(£hv ^¡JartUxtxò Gibeeruer B la c k February 16, 2000 Focus ►- H M istory »nth for Youth March for Integrated Schools Bv J anus A dams V. continued 4 been u n d e rre p re sen te d am ong combat troops in previous wars, their deployment in Vietnam evoked charges that blacks soldiers were bearing an unfairly large share of the burden. At the time, African Americans represented 9.3 percent o f U.S. armed forces personnel, but 15 percent o f the infantrym en serving in Vietnam were black. Moreover, between 1965 and 1967, African American soldiers suffered 20 p e rc e n t o f all b a ttle fie ld casualties in Vietnam. Most glaring was the discrepancy in rates of conscription: In 1967, 64 percent o f eligible blacks were drafted, compared with only 31 percent of eligible whites. At the time, 98.5 percent o f the officials serving on local draft boards were white. At the end o f the war, 7,115 African American troops had died in the conflict, representing 12.2 percent o f the total U.S. w ar dead. for Malcolm X By T i l t S l IIOMBlRli C tM tM Born in O m ah a, N eb rask a as Five years after the Supreme Court found segregated public schools unconstitutional and thus illegal, little had been done to desegregate schools. Labor leader and Civil Rights activist A. Philip Randolph issued a call to protest. It was billed as the “Youth March for Integrated S chools.” On A pril 18, 1959, 2 6 ,0 0 0 stu d e n ts o f all ra c e s answered the call at the Lincoln M em orial. W ith them cam e a n a tio n a lly c irc u la te d p etitio n Malcolm X is shown addressing a Harlem rally in front o f the Hotel bearing the signatures o f 250,000 Theresa, a black-owned business. On September 19. I960, PremierNikita fellow voices o f protest. Among the Khrushchev o f the Soviet Union, Malcolm X, and Dr. Fidel Castro, o f day’s high points were a youth delegation to the White House and Cuba were overnight guests at the establishment. a speech by Dr. Martin Luther King. M alcolm Little dropped out o f school in the eighth grade. He moved to Boston, then Harlem, becoming a hustler and a pimp. Forming a burglary ring in Boston, he was arrested and sentenced to prison in 1946. W hile incarcerated, he was converted to the teachings o f Elijah Muhammad, leader o f the Lost- Found Nation o f Islam. Following his parole in 1952, Malcolm became a minister and the Nation’s most effective evangelist. He headed its H arlem m osque and organized te m p le s from coast to coast, recruiting thousands o f members and g a in in g a d d itio n a l sy m p a th iz e rs. A m id g ro w in g te n sio n w ith in th e N a tio n ’s hierarchy and the evolution o f his own spiritual beliefs, he resigned from the Nation in 1964 and formed his own Muslim Mosque, Inc., in Harlem. He made a pilgrimage to Mecca the same year, changed his name to El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, and embraced the traditional Islamic faith. He was assassinated at the Audobon Ballroom in Harlem in 1965, shortly after he founded the O rganization o f Afro-Am erican Unity. z ■r for Zebra Advertising It w as official: w hat she had accomplished in giving a positive Page 7 face and form to African Americans viaadvertising was historic. Inspired by that recognition, the Smithsonian Institution opened its Caroline Robinson Jones Collection at the Museum o f American History on October 29, 1997. There were cotillion photos from her early days as one o f ten chi ldren from Benton Harbor, Michigan, and a business portrait from her “fear and fun” days of the 1960s, when she was the first African American to be hired and trained in the hundred-year history o f J. Walter Thom pson, the w orld’s largest advertising agency. The “challenges and rewards” o f the 1970s saw her co-found two agencies - Zebra and Mingo-Jones. On her own in the 1980s, w ith c a m p a ig n s that “blended sophistication and soul,” she changed the way the public viewed blacks. By the 1990s, she was advertising’s Woman o f the Year. In an industry that had made the plantation slave images ofUncle Ben and Aunt Jemima synonymous with rice and pancakes, Jones’s courageous talent helped give print and television ads a black face that was human and glamorous. Doris Café > Bar & Banquet Room Available For Private Parties Full Bar Available For Private Parties! Complete with Bartender & You can order Beers of your of choice! Buffet Style food or a personalized Menu for your party Can handle parties as small as 10 people and as large as a 100 Or let us Cater your party at your place! Call Rosie Dean, Keith or Sam for a quote @ 503-287-9249 JANUARY 11 - FEBRUARY 20, 2000 1516 SW Alder Street www.artistsrep.org For tickets call: 503/241-1 ART "For trie, Raisin is still fresh, it's still relevant Lorraine Hansberry was a visionary." Spike Lee, Filmmaker Doris Cafe-Located at 325 NE Russell- Portland, OR 97212-(503) 287-0640-Fax Breakfast Available 7 AM - Noon Sat & Sun