Sprint’ s new flat-rate system is a radical departure from the higher- math comparisons the industry has previously demanded o f callers. So ifcustomers begin flocking to Sprint, A T & T and M CI would be under pressure to adopt tlat-rate plans ot their own. But that could encourage even further price-cutting because the rates would be so easy to com­ pare. [A ll o f the above facts are from The New York Times, January 21, 1995] Kainbs* Elan 15.9 cents 7 Days, 24 Hours NYT, January 21, 1995) Call yoar long-distance carrier today and compare our T O T A L PLAN with the one you currently have, and see the savings add up! CHECK TO SEE IF THE RAINBOW PLAN IS EQUAL OR BETTER • Free Enrollment! • One Flat Rate O f 15.9 Cents Per Minute! (24 hours a day, 7 days a week) • Same Rate for both HOME and BUSINESS! (Most basic rates are about .28 cents per minute during the day. When your long distance carrier says you are saving ‘X ’ per­ cent on your bill, ask them, “ ‘ X ’ PERCENT OFF OF W H A T BASE RATE?" to find out what you are really paying.) • Up To 20% Sav ings Over Most Other DISCOUNTED Calling Plans! (Same as the previous question) • No Monthly M inimum Usage! • Six-Second Incremental B ill­ ing -A dd ition al Savings! (i.e., b ill­ ing is divided into 10 second incre­ ments). For example, ifyo u talk for 3 minutes and 2 seconds, you are often billed for 4 full minutes; while under the Rainbow plan you would be billed for only 3 minutes and 6 seconds. • Already W ith A T & T ? Keep the same quality service and enjoy the Rainbow rate. • A ll B illin g Services Handled By An A T & T B ill Manager! Special coding needs-e.g., attorneys, con­ sultants and others who need to ID calls with special codes? No prob­ lem! F ill out specially designed busi­ ness forms. • Receive A Special Message on your bill each month from the Na­ tional Rainbow Coalition! • A T & T Is A Union Carrier! • You D on't Have To Be A Rainbow Member To Join! But we hope you are. HERE’S HOW TO ENROLL!! It’ s easy. Simply call 1-800- YES-JESS [ 1 -800-937-5377]. Have A Recent Phone B ill In Hand! > Switch Each Telephone Line > Switch FAX Lines > Switch 1-800 Numbers When you answer a series o f questions by an automated operator, within days you w ill be on the Rain- bow Plan. Civil Rights Journal New Threat To Minority Businesses by B ernice P owell J ackson t’s ironic. At the same tim e that there are efforts to eliminate or d ra stic a lly cut w elfare payments to the poorest of the poor, there are also attempts to end governm ent programs which were established to help people of color who own businesses. These programs encourage governm ent contractors to set aside a certain number of contracts for businesses owned by people of color, many of whom would find it difficult or impossible to compete for, these contracts otherwise. It feels like we are under siege from all sides. 31 , A c c o rd in g to the N atio na l M in o rity Suppliers Developm ent C o u n cil, the number o f business­ es owned by people o f co lo r in this country is risin g . They e sti­ mate there are 1.5 m illio n such businesses n ationw ide, w ith an­ nual revenues that co uld go as high as $100 b illio n . T h a t's good news, not o nly fo r these business owners, but also fo r th e ir com ­ m unities and fo r our country be­ cause most job s are in small busi­ nesses and businesses owned by people o f co lo r are often located in th e ir own com m unities and e m p lo y higher percentages o f th e ir own people. M ore business­ es owned by people o f co lo r mean more jo b s fo r our com m unities. But a case now before the U.S. Supreme C ourt endangers many sm all businesses owned by people o fc o lo r. In Adarand C on­ s tru c tio n vs Pena, Adarand C on­ tra c tin g Company o f C olorado is ch allen gin g a U.S. Departm ent o f Transportation program that encourages large contractors to subcontract w ith disadvantaged businesses through fin an cia l in ­ centives. U nder th is program , members o f so-called m in o rity groups and women are presumed s o c ia lly and econom ically disad­ vantaged and other sm all non­ m in o rity owned businesses can be included, i f they establish that they are so c ia lly and econom i­ c a lly disadvantaged. In th is case, A d a ra n d , a w hite-ow ned business, did not receive a contract fo r p ro v id in g h ighw ay guard ra ils, w hich went instead to a H ispanic business because the prim e co ntractor re­ ceived a $10,000 bonus fo r using a disadvantaged business. The suite charges that this violates A darand's o w n er's rig h t to equal p ro tectio n under the 5th amend­ ment to the C o n stitu tio n . The governm ent argued that federal law' is a means o f e ffe c t­ ing an natio na l p o lic y that was adopted by Congress and sup­ ported by Presidents o f both par­ ties and that the federal g overn­ ment can engage more free ly in a ffirm a tiv e action than states and lo c a litie s , w hich in the past have not been allow ed by the Supreme C ourt to use set-aside programs fo r ra c ia l/e th n ic businesses. It also pointed out that this p ro ­ gram was based on disadvantaged business categories, w hich also can include businesses owned by w hite men. Thousands o f those business­ es owned by people o f c o lo r w hich are now doing so w e ll are w atching th is case w ith fear and trep ida tion . They are fearful be­ cause the D epartm ent o f Trans­ p o rta tio n alone set aside $2.2 b illio n in 1993 fo r disadvantaged businesses. They are fearful be­ cause private ind ustry watches governm ent p o lic ie s c a re fu lly and adjusts th e ir p o lic ie s accord­ in g ly. So, not o n ly co uld m in o r­ ity-ow ne d businesses’ g o v e rn ­ ment contracts be je o p a rd iz e d , so too could th e ir contractors w ith private industry. But these businesses are fear­ fu l fo r another reason as w e ll. They remember the days o f “ old boy n etw orks" w hich excluded people o f c o lo r fo r generations. They remember when people o f c o lo r businesses were re d -lin e d by banks and lending in s titu tio n s and it was im possible fo r them to raise the d o lla rs fo r the large bonds often required o f co n tra c ­ tors. They rem em ber when p rio r w ork requirem ents and other so- called q u a lific a tio n s were used to keep them out. This country needs strong busi­ nesses owned by people o f color. This country needs government to take the lead in supporting these busi­ nesses and we need private industry to make a real effort to use them as well. Maybe one day racial/ethnic and women-owned businesses w on’t need that special help, but that day certainly hasn’t yet arrive. Those Bloody Gloves Whose Are They? bv D r . J ohn C ashin 'h e m o s t s e r io u s th re a t to B la c k A m e ric a n m a le s in all s ta te s , a n d fro m a ll w a lk s o f life , is th e fa c t th a t th e K u K lu x K ia n h a s tra d e d in i t ’s w h ite s h e e ts fo r b lu e p o lic e u n ifo rm s .” E rs k in e S m ith -1 9 7 2 N o t m an y p e o p le knew Erskine Sm ith as w e ll as I did At the tim e o f his death in 1973, Erskine was the chairm an o f the Alabam a A d v is o ry C om m ittee to the U.S. C om m ission on C iv il R ights. I was the V ice C hairm an, and I succeeded him as Chairm an a fte r his death. He was a b rillia n t law yer, and a fearless cham pion o f C iv il R ights in Alabam a in the days when it was p h y s ic a lly dan­ gerous and econom ic suicide tor w hite man to defend B lack A m er­ icans' C iv il R ights in the State o f Alabama. But despite the threats, Erskine never faltered or backed down. He was also very b rig h t, as his Phi Beta Kappa key attest­ ed The quotation above came from I one o f our many reports to the U.S. Commission on C iv il Rights. Our Alabama Committee had become the most active o f the fifty states, which was a natural result o f Alabama's role as “ the keystone State o f Mas­ sive Resistance", and “ The Heart o f D ixie", and "The Capital o f the Con­ federacy". With such mottos and boasting, it is no wonder that Ala­ bama became the main battleground o f the C ivil Rights movement. In fact, John Patterson was elected gov­ ernor over George Wallace in 1958, mainly because he could boast that, as Attorney General, he had "put the NAACPoutofbusinessin Alabama!" Few people outsideof Alabama know that ju s t being a m em ber o f N.A.A.C.P orC.O.R.E. in Alabama was punishable by a $1,000.00 fine and six months in ja il! But this column is not about Alabama and/or the C iv il Rights movement per se It is about the current rage o f the century, the O.J. Simpson murder trial in California. Whenever I spoke before audiences back in the sixties and early seven­ ties, I was obliged to point out that things were the same Up South and Down South. Many “ knee-Grows” disputed me back then, but not any longer! Time does te ll— Right? Since the very beginning o f the tragic O.J. Simpson murder case. I have had an uneasy gut felling that some things offered as evidence against O.J. just defy logic. The most disturbing thing was the convenient­ ly incriminating bloody gloves, one found at the murder scene, and the other at O.J.’s house. But where at O.J.'s house? In a narrow space be­ tween a steel fence and the wall be­ hind the room o f a “ witness" who heard loud bumps and thumps at a time “ conveniently” appraised as shortly after the murder. It was these loud noises reported by this witness which led to the search o f this remote area. I suppose, and EUREKA!! The Los Angeles Police detective found the other bloody glove'! How “ con­ venient"! how “ cut and dried!" But the story is a bit too cute for me to swallow! First o f all, even the dumbest, craziest kille r in the world is dumb enough to leave two bloody gloves anywhere to be easily discovered, and is much less likely to leave one at p e r s p r e c t i / v r e s More Recommendations Of Excellent Readings In Black History: Both Classic And Modern bv P rof . M c K inely B i ri he follo w in g two paragraphs are taken from the preface of an inspiring book pub-lished in 1993 by James M. Brodie; “Created Equal: The Lives And Ideas Of Black American Innovators”, Bill Adler Books (William Morrow & Co.) You will not only be given a new perspective on many known classic pioneers in science, medicine and invention, but will be introduced to new geniuses, men and women -- from business to nuclear science. The preface voices my sentiments exactly’. “ The cre­ ativity o f African people was evi­ dent long before th ey w ere brought to the North American continent. Euro­ pean explorers were in awe over the advancement o f African civiliza­ tions, and they returned home with wondrous stories o f a black-skinned people who were more advanced in their knowledge o f astronomy, nav­ igation, mathematics, architecture, literature, and agriculture than any­ one they had ever encountered." 'They spoke o f the mighty em­ pires. the power and emotion in the art, the elaborate governments and ornate cities, the detailed codes o f law, and the ingenious methods A f­ ricans used to irrigate their crops, keep time, and embalm their dead. In fact, the first noted European h is to ria n and p h ilo s o p h e r Herodotus, a Greek, remarked in the fifth century B.C. that Africa was the greatest civilization in hu­ man history.” Every few years I recommend the follow ing three-volume set on African literature: “ Ancient Egyp­ tian Literature, 3 vol.” , M iriam Lichtheim, University o f C alifor­ nia Press, Berkeley, 1973 (pb. 1975) Vol I., the Old Kingdom; Vol II, The New Kingdom; Vol III, The Late Period. The set may also be ordered through the mail order, cat­ alog house, “ the Scholar’s Book­ shelf, l lOMelrichRoad,Cranbury. N.J., 08512; No. 45I2 R. Price $39.00. Shipping $4.00. The longer I have these vol­ umes, the more I learn from their revelations; better understanding each year why Plato and Herodotus, the leading historians and philoso­ phers o f ancient Greece, said that the Africans were the inventors o f “ letters/language” (along with as­ tronomy, mathematics. etc._. One w ill soon realize with startling clar­ ity that the plots and story lines o f many "B ib lic a l" narratives had A f­ rican sources; Egypt having estab­ lished colonies in Israel long before the era o f the Jews ot the Old T esta- ment. The chronicles o f their con­ quests remain, etched in stone — in Africaand in museumsofthe world, alternately conceded, then denied in racist ambivalence. It is her in Dr. Lichtheims of­ ferings we note the striking (reveal­ ing) sim ilarity o f earlier African literature to the "Psalms", the so­ journs o f Moses, to the predictions o f Ezekiel, the descriptions o f the soul, resurrection and afterlife and to many religious rituals, incanta­ tions and icons. Egyptian Religion is detailed in books by Donald Budge — on a j sh elf locally at “ Looking Glass By \ Bookstore, 318 Professor s. W. T a y lo r, Mckinley I 227-4760. Given Burt \ these facts, we _______ J marvel that there are African Americans who are won­ dering aloud in the nation’ s black media and lecture halls, "why it is that Israel has hustled the so-called 'Ethiopian Jews’ out o f Africa to the Holy Land' -- employing ex­ pensive a irlifts while borrowing money from the U.S. for new hous­ ing9 Can it be that, unlike most blacks, there are peoples on this earth smart enough and astute enough to control their versions o f history? We offer more enlightening readings. The founders(?) o f "psy­ chiatry” , Sigmond Freud ( The Oe­ dipus Complex) and Carl G. Jung (Signs and Sy mbols) developed their basic theories o f psychoanalysis, human personality , dreams and the subconscious from the stories and narrativesof African literature. One o f the most familiar photographs in the world is that o f Freud with the African bust on his desk. Jung, au­ thor o f "M an And His Symbols", documented that the Christian sym­ bols (Ezekial Evangelists) were derived from worship o f the Egyp­ tian sun god. Horus. and his four sons (P.3). U.S. President Thom as Jefferson certainly thought Horus was worth emulating. For his de­ sign o f the 'Great Seal O f The U nit­ ed states' he placed the all-seeing eye o f the African god over another African icon, a truncated pyramid (look on the reverse side o f a dollar bill). The L atin phrase, "A n n u it C oeptis" means “ He (G o d ) has favored our e nte rp rise ". What arrogance and guts these slave owners had. M ore re v e a lin g books next week; P ioneering black authors. STFfe |Hortlaub ©bscruer the murder scene, and the other at his house!! This strains credibility to the utmost! But the other credibility cri­ sis came when prosecutor C lark made her detailed opening statement dur­ ing the first day o f the trial. Perhaps she recognized her problem, because she carefully and dramatically traced the drops o f blood from the Bronco, up the driveway, and into O.J’ s front door, meticulously describing each numbered drop as matching the de­ fendant’ s. However, she avoided mentioning the bloody glove and where it had been discovered, per­ haps a hundred feet around two cor­ ners from the trail o f drops she care­ fully described! Maybe she thinks she can convince the ju ry that O.J. entered the premises twice, or that Johnnie L. Cochran, Jr., F Lee Bailey and Bob Shapiro w on't notice the discrepancy! FAT CHANCE!! These guys are the best there is! And 1 would even bet they have contacted Morris Dees at Klanwatch in M ont­ gomery, Alabama, to see what infor­ mation they might have on K K K infiltration o f the Los Angeles Police Department! Now w ouldn't that be interesting9 (USPS 959-680) OREGON'S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERIC AN Pl BI ICATION Established in 1970 by Alfred L. Henderson Joyce Washington—Publisher The P O R T LA N D O BSER VER is located at 4747 NE M a rtin L u th e r King, Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 503-288-0033 * Fax 503-288-0015 Deadline fo r all subm itted materials: A rtic le s :F rid a y , 5 :0 0 p m Ads M on da y N oon PO STM A STER : Send Address Changes to: Portland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, Portland. OR 97208. Second Class postage p a id at Portland. 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