MAR. 3, 1999 Page A4 'Pnrtlanò <®b«ruer Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily Reflect Or Represent The Views Of (Clje JlarH anit (0bseruer National Poll Of People’s Fears Attention Readers! Please take« minute to send us your comments. W e’ 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. W e take criticism well! Get your powerful pens out N O W and address your letters to: Editor. Reader Response. P.O, ^ n rtla n h (©bseruer Spurred by Growing Popularity o f Horror Films, Novels Afraid o f the number 13? O f cats or bats? Does being along— riding in elevators—or picking up ordi­ nary pins and needles—make you a little uneasy? And what about sounds in the night— or simply the unknown? In a nationwide poll o f 1,500 re­ spondents— including several writ­ ers skilled in making people afraid o f the dark—the syndicated cable TV show. Dateline: USA, found that approxim ately 30 percent were frightened most by what they de­ (USPS 959-680) Established in 1970 Charles Washington P ublisher Larry Jackson, Sr. Editor Gary Ann Taylor Business M anager Joy Ramos. Copy Editor Mark Washington Distribution M anager Tony Washington Director o f Advertising Laphael Knight Graphic Designer Heather Fairchild Graphic Designer Contributing Writers: Richard Luccetti Lee Perlman. Bv C lifford F .T hies Deadline fo r all submitted materials: A rticles:F riday, 5 :0 0 pm Ads: M onday, 12:00pm POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes To: Portland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. Periodicals postage p a id at Portland, Oregon. Subscriptions: $60.00 p e r 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 o f the newspaper and cannot be used in other publications or personal usage without the written consent o f the general manager, unless the client has purchased the composition o f such ad. © 1996 THE PORTLAND OBSERVER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, RE­ PRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PART WITHOUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED. The Portland O bserver-O regon’s Oldest Multicultural Publication- -is a member o f 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. to a ii^ I S o r tia n h © b s m i e r The Portland Observer can be sent directly to your home for only $60.00 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 N am e:................. .......... .......................... ......................................................— Address: _____________________________________ ____________- City, State:_______ ___ _________________________ ______________ Zip-Code:____________________________________ — ------------------- (Winchester, Va., February 25, 1999) - It is certainly awful that the person holding the office of Presi­ dent is, in the words o f his fellow Démocrates, "reprehensible.” It is disappointing that he was allowed to get away with breaking the law because the U.S. Senate could not convincingly threaten to remove him from office to force him to make a meaningful plea bargain. It is frustrating that the opinion polls seem to indicate that, with every revelation o f wrongdoing by the President, his job approval rating goes up. S till, these are not suffcient reasons to be despondent as is Paul Weyrich o f the Congress Foundation. First, our democratic form o f government is not based on the premise that the majority is right, for what is right transcends any ma­ jority. It is based on the premise that majorities change. As long as our elections are open, as long as we have free speech and freedom o f the press, majority opinion w ill change in response to the actual results o f public policies. If, for example, the Great Society pro- It is my p leasu re to w rite and let you know about my s tr o n g s u p p o r t fo r K a r la W enzel, an ex cep tio n al can d i­ date for the P o rtlan d P ublic School B oard. K arla, in my view , is a h ig h ly in te llig e n t, com petent and en erg etic p er­ son who un d erstan d s ed ucation and cares about the w ell being o f all ch ild ren . She also has th e a b ility to b r in g a b o u t change and m ake a d ifferen ce. P ortlan d is fo rtu n ate to have one o f the b est urban d istric ts in the country. H ow ever, the D istric t is faced w ith som e v ery u n iq u e c h a lle n g e s th a t could have an a sto u n d in g im ­ p act on the q u a lity o f e d u c a ­ tio n , student access, and stu ­ dent achiev em en t. W e n eed a strong School B oard th at re p ­ resents ou r com m unity and that w ill co n tin u e to raise e x c e p ­ tio n s, re sp e c t d iv e rs ity , im ­ prove acad em ic ach ie v e m en t and be acco u n tab le. K arla is a b rig h t lead er w ho is honest, a rtic u la te s, a c a re ­ ful liste n e r, and is c le a rs in h er o pinions and ideas. She cares about ed u c a tio n and is com ­ m itted to h elp in g all k id s have a m ean in g fu l and su ccessfu l ed u catio n . As citiz e n s w e w ill be w ell serv ed b y h av in g K arla on the b o ard tack lin g the tough issu es, liste n in g to o u r c o n ­ cern s, and in v o lv in g us in the so lu tio n s. I stro n g ly u rg e you to c o n ­ sid er jo in in g me on M arch 9 and v oting for K arla W enzel fo r P o rtla n d S c h o o l B o a rd , Zone 1. Condolences from Lucy Vazaquoz to the grams actually worked in alleviat­ ing poverty, an increasingly large m ajority w ould have em braced them. Instead o f alleviating pov­ erty, they trapped people into unfulfilling lives, and eventually we took the first steps to end the en­ titlement system. Second, the majority at this time, as indicated by the only poll that counts, is conservative. Bill Clinton was elected in 1992 with 43 per­ cent o f the vote. That election was a fluke! He was re-elected in 1996 with 49 percent o f the vote. An­ other fluke! In 1998, for the third time in a row, the Republicans won control o f both houses o f the Congress - the first time this has happened since the 1920’s! In 1998, when you add up the votes received by Republi­ can canidates for the U.S. House of Representatives all across the coun­ try and the votes received by the Democratic candidates, you find that the Republicans received more than the Democrates. Yes, I know the liberal m edia declared the D em ocrates the w inners o f the election. This so-called victory was because the Democrates beat the point spread, not because they Mystery Scene magazine editor Ed Gorman said his own, occasional fear o f being alone in a house at night isn’t helped much by reading novels like K ing's “Misery,” “Fear” by Hubbard, or Robert B loch’s “Psycho.” All o f these stories, he noted, involved frightening things that happen to ordinary people in ordinary settings. As for fear o f the number 13, the Dateline: USA poll found that vir­ tually everyone surveyed has expe­ rienced some feeling o f unease about it. But no one could say ex­ actly why. crazy, was listed by another 20 per­ cent. World Fantasy Award winner Tim Powers (“Earthquake W eather” and "Last Call”), who listed the unknown as one o f his personal bugaboos, told the Dateline: USA survey that fear o f the unknown—o f "the heard but unseen” - can be intensified for him by reading a “truly scary story." He said that nearly any Stephen King novel can turn the prosaic into a nightmare, and that a horror clas­ sic like “Fear” by L. Ron Hubbard can “scare the daylights out o f you with a hat, or a stairway.” Burt Family To the Portland Observer I would like to say thank you for such a wonderful person such as Professor Burt. 1 was dumb to our history until 1 spoke with Mr. Burt and read his articles. He will be missed by me. I grew up dumb to our History and I now try to edu­ cate my family more about our slave experiences. Growing up in LA, my parents didn’t allow us to be around them when they talked o f our history, but I saw the pain in my father’s face and now I know why. Thank you, The Portland School District faces huge issues both in terms of funding and educational achieve­ ment. The new team the district has essembled is top notch and needs a top notch Board. We are enthusiastically supporting Karla Wenzel for the Portland School Board. Karla will be the strong, focused, and pratical addition the Board needs. She will work as part o f an effective team with other Board members, teachers, parents and other community members. Karla has the broad support of teachers and business leaders. She has budget experience and proven problem solving skills. Karla also has two preschool children and will work for a quality education for all Portland's children. What impresses us the most is that she cares and is deeply committed to education. Please vote fo r Karla Wenzel fo r School Board. Lucy Vazquez divorce, and abortion are falling. We have ended the welfare system and the revolving-door criminal justice system. We have deregulated the banking transportation, and commu­ nication industries, and we are in the process o f deregulating electricity. Advances in science and technology, in medicine and in business are bless­ ing us with greater longevity, higher standards o f living and more per­ sonal freedom. We will surv ive the next two years, and then pass Bill Clinton like a gall­ stone from our system. For liberals. Bill Clinton is a Buffon who con­ firms their prejudice against white men in power and their agenda o f using the government to end what they call “the patriarchy.” For con­ servatives, he should be a reminder that government attracts egomani­ acs, megalomaniacs, and liars, and this should caution us against allow­ ing those in government to accumu­ late power. It is good to feel sick thinking ofBill Clinton, but the proper response is not to give up on the country. It is rededicate ourselves to the ideals for which this country stands - both o f which is falls short - those high ideals “of liberty and justice for all.” won. Our small margin o f victory in 1998 was due to the attempt by the Republicans to hold Bill Clinton responsible for his lying under oath and obstruction o f justice. It would have been to our political advantage if we avoided it. Yet looking the other way when there is evidence of criminal wrongdoing is not what it means to be Republicans, lam sorry ourCongressonal leadership did not rally our side around a positive agenda such as ending the marriage penalty tax. It was, therefore, appro­ priate that we needed a shake-up in leadership for failing to achieve sub­ stantive policy successes. But I am mighily proud that our Congress impeached the President, and that fifty Senators voted to remove him from office. Abraham could have saved Sodom and Gomorrah if he had been able to find only ten just men. We found a lot more than that. Mabey Paul Weyrich, who believes in term limits, should take a sabbati­ cal from his duties in Washington. Maybe he should get outside the Beltway and return to America. Other, things are going well. The economy is in good shape, employ­ ment is up, and the rate o f crime. No high school attendence no driver’s license bill = problems Dear Editor: T hank Y ou F or R eading T he P ortland O bserver L e tte r to E d ito r scribed simply as “the unknown” : unseen things that go bump in the night, or the discovery that “some­ thing” that seemed normal, some­ how, isn’t. The Dateline: USA survey— in­ spired by the phenomenal, ongoing popularity o f suspense and horror films (“Psycho") and novels (“Fear.” “Bag o f Bones,” Seize the Night") - uncovered another 20 percent who cited accidental death or injury by fire, drowning or falling from high places— such as the tops o f stairs or trees-as their primary fear. Loss of lack o f control or fear o f just going Cheer Up Conservatives! 4747 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, Oregon 97211 503-288-0033 • Fax 503-288-0015 Email: Pdxobserv(£aol.com S ubscribe National Poll o f People’s Fears, Phobias Box 3 1 37, Port l a n d. OR 97 2 0 8. S tu d e n ts w h o d ro p o u t o f sc h o o l w ill lo se th e ir d riv in g p r iv ile g e s u n d e r a b ill d is ­ c u s s e d th is w e e k by th e S e n ­ a te E d u c a tio n C o m m itte e . SB 4 8 7 , s p o n s o re d by S en. P e te r C o u r tn e y ( D - S a le m ) , r e q u ir e s s c h o o l d i s t r i c t s to in f o r m th e D e p a r t m e n t o f M o to r V e h ic le s (D M V ) w hen a s tu d e n t d ro p s o u t o f sc h o o l. T he b ill th e n g iv e s D M V a u ­ th o rity to su sp en d th e s tu d e n t's d r i v e r ’s lic e n s e or to p r o h ib it th e s tu d e n t from a p p ly in g f o r a d r i v e r ’s l i ­ cense. “ T w e n ty o th e r s ta te s h av e s im ila r la w s on th e ir b o o k s. W e st V irg in a p a s s e d th is le g ­ is la tio n in 1988 an d its d r o p ­ o u t ra te h as d e c re a s e d by a l­ m ost o n e - th ir d ,” Sen. C o u rtn e y to ld th e c o m m itte e . “ A d r i v e r ’ s li c e n s e is a r ig h t- o f - p a s s a g e fo r a te e n ­ a g e r. It w e can te ll o u r s tu ­ d e n ts th a t you h a v e to go to sc h o o l a n d a tte n d c la s s to get you lic e n s e s , I b e lie v e w e w ill se e o u r d ro p -o u t ra te d r o p .” W h ile O SB A su p p o rts re m ­ e d ie s to p re v e n t d ro p o u ts , SB 487 c a u s e s a s e t o f p ro b le m s fo r sc h o o l d is tr ic ts . A c c o rd ­ ing to O SB S e n io r L e g is la ­ tiv e A d v o c a te Jim G re e n , the b ill w ill “ m a n d a te a p a p e rw o rk b u rd e n on s ta f f th a t th e y m ay n o t be a b le to h a n d le .” He a d d e d s ta tu s o f e v e ry s tu d e n t b e tw e e n ag e 15 an d 18 to the D M V is an im p o ssib le ta sk . “ In s te a d o f m a n d a tin g th is on a ll s c h o o l d i s t r i c t s , w e s u g g e s t m a k in g it an o p tio n a v a ila b le to th o se w ho w a n t to im p le m e n t i t , ” G re e n sa id . “ D is tric ts b e lie v in g th is w ill a d d re s s th e ir d r o p - o u t p r o b ­ lem sh o u ld h a v e it a v a ila b le ; d i s t r i c t s th a t e i th e r c a n n o t im p le m e n t it o r b e lie v e it w ill n o t a ffe c t th e ir d r o p - o u t ra te s h o u ld n o t be r e q u ire d to do it." N o f u r th e r a c tio n o n SB 487 by the S e n a te E d u c a tio n C o m m itte e is c u rre n tly s c h e d u le d . A special evening to salute: African-American Chamber of Commerce of Oregon / Walker Institute in cooperation with Oregon Convention and Visitor Services, PGE and Northwest Airlines Minority women, business professionals and others Keynote Speaker: Patricia Russell-McCloud “One of the nation 's top five speakers ” - Black Enterprise Magazine Friday, April 2,1999 6:30 p.m. Oregon Convention Center Master of Ceremonies: Ken Boddie of KOIN-TV News ( .hannc I 0 M jn n v ^ ttv j ryood f o l y rm t u n tiv i, Advance Tickets: $35 After March 25: $50 Tickets by phone: (503) 244-5794, ext. 22 (503) 285-1165 Credit and Debit Cards Accepted Tickets also at a Hable at: Reflections. Vessels, Renaissance .Market, Walker Institute an d Delta Sigma Theta Tor Group Sales, call 2BSAOOO . (y S in c e re ly , G eorge E. R ich ard so n , Jr. I 7V&«' Round trip for two (up to a $4,000 value) on Northwest Airlines Destinations include: Europe • China • Hawaii • The Carrihean donation for each raffle ticket <5