’►«-. IK ¿\ ' a< I July 21,1999 '»•tf * ■»< — (Jlw ÿtorUnnô (ftbaemr Page A5 * »1 Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily Reflect Or Represent The Views Of 1 ** *• (The P o rtlan d OPbscruer 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.0. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. An Open Letter To White Parents ~ B\ B e r n ic e Pou ell J ackson D ear E uropean A merican P arents and ^lortlanh (lObseruer (USPS 959-680) Established in 1970 Charles Washington Publisher Larry J. Jackson, Sr. Editor Gary Ann Taylor Business Manager Joy Ramos. Copy Editor Mark Washington Distribution M anager Heather Fairchild Graphic Designer Tony Washington Director o f Advertising Contributing Writers: Richard Luccetti Lee Perlman, 4747 NE M artin L u th er King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, O regon 97211 503-288-0033 • Fax 503-288-0015 Em ail: Pdxobserv@ aol.com PO STM A STER: Send Address Changes To: Portland O bserver, P.O. Box 3137, P ortland, O R 97208. Periodicals postage paid at Portland, Oregon. Subscriptions: $60.00 per year The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manuscripts and photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned if accom­ panied 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 o f the general manager, unless the client has purchased the composition of such ad. © 1996 THE PORTLAND OBSERVER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, REPRODUC­ TION IN WHOLE OR IN PART WITHOUT PERMISSION IS PROHIB­ ITED. 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 ( D b s m w 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: T he S ubscriptions P ortland O bserver ; PO B ox 3137 P or tland , O regon 97208 Name: Address: City, State: Zip-Code: . T hank Y ou F or R eading T he P ortland O bserver Letter to the Editor Throughout this legislative ses­ sion, I have listened closley to the debate on education funding. I have also heard the legislative leadership say there is not enough money to fund education at the $4.95 billion level. Three months ago, I brought forw ard a plan to use part o f Oregon ’ s tobacco settle­ ment m oney for education and healthcare needs. This m oney would have brought the education budget up to an adequate level. However, that plan has been re­ jected, w hile at the same time the legislature is underfunding the K- 12 education budget. As an A fri­ can-A m erican who grew up in the south, I know firsthand that edu­ cation is the greatest gift that we can give to our children. I an angered that there are schools out there in dire need o f new in- structional materials deferred main­ tenance and capital improvements. In many schools, children are forced to share tom, outdated textbooks, many with missing pages and cov­ ers, and it is not uncommon to find children in classrooms with leaky roofs. This substandard learning environment is unacceptable. All Oregonians, and I would think cer­ tainly all legislators, should be bend­ ing over backwards to provide our children with the best education possible. If that means $4.95 billion then that is what we should pay. After all, a quality education system not only benefits our children, it benefits all o f us. It the legislators adjourn without giving our children the money they need to receive a quality education, then they simply haven’t done the job they were elected to do. Please Advertise In the El Observador De Portland (503) 288-0033 or Visit us On The Web at http://\v\v\v.portfand observernet e-mail PDXOBSERV@aol. com F riends : I’ve occasionally written letters to my own people, but this time I feel the need to speak to you. I write because 1 know no other way than to warn you; I write because the mainstream media are not informing you; I write because we are bound together in this nation and what happens to you and your families impacts us all. I write because 1 am fearful that we are losing young European American males to hate. We are losing your sons, your nephews, your neighbors to hate groups, to white supremacist groups, to so-called Christian identity groups, to militia groups. W e’re los­ ing the sons of doctors, of soldiers, of teachers to the hate. W e’re losing college students and bright high school students to hate. Yet everyone seems to be talking around it. I first heard a warning back in 1996, when Rose Johnson, the attor­ D ea d lin e f o r a ll su b m itte d m aterials: A rticles .F riday, 5 :00 p m A ds: M onday, 12:00pm S ubscribe * ? ~ ~ ney from the Center for Democratic Renewal who was doing the investi­ gations into the arson o f African American churches, warned that white supremacist groups were court­ ing young white males and that it looked as if some o f the church burnings were initiation rites for some o f these groups. In the three years since then Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold shot and killed 13 o f their classmates at Columbine HighSchool (including an African American who was especially targeted) on Adolph Hitler’s birthday; the brothers Ben­ jam in and Jam es W illiam s o f Redding, CA have been arrested in the murders of a gay couple and are being investigated in the arson fires o f three synagogues in Sacramento; Benjamin Nathaniel Smith murdered two people, one African American, one Asian American and shot a num­ ber of others including orthodox Jews, African Americans and Asian Americans and dozens o f African American churches have burned. 7 . U brothers r - , a n and d ^mith Both the , M W llliams Smith seem to be associated with the World Church o f the Creator, and extremist religious group which predicts a ra­ cial holy war and which recruits on the internet and on college campuses. Its web-site has a coloring book for children and a crossword puzzle with racist clues for adults. These hate groups want your chil­ dren, especially your sons. The feet that you are a professional, the feet that you live in a middle-class suburb, the fact that you have never used racist epithets, the fact that your son is in college or seems to be only inter­ ested in computers is no protection. These hate groups want your sons and they will do whatever they have to, to get them. They prey upon those who are a little lonely, for those who are isolated or have recently been rejected or those looked down upon by their peers. They come into your home via your computer or the tele­ phone, they seek out your children on their college campuses and you may never even even know about it. They mav tell your children half-truths and out­ right lies, they scapegoat people o f color, Jewish people and gay and lesbian people, They find ways to give self-esteem to those who are lost and attention to those who are lonely. They ’ re using sophisticated language and the wonders o f technology to steal your sons, but they are just as destructive and hate-filled as the Neo- Nazis and the KKK o f the past. Only you can stop this insidious, secret stealing away o f your sons. Only you can talk with your sons about what is going on in their lives. Only you can help them understand what is going on in the world is not the fault of blacks or Jews or gays or Asians. Only you can help them to cope with the storms of life as a teen­ ager. Only you can conquer their fear with unconditional love. Only you can reclaim your sons. It’s not too late, but only if you begin right now, today. May God give you strength and courage and wisdom to do so. w ' • V • . .4 w A; »» . tr. • • r • Again, A Promising Kennedy Ufe is Cut Short By A R T H L R S p IEG ELM AN NEW YORK, July 19 (Reuters) - Once again, a K ennedy has been struck dow n in the prim e o f life before achieving what he might have. One sad undercurrent sw eep­ ing through the national mourning for John F. Kennedy, Jr. on M on­ day was the thought that here was a young man who was going to make a contribution to American life on a grand scale but never got the chance. “ This was a career cut short not even at the m idway point,” said K ennedy fam ily expert G erald Posner as divers searched the w a­ ters o ff M assachusetts for the air­ craft that crashed Friday night car­ rying Kennedy, his wife and sis­ ter-in-law . “John F. Kennedy Jr. would have had the ability to run (for office),” said Posner. “We will never know if he would have had the fire in the belly but the Dem o­ cratic party would have embraced him w ith open arms. W hatever he w anted was there for the asking.” K ennedy’s father had 1,000 days in the White House and, when he was m urdered in 1963, many Americans thought not o f what he had accom plished but o f what he might have done had he lived: the alw ays u n fu lfille d prom ise o f Camelot. In three years in office, some historians argue that President John F. Kennedy had m iscalcu­ lated by provoking a nuclear con­ frontation with the Soviet Union and dispatched Am erican troops to Vietnam to fight in a war in a far-away land that few Americans knew anything about. But after his death, there were many who argued he would have cut the Vietnam W ar short, avoid­ ing the traumatic fall o f Saigon, untold casualties and the student p ro tests th at le ft an in d e lib le polarising mark on A m erican life. Then there was the president’s brother, Robert Kennedy, assassi­ nated in 1968 as he cam paigned for the D em ocratic presidential nomination. Had he lived, most historians agree, A merican politics o f the next 30 years would have been ra d ic a lly d iffe re n t: m aybe no W atergate, maybe no Reagan revo­ lution, no politics o f greed and maybe no erosion o f confidence in government. And now John F. Kennedy, Jr. is gone — at age 38 in a plane crash. Friends and associates said he died at a point when he was about to make a m ajor life change, including possibly entering the fam ily business o f politics. N ew sw eek M agazine quoted one Kennedy confidant as saying he was seriously thinking o f enter­ ing politics and had even consid­ ered running for the Senate seat being vacated by New York Demo­ crat Daniel Patrick M oynihan be­ fore H illary Clinton declared an interest. I think that was obviously a possibility. O bviously ‘G eorge’ (the political magazine Kennedy founded and edited) was in trouble and was a candidate to be folded and I think it would have been a difficult time in his life,” said Laurence Laemer, author o f the bestseller “The Kennedy W omen.” “He was interested in the mesh betw een politics and popular cul­ ture and celebrity. It would not have been a very big jum p to poli­ tics,” Laemer added. Historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., a close friend o f the Kennedy family, agreed. W riting for Time Magazine, he said young Kennedy “ seemed to be edging into politics. ... He was a cautious man, methodi­ cally feeling his way, but I think he sensed an evident opportunity and acknowledged a dynastic responsi- bility. He was destined, I came to feel, for political leadership.” Posner, the bestselling author o f “Case C losed,” a m ajor book on the JFK assassination, said that the young K ennedy had left the same questions behind as his fa­ ther and uncle. “The frustration here is going to be that lingering question o f what might have been. W hat would Jack Kennedy have done if he had eight years in the W hite House? W hat would Bobby Kennedy have done had he been able to pick up the standard?” he said. The New York Tim es, in an editorial, said, “It would have been interesting to see if Jack Kennedy’s son w ould have developed his father’s gifts for hard politics and inspirational leadership." K ennedy’s hom etow n paper praised him for living his life the way he did — “keeping his dignity and sense o f hum our about the mixed blessings o f inescapable fame.” He did it even when the New York Post headlined “The H unk Flunks” when he failed the bar exam ination for a second time years ago. That failure led to a touching tribute note left at his New York apartm ent saying: “Thanks for the inspiration from someone who also passed the bar exam ination on the third try.” As was sa id o f JohnF. Kennedy Jr’s father: “Johnnie, W e H ardly Knew Y e.” Im agine this: You're proud o f the children you raised. Your grandkids are talented and beautiful, too. The reality of retirement has finally arrived and it's even better than the fantasy have family behind you. You couldn't have done it without family behind you American Family Mutual Insurance. When it comes to y o u r future, over 70 years in the insurance business is experience you can trust. 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