P age J anu ary A? 1, 1997 « T he P ortland O bserver Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily Reflect Or Represent The Views O f (Elje ¡Portland fflbscrorr Attention Readers! Please take a minute to send us your comments. We’re always trying to give you a better paper and we can't do it without your help. Tell us what you like and what needs improvement... any suggestions are welcomed and appreciated. We take criticism well! Get your powerful pens out NOW and address your letters to: Editor, Reader Response, P.O, Box 3137, Portland, OR 972WL (Elje ^.lortlanh (©bscruer (USPS 959-68(1) Established in 1970 Charles W ashington Publisher & Editor Mark W ashington Distribution Manager Gary Ann Taylor Business M anager Sean Cruz Consultant & Editor Portland Ohservador Danny Bell Advertising Sales M anager Gary Washington Public Relations Paul Neufeldt Production & Design kovonne Black Business Assistant Contributing Writers: Professor McKinley Burt, Lee Perlman, Fred Hembry. 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REPRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PART W ITH­ OUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED The Portland O bserver—O regon’s Oldest Multicultural Publica­ tion—is a member of the National Newspaper Association- Founded in 1885, and The National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc, New York. NY. and The W est Coast Black Publishers Association • Serving Portland and Vancouver. S ubscribe to $ b r t i a n h < © b sm > cr The Portland Observer can be sent directly to your home for only $30.00 per year Please fill out. enclose check or money order, and mail to: S ubscriptions T he P ortland O bserver ; PO B ox 3137 P ortland , O regon 97208 Name:______________ Address City, State:________ Zip-Code: T hank Y ou F or R eading T he P ori land O bserver teller Tfv 'Cite Capitar Send your letters to the Editor to: Editor, PO Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208 Demand paper: It’s the law T here’s a reason why stores ask. “Paper or plastic?" when bagging purchases—they have to. Accord­ ing toOregon law (ORS 459A .695), retail establishments that offer plas­ tic bags to customers for purchases made at the store must offer paper bags as an alternative to plastic bags. Further, the store must in­ form customers that the choice is available. The law was passed in 1991 to encourage the use of paper bags and facilitate recycling options. Paper bags are considered environ­ mentally superior to plastic bags for a number of reasons: They are manufactured from a renewable, natural resource: they are easy to recycle; they are made from recy­ clable materials; and they require less energy to manufacture. Willamette Industries. Inc. is the largest producer of paper grocery bags in Oregon. Bags are manufac­ tured at the com pany’s Beaverton plant with paper manufactured at W illam ette’s paper mill in Albany. The null combines recycled bags and old corrugated containers with leftover wood fibers from sawmills and plywood plants to make paper. W illam ette's bags contain up to 60 percent recycled content O reg o n re v ise d sta tu te 459A.695: Any retail establishment that offers plastic bags to customers lor purchases made at the establish­ ment shall offer, at the location where the customer pays for the goods, paper bags as an alternative to plastic bags and inform custom­ ers that a choice is available. Noth­ ing in this subsection shall be con­ strued as requiring retail establish­ ments to use plastic bags. —Carrie Keese, Willamette Industries, Inc. exaco released its diver­ sity plan, in response to the scandal caused by the corporate racism in its exec­ utive suites. "Texaco is on a journey from trag­ edy to triumph The journey is in­ complete, but they have changed their course “ It took a combination of factors to trigger a review of Texaco's toxic culture: worker resistance to indigni­ ty, the sacrifice of some jobs and careers, law suits, embarrassing tapes, and a strong consumer boycott which devalued Texaco’s stock. "Texaco's review was from the Board ol Directors to entry level positions Under the leadership of Peter Bijur, Texaco has developed a plan for equal opportunity and inclu­ sion- an affirm ative rem edy to present and past discrimination “Mr. Bijur plans to expand by pursuing the urban market, as op- p e r N A T IO N A L C O A L IT IO N Texaco: Tragedy to triumph poseil to the present strategy of urban abandonment. Texaco is now reach­ ing out for new talent and new capi­ tal This is good under the law, and it is good business. “Texaco’s new plan is compre­ hensive and thorough, but our stand­ ing concerns about the environment, and the lack of complete data remain unresolved. Without detailed em ­ ployment information on l.atino/His- panics, without further details about African American employment, and s p e without an adequate plan to reduce emissions of carcinogens, their plan remains incomplete We will contin­ ue to m onitor-and force adequate attention t o — these areas “The specific benchm arks for goals, targets, and timetables for employment and business opportu­ nity expansion are substantial For example, Texaco plans to double the number of minority- and women- owned wholesaler marketers within five years. Overall company minori­ ty employment will increase from 23% to 29% within four years, and employment of women will increase from 32% to 35%. “Texaco also plans to increase its purchasing with minority and worn- en-owned businesses, from $135 million this year to a cumulative total over five years of more than $1 bil­ lion. "Those businesses include pro­ fessional service firms in the areas of law, advertising, accounting, and public relations. “Texaco officials say they are al­ ready increasing the number ot m i­ nority- and women-owned banks they do business with, from 21 to 50. The company will increase the number ol fixed-income and equity managers of its pension fund who are women and minorities from one to eight, and increase the funds under their m an­ agement from $31 million to $186 million--13% of the fund. r e s We Have Fire, Now Let’s Move On • ome of us seem not to have had a new idea since th e discovery of fire. At least it would appear that way when we examine a number of pro­ grams said to address the economic, educational or social situation of African Americans. Certainly that is notjust one m an’s opinion, a fact made abundantly clear by (he reader comments generated by recent articles: "W ho fold You That You Were Naked" for an in­ stance, and similar expositions of forw ard-looking interventions -- quite successful and which could be applied across the board. Special interest was expressed in my description of inter-generation applications that enabled the design of experience-based programs for the youngsters. By sensibly taking ad­ vantage o fa real-time learning curve, one has no difficulty tailoring a pro­ cedure which with that parent and grand parent support can accomplish a seamless transition into the ‘year- 2000’ technology. Several people were especially appreciative of my reprise of earlier U.S. Forest Service Outreach Pro­ grams where this time instead of tak­ ing the youths and parents to tree nurseries or other horticultural sites to see black role models in techno­ logical environs - my program trans­ ports them to the 'w est side provinc­ es of cyberspace' and the w orld's electronic future. W e’ve discovered fire and I thoroughly understand its time to move on (or perish). One reader said, “we wondered what was up when we could drive by your place and see you sitting out there on that little ledge in front of the beauty shop - or my son would quiz­ zically comment that sometimes he would see a van load of kids pick you up (doesn't look like he’s headed tor the Senior Citizens Center). Now we know; right on brother.” Several teachers commented, “we were wondering why you were ac­ tively involved with AOI (Associa­ tion or Oregon Industries), hobnob­ bing with all those big C.E.O.s and executives from that other culture' and paying those big dues for the privilege. But now it all begins to fall into place.” Well, thank the Lord for little things. Some people are beginning to remember that I came to the teaching fraternity after two decades of inten­ sive experience in the very real world of American industry and business, m oving alo n g the tra d itio n a l timelines: worked technician, book­ keeper, accountant, certified for Fed­ eral Tax Court practice, and admin- istrator/executive. This, I explain to sometimes un­ comprehending people, is how I was able to win that National Science Foundation Award for that Math- Communications Demonstration in The Dalles O regon’ - startling ev­ eryone by being the first ever to put terminals in elementary/jumor high class rooms and to On-line with re­ mote computers and industrial sites ( 1966). Earlier this year I gave a hint of my new ‘21st century' designs when I gave a demonstration for P o rtlan d 's "Saturday A cadem y” (Michael Grice, Director). The word out there in westside cyberspace land is that several of my new designs may again win national awards Once more I am trying to point the way, demonstrating the obvious - that the education process can be successfully designed to in­ corporate the “real world” . But real­ izing that this requires input of real people from the real world, not the superficiality of academic dilettantes (not all of course). And also it is found that real world experiences equip one with a “peo­ ple posture" that transcends race and culture;e.g my organizing a demon­ stration support group for The Dalles demon station: engineers, electronic technicians, ranchers, teachers, el. or when back in 1949 & 1950 I orga­ nized 2 dozen white car dealers and set up "Union Ave. Finance Co.” “Shuckin and Jivin” ( hosea 4 6) ur youth need to be re educated. They need the intellectual history of the B lack movement toward people- hood, and it’s leaders. Today this task falls heavily on the shoulders of youth who have it with­ in their grasp to lead us all out of this wilderness on the treacherous shores of this modern Babylon. They can do so not only by looking forward, for they came further than the rest of us, but by looking backward as well, for they can see the future more clearly if they look from the perspective of the past It is for them to complete the task which was so nobly advanced by our leaders of the past. These children of the sun Io whom life has bequeathed an awesome legacy. For they - our youth - are surely the last best hope for the transformation of our people, our coun­ try, and our world. Critics sometime say that each generation of young Blacks acts as though history didn’t begin until they cam e on the scene; that the young fail to appreciate that there is interna­ tional in scope. To the extent that this charge is intended to promote cyni­ cism and demoralization, it should be rejected out of hand. But to the extent that it is intended to instruct then its merits should be considered. I'm inclined to believe, history favors no particular generation; we must all hack our way through time, clim bing over obstacles and strug­ gling with forces that would oppress us But each generation is not isolat­ ed unto itself, stumbling along in an historical void. Others have traveled similar paths, and we would do well to learn from the fighters and teach­ ers who have gone before. Since we tend to associate people with events, it is particularly fitting that we should pay tribute to Jose Marti, H oChi M inhand Malcolm X. It is significant these revolutionary figures and, more importantly, in their lives we can discern the history and unity of the great struggle against racism and oppression. Brother Ho Chi Minh, the man who was to lead the Vietnamese peo­ ple in their long struggle against French, Japanese and Amerikan im­ perialism, was born. Five years later, Jose Marti, called the Apostle of the Cuban Revolution and a hero to the oppressed people of Latin Amerika, was killed in battle while fighting the Spanish colonialists. Thirty years later. Brother Malcolm X, who was to epitomize the new Black awaken­ ing in North Amerika, was born. Ho Chi Minh was a revolutionary Vietnamese patriot, but he was also an internationalist concerned about all oppressed peoples, including Black people in the United States. Ho, who visited the U.S. more than sixty years ago as a mess boy aboard a ship, had a deep interest in the plight of Black people. In 1924 he wrote an article for a French publica­ tion denouncing lynching in the U.S. that essay opened with the statement: It is well known that the Black race is the most oppressed and ex­ ploited of the human family. It is well known that the spread of capitalism and the discovery of the New World had as an immediate result the birth of slavery which was, for centuries a scourge for the Negroes and a bitter disgrace for mankind. What every­ one does not perhaps know, is that after sixty-five years o f so - called emancipation. Amerikan Negroes still endure atrocious moral suffer­ ings, of which the most cruel and horrible is the custom of lynching. In another article, Brother Ho at­ tacked the Christian knights of the Ku Klux Kian and observed that Black People and Vietnamese were victims of racism. He called for sol­ idarity among all the oppressed. Similarly. Brother Jose Marti, who lived in exile for several years in the U.S. was appalled by the racism in this country and its growing influ­ ence in his native Cuba. He declared that the revolution for which he was fighting must destroy racism In re­ sponding to a racist article published in a Philadelphia newspaper, he as­ serted that: The colored man is already a fully achieved being who reads his book and knows the measure of his waist. He doesn't need any secret manna to be supplied from the sky of the whites. In the life of Brother Malcolm X we see the new militant spirit that seized the Black movement in the 1950s and 1960s. Beyond that. Broth­ er Malcolm also called for solidarity among all oppressed peoples. He spoke of “linking the problem of racism in Mississippi with the prob­ lem of racism in the Congo, and also the problem of racism in South Viet­ nam” “it's all racism,” he said. “It’s all part of the vicious racist system that the Western powers have used to continue to degrade and exploit and o p p re ss the p e o p le in A frik a (ALKEBU-LAN)andLatin Amerika during recent centuries." And he con­ cluded: The concept of a unified struggle against racism and the idea of Third World solidarity did not arise just yesterday or in a vacuum. Rather, they developed as an inevitable re­ sponse to the growth and decay of imperialism on a world scale The struggle will be long, and unity is essential for victory. This is the polit­ ical heritage left to us by Brother Malcolm X, Brother Ho Chi Minh and Brother Jose Marti. I know many of my Christian Brothers and Sisters may be mad at me, but I must say this. Generations of Black preachers lost sight of the radical and revolutionary nature of the Christian gospel. They forgot that Jesus the Christ stood in opposition to the religious, political, and social status quo of his day because he found those positions to be oppres­ sive and de humanizing to his peo­ ple. Many are able to talk about the crucifixion of Christ without really understanding that here was a radi­ cal, a revolutionary who was put to death for treason Christ was a Mal­ colm X. —Dr. Jam il Cherovee, Field Fir. For CORF “How to Maximize Your Unemployment Benefits” by R aymond A vrutis he federal government d o es not te ll p eo p le about their rights and re­ sponsibilities to receive unem­ ploym ent Insurance (U l). In my co-authored unique book, How to M aximize Your Unemploy­ ment Benefits: Complete Inform a­ tion for All 50 States (Avery Publish­ ing, 1994, 216 pages, $8.95 + $3.50 shipping. O rder from 1-800-548- I 5757), I discuss how to get every UI dollar you my be entitled to receive. Here arc some facts about UI you should know: I . No minimum age is required to collect UI. You may live with your parents, or in a group house or even be homeless - just have a P O. Box or a friend s house at which to receive your checks Problem: Many states disqualify (DQ) people who would otherwise be eligible just because they're stu­ dents. This form of discrimination should be taken to the U.S. Supreme Court. Start by filing your two (gen erally free) appeals if you are DQ because you're in class. 2. UI is not welfare, but comes from an already-paid employer tax on your prior wages. Employees contribute a small amount in just three states Problem: Ul often has a bad name Unemployment offices can be grungy places But the program should be seen as a survival blessing, not a curse 3 You need not be poor to draw benefits. Rich stockbrokers have re­ ceived unemployment checks, which are often “signed for” no longer in person, but simply by mailing in a computer card which is sent back to you as an unemployment check and another card (until you exhaust your claim or find a job). In some states. UI continued claims are done by push-button telephone. 4. Part time and temporary work, even work performed at two or more jobs in two or more slates, usually counts towards your UI benefits. (Part-time work for non-profit orga­ nizations that don't pay federal in­ come tax is not covered). Problem When people leave a job, they are often not told about their Ul benefit rights and responsi­ bilities by their employer 5. You don’t need six months of constant work to qualify. Base peri­ od earnings of $2,000 or more are necessary in only 11 states. I suggest you read my book for full informa­ tion about qualifying requirements 6. You must be able to work, avail­ able for work, and looking for work to collect UI. But you don't have to take "just any” job, only suitable employment - if such work can be found.