j vi y 2, 1997 • T he P ortland O bserver j E A4 XiTÜRIAL 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 appreci­ ated. We take criticism well! Get your powerful pens out NOW and address your letters to: Editor, Reader Response, P. O. Bos 3137, Portland, O R 9 7 2 0 8, W lje ^ o r t l a n b (© b s e ru e r (USPS 959-680) Established in 1970 Charles Washington Publisher <4 Editor Mark Washington Distsribution Munager Gary Ann Taylor Kusin ess Manager Larry J. Jackson, Sr. Director o f Operation Yvonne Lerch Account Executives Mike Leighton Copy Editor Contributing Writers: Professor McKinley Burt, Lee Perlman, Neil Heilpern 4747 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, Oregon 97211 503-288-0033 • Fax 503-288-0015 Email: Pdxobserv@aol.com Deadline for all submitted materials: Articles:Friday, 5:00pm Ads: Monday, 12:00pm POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes To: Portland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. Periodicals postage paid at Portland, Oregon Subscriptions $30.00 per year The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manu­ scripts and photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned if accompanied by a self addressed envelope. All created design display ads become the sole property of the newspaper and cannot be used in other publications or personal usage without the written consent of the general manager, unless the client has purchased the composition ol such ad © 1996 THE PORTLAND OBSERVER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, REPRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PART W! I H- OUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED. The Portland Observer-Oregon’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 West Coast Black Publishers Association • Serving Portland and Vancouver. S ubscribe to hina represses religious freedom, dominates Tl- L, bet, threatens Taiwan, restricts democracy in Hong Kong, oppresses independent unions, and undercuts wages with prison labor-so now they've been rewarded with Most Fa­ vored nation (MFN) status. Cuba gets a trade embargo, even on food and medicine. Could it be because Cuba is small, while china has a billion potential consumers? The MEN vote for China this week was a setback for human rights. SHAFTA-Rep. BobWise(D-WV) calls it SHAFTA-the Southern Hemi­ sphere Area Free Trade Associa- tion-the Clinton Administration's attempt to win “fast track" negotiat­ ing authority for NAFTA expansion into South America, starting with Chile. However, by 2-1, a majority of Americans believe that trade agree­ ments are more likely to cost jobs than to create them. 73% believe labor and environmental issues should be negotiated as part of trade agreements, rather than separately. And the AFL-CIO will oppose any fast-track legislation that does not require enforceable labor and envi­ ronmental standards. lio r tia n b (O h sm w r 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: Sl BS( RIT I IONS T he P o r u and O bserver ; PO B ox 3137 P or i land , O regon 97208 Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ — ------- Address:.__________ __________________ ___________________ _— City, State; ------------ -------------- ------------------------------------ —-— Zip-Code : ----------------------------- --------------------------------------- -— T hank Y o t F or R eading T iu P ortland O bserver This Way for Black Empowerment Bill Clinton Can’t Heal The Racial Divide by I) r . L enora F ulani everal w eeks ago P re s id e n t C lin to n kicked off his cam­ paign to heal the racial divide in America. Bill Clinton is one of those politicians who has built his career off of reinforc­ ing that racial divide. Bu, like any politician who bases his principles on the polls, the focus groups and the politi­ cal winds, what he did yesterday has no bearing on what he docs today. Everything is for political gain Little is for the good of the country. And nothing is for the good of African Americans In his speech at the University of California in San Diego he told the country that we have the opportunity to overcome the ra­ cial polarization that still plagues A m erica and create a “truly multi-racial democracy." Presi­ dent Clinton says we need to have a constructive national con­ versation on race. I agree that we need to work to create a "truly multi-racial de­ mocracy." But in order to have the meamngtul conversation that President Clinton is calling for. then some true things about the situ atio n that we, as B lack people, find ourselves re, are going to have to get said. Some of those things are go­ ing to have to be about the issue of political power. Because the long-standing inequities between Black and white America - in education opportunity and the quality of education - in job opportunity and the quality ot jobs -- persist because the cur­ rent political arrangement has kept us marginalized as a politi­ cal force. This problem must be addressed, it we as a country and Black people as a community, are going to overcome. And no amount of commissions, or con­ versations, or apologies for sla­ very are going to make a différ­ ence unless we do that. How do we do that? Slavery may have been abolished and “apologies” may be forthcom­ ing, but most of Am erica's key political institutions were cre­ ated during slavery -- notably the Democrats and the Republi­ cans and still bear the slavery mentality. Until we create a new political party that includes Af­ rican Americans as full partners in its inception, conception and design, we will remain without the political power we need. Moreover, it's building this new party - together with other Americans -- that will heal the racial divide. Editorial articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views o f (Ebt? Inrtlanb ©baerucr RAINBOW PUSH C O A L I T I O N The week in review The upshot is that NAE TA ex­ pansion cannot succeed this year unless Clinton and big business can persuade 40-50 "Free trade Demo­ crats to vote for a GOP last track bill with no environmental & labor stan­ dards. But most House Democrats- and a block of Republicans-oppose this, so the final vote is in serious doubt. Oppose fast track-please contact your Congressperson! Don’t Forget-lhe Rainbow/Push Coalition first annual conference will be held at the Chicago Hilton & Towers, from July 30th through August 2nd. We will be discussing our Wall Street Project, schools & jails, and Vision 2000 (including an open conversation about our politi­ cal plans on Saturday, 8/2-to run or not to run?). We need you there for your input. Please call Ms. Velma Wilson at 773-373-3366 for details. Huelga-Rev. Jackson gave a key­ note address at LULAC’s national convention in Anaheim, CA. He called for Latino/Hispanics and Af­ rican Americans to continue to work together to insure that existing civil rights laws are enforced; stood with LULAC President Belen Robles to demand that the President fight back against Gov. Pete Wilson's Prop 209 states' rights challenge to affir­ mative action; and demanded that the President appoint more minority judges to the Federal bench-includ­ ing filling the next Supreme Court vacancy with our first Hispanic Jus­ tice. Tear Down the Walls-Rev. Jack- son also spoke at Trinity Church in New York this week, calling on Wall Street to he part of the solution to racism. Using information provided by historian John Hope Eranklin. currently ch airing President Clinton’s Commission on Race, Jesse pointed out that Wall Street histori­ cally played an integral part in the salve trade: • about 60 NY clothing firms were doing business in the South on the eve of the Civil War; • several NY firms were branches of Southern firms, and many NX businessmen and firms owned slaves & plantations in the South; • the NY Journal of Commerce commented on Eeb. 19, I860, that New York was “almost as depen­ dent upon southern slavery as Charleston itself, and on May 5, 1860, that "downtown merchants of wealth and responsibility are extensively engaged in buying and selling African Negroes." • many NY merchants were very interested in the slave trade be­ tween Cuba and the (. oast of Af­ rica, with business firms of the "highest repute" supplying the capital for these ventures. By opening up to African Ameri­ cans and Hispanics, Wall Street can help tear down the walls of racism, eliminating the internal trade barri­ ers which artificially restrict growth and prosperity. Our Wall Street Project will continue to focus on this goal. / ¿ More science - the right kind III p e r ere is that promised sup­ port and motivation ma- r terial for directing our children and youth into the fields of science and technology. For the many, their socio-economic future will depend on an early introduction and education in these areas - and ‘you’ have got to be there for them! In preparing this package, I was sharply reminded that there are sev­ eral basic technology learning aids that have stood the test ol time - a long time! A recent discussion with a group of parents and grandparents revealed that two of these - learning tools that we ourselves used to ini­ tially grasp the nature of science - are readily available at “Toys R Us", Lloyd Center or Jantzen Beach. For many decades the “Gilbert Erector Set" has been the point of entry for many an inquisitive child who was to become a mechanical engineer, architect, bridge builder or space crat t designer. And of course the newer “Leggo" sets lend them selves to later and expanded appli­ cations. Equally important, there are the famous “GilbertChemistry Sets that sparked the development of many a child into a gitted neneiactor 01 gifted benefactor of m ankind—medicines, foods and much else. Let me say again in respect to chemistry in particular and about science in general (last week) - be­ ing about discipline, order and logi­ cal, steps or building blocks - our parents used the very accessible models of the labels/formulas on the packages of food in our kitchen and on the prescription drugs in our bath­ rooms; The pre­ cise, ‘repeatable’ formulation of the product from package to pack­ age (Safety through ‘Quality C o n tro l’). And they would make the same pint with the recipes for meals. These attitudes were inculated early on in our basement and garage science clubs, not only by parents or youth counselors, but by the next older generation ol youth who al­ ways handed down their skills and motivation; just as with the bicycle clubs, river steamer excursions and the supporting fund-raising activi­ ties. Fifty years ago (and even before senior high school) black kids in our neighborhood were buying their own test tubes, retorts and reagents - ..... - — s kind of minds this country will need crystals to make our little radios - to compete on the world stage. We model airplane kits (from scratch). had it right before. We made soaps, lubricants glues, And the new issue of “Forbes paints - and alot of messes. But Magazines” expresses the resent­ that’s learning. ment of many educators that major Of course these were the days computer companies are “dumping when the great black inventors I millions of dollars of P C. s and wrote about were delivering the ge­ software on our schools and belea­ nius of their innovations to a waiting guered, over worked teachers. “Ex­ world. And we kids would hear about citement is not learning’ we arc told. them through the black press, then “We’ve yet to effectively teach the quickly head for counting, reading and writing, be­ the lihi.irx li' fore big super-marketing techniques search the’ how­ smother us.” I say, “homework be­ P u o i essor to-do it books’. fore NET." M< KIM.I V There were n a­ Talk to your children’s science tional magazines B eri teacher. Direct that television time like “Boy’s Life" to the “Learning" and “Discovery" that each month channels. Get those relevant monthly featured new projects in chemistry, magazines coming to the house. radio, biology or mechanics. We have Check your library for ordering, lost so much today with ready-made “Scientific American. Popular Sci­ products that require no ingenuity. ence Across the country, today, we are Sm ithsonian, N ational G eo­ seeing a number of parent groups graphic, Natural History - and/or progressive public schools and al­ the ‘junior versions’. Also at the ternative schools who have recog­ library, get addresses for “Edmund nized the significant negative as­ Scientific Co.” and other suppliers pects of "out of the box, ready-to-go" of science toys and equipment. Re­ toys for the direction and guidance member we quoted polls saying 68% of American children into the 21st of black kids expected to become century world o f technology. wealthy professional athletes. On Stamped-in-a-mold Asian imports what planet? will not be useful in developing the Civil Rights Journal: Chief Wahoo must go instance. Sambo were to African Americans. But stereotyping is a dangerous They were all racist caricatures live in Cleveland, where and dehumanizing phenomenon. which showed hlack women as ves- the city is preparing to Black men in the U S. are constantly tiges of our slavemothers and black host the 1997 All Star shown in television news and pro­ men as subservient, lazy and slow- Game. gramming as criminals and the re­ witted. Chief Wahoo is no more an It is a time when the nation s sult is that many Americans fear honor than Charlie Chan was to sports attention will be turned to our black men. Women were once ste­ Asian A m ericans or the Erito city and to baseball. But what prob­ reotyped as less intelligent, more Bandito was to Mexican Americans. ably will receive little attention is moody and only concerned about All of these arc stereotypes which the movement to change the name getting married and the result was de-humanizc and take away the dig­ and the logo of the Cleveland base­ that women were barred from jobs in nity of a group of people. All of these ball team. It’s not a popular story the corporate and governm ent take the worst characteristics, often because it is a story of institutional worlds. Chief Wahoo is such a ste­ imagined, and make them foremost and public racism, but as President reotype -- dangerous to native Ameri­ in the public mind All of them have Clinton encourages us to talk about cans and dehumanizing to a whole been used to sell products or to de­ racism, we need to include Chief group of people. mean people rather than to honor Wahoo in the dialogue. Chief Wahoo is no honor to those them. Maybe you’ve seen the logo of the people who discovered Columbus Now, unfortunately, stereotyping Cleveland baseball team - a grin­ and then shared their wealth, their is not a new concept. Germany ste­ ning, bignosed, bug-eyed, deep-red knowledge and their resources with reotyped Jewish people as money­ colored caricature of a native Ameri­ those who followed Columbus to the grabbing and power hungry before can But, maybe you never looked at new world. That grinning, bug-eyed World War II and a demeaning cari­ the image closely or thought about Chief Wahoo is no honor to a people cature similar to Chief Wahoo was what it was saying underneath the whose land was taken away from used in anti-Jewish German propa­ stereotype. Or, maybe you unthink­ them, whose language was taken ganda, for instance ingly believed the explanation that away from them, whose religion was And, stereotyping is not just an the name, the Cleveland Indians, taken away from them and now European or American concept ei­ and the logo. Chief Whaoo, were whose dignity is being taken away ther. Idi Amin, former Ugandan honoring native Americans. from them through this stereotype. president and one of Africa s most But Chief Wahoo is no more an If native Americans are offended infamous despots, stereotyped Indi­ honor than Aunt Jemima or Uncle by the image of Chief Wahoo, then ans who lived in that nation, for Ben or Step n Fctchit or Little Black B y B ernice P owei . i . J ackson better ^ 0 ... f^Lditor Send your letters to the Editor to: a 11-7 Dnrtland OR Q7208 iLxi -»-»c-t /if hi* offended < ft t('H i 1 also. disc the » rest of us mnet must be Outside this All Star Game the de­ scendent of Louis Sockalexis, the native American baseball player for whom the Cleveland team is report­ edly named, will announce his family's and the Penobscot Indian nation's rejection of the myth that the name and the logo honor Louis Sockalexis. In the words of the first stanza of a poem written by a native American poet, Juanita Helphrey: Why is it that when we say, “It hurts, take it away,” You say, “No it doesn’t, You shouldn’t fell that way?” So as you watch the All Star Game, remember the story which probably won't be told. Remember the struggle of native American people to get rid of Chief Wahoo and to change the name of the Cleveland baseball team. And then write to Dick Jacobs, the owner of the team, and, while you’re a, it, write to the owners of the Washington Redskins, the Atlanta Braves and the Kansas City Chiefs. • Dick Jacobs, Cleveland Indians, 2401 Ontario Street. Cleveland, OH 44115 • Ted Turner, Atlanta Braves, 521 Capitol Avenue, SW. Atlanta, GA 64129 • Lemar Hunt, Kansas City Chiefs, I Arrowhead Dr., Kansas City, KS 64129 iic . U / n r L in iT t n n U o z lc L in V R FK S lil-