• • e • 4 4 « r • ïin ' îjjnrtbuib (©bsseriw H M B la c k istory onth c for Civil Rights Act Bv J a m s A dams On August 29, 1957, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act o f 1957. Despite some official efforts to limit Jim Crow, not since 1875 and the end o f Reconstruction had the fed eral g o v e rn m e n t m ade a definitive antisegregation strike. Yet the 1957 act was a step backward for the movement. In its language, if not its intent, it undermined the federal governm ent’s pow er to in te rc e d e in C iv il R ig h ts enforcement. When the Congress passed the Civil Rights Act in memorium o f the recently assassinated President Kennedy, it once again sacrificed the justice due people o f color for accommodation to a guilty South. Congress “negotiated” voting rights out o f the Civil Rights Act o f 1964. On July 2,1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the beleaguered, hard-won, albeit watered-down, bill into law. Buried in the bill was its g re a te st leg acy - T itle V II: Employment, which opened the door to legislation on “affirmative action.” D E 4 t o’r February 16, 2000 Focus was posted on the FBI’s “Ten Most Wanted” list o f felons. In a national dragnet, women with natural Afro for Emanuel h airsty les co ast-to -co ast w ere harassed in the name of the law. in October 1970, Davis was captured Hospital Urban Renewal in New Y ork, extradited, and Project imprisoned (often in solitary) to B y P ortland B lrlal ol P lasm , s c await trial and, as detractors hoped, In 1967, needing to expand or execution for a crime all knew she re lo c a te in o rd e r to stay had not committed. Just five days technologically abreast and before hei trial, the state Supreme competitive, Emanuel Hospital Court abolished the death penalty - annou n ced th a t, w ith the and with it the grounds upon which assistance o f federal grants, it she had been denied bail. She was would build a 19 acre health campus. The project required released. r < ♦ | multiblock land clearance o f the Central Albina area, now called the Page 3 Eliot Neighborhood. Since 1962, PDC wrote off the entire Eliot The Black protestors march at Emanuel Hospital in 1972. Emanuel Hospital announced that, with the assistance o f federal grants, it would build a 19-acre health campus. Families immediately surrounding the Emanuel Hospital were confronted with the expansion plans which included the land o f many o f these residents. Residents were required to move within ninety days. IH cn ien a m in s k en n ed y School II GRAS In the end, Kennedy did not deliver on the promise fo r which blacks had helped elect him. For all he offered in glamor and hope, Kennedy too often sacrificed black justice fo r southern votes. It took his successor, a Southerner, Lyndon B. Johnson, to break the mold and enact the Civil Rights Act (1964), Executive Order No. 11246 on ajfirmative action (1965), and the Voting Rights Act (1965). Jazz D in n e r for Davis, Angela B y J a m s A dams On February 28, 1972, The People o f the State o f California v. Davis went to trial at last. It had stemmed from a 1970 courthouse siege that left four dead in a failed plot to free George Jackson - the author and brother o f the raid ’ s seventeen-year- old leader, Jonathan. In the prisoner’s rights movement ofthelate 1960s,theelderJackson’s plight was championed, and he and his family were befriended, by Angela Davis - a young UCLA professor o f philosophy infamous in her own right as a political target o f the then-govemor o f California, Ronald Reagan. Her principled refusal to sign a loyalty oath as a term ofher contract made her perfect cannon fodder. W hen Reagan’s attack yielded threats on her life, she purchased and legally registered a gun for her own protection - a gun later used in the courthouse siege. She was charged with murder and kidnapping, and a warrant was issued for her arrest. Knowing the charge to be political, she fled and « « t » tb u rsd a y , fe b ru a ry 24 Live M u sic with the Black Sw an Classic Jazz Band Doors at 6:30pm Show at 7pm • Dinner at 7’30pm Reservations required • Cost $28 • • McMenamins Kennedy School 575« NE 33rd • Portland, Oregon • (503) 249-3983 w w w jncm c -com «e