Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, August 15, 2001, Page 4, Image 4

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    Page A4
August 15,2001
(The ^Iortlanh (Dbseruer
Opinion articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views
of
{In rtlan it (BbstrUer
S om ebody Ought To Say Som ething
Iiv T. K. Hass
^ o rtia n b
(Observer I t’s Not Just About the Words
USPS 959-680
Established 1970
STA FF
E
d it o r
C
P
in
h ie f
,
u b l is h e r
Charles H. Washington
E d i
t
o R
Larry J. Jackson, Sr.
B
M
u s in e s s
anager
Gary Ann Taylor
A sst . P ublisher
Michael Leighton
C
o pe
E
d it o r
Joy Ramos
C
r e a t iv e
D
ir e c t o r
Robert Parker
4 7 4 7 NE M a rtin Luther
King, Jr. Blvd.
Portland, OR 9 7 2 1 1
5 0 3 -2 8 8 -0 0 3 3
Fax 5 0 3 -2 8 8 -0 0 1 5
e-mail
news@portiandobserver.com
ateat]ttan@patimdotBencrjoom
ads@portlandobserver.com
P ostmaster :
Send address changes
to
O ne thing that the D erry
Jackson deb acle proved is
that w ords do hurt. They
can attack the spirit and pain
the soul. T hey even have
th e p o te n tia l to fo re v e r
change your heart and in
essence w ho you are. One
th ing that both the Jew ish
and A frican-A m erican com ­
m u nities know all to w ell is
this:
W ords m atter, fo r they
b e c o m e th e
pegs that ideas
are hung on.
W e ’v e a ll
been ch ild ren ,
w ounded or
d e v a lu e d by
w ords. So you
can rem em ber
w h at t h a t ’s
like. U nable to
u n d e rsta n d or
defen d ; often
fo rced to r a ­
tio n a liz e your Lydia K. Bass
w ay to c o m ­
p reh e n d in g the in co m p re ­
hensible. And w ith every oc­
c u r r e n c e y o u p r o b a b ly
a sk ed y o u rs e lf w hy? N ot
w hy m e, but why? A nd when
you got hom e, seeking com ­
fo rt and c o u n se l, i f y our
house w as like m ine, you
alw ays heard: “ T urn the
experience around and show
them w hat y o u ’re m ade o f.”
So, how do I feel som e
forty y ears later o v er the
‘Jack so n d e b a c le ’? D eeply
p a in e d . N o t j u s t by th e
w ords, but by th e ir p o ssib le
effect. W ill the lesions left
by the d e liv e ry o f the Jack-
son in terv iew leave us sore
i f untreated? W ill ethnic ten ­
sio n s sw e ll? W ill a non-
m onolithic A frican -A m eri­ dren, you do not have the
can com m unity, sorely in luxury o f publicly trading off
need o f tw o Portland Public during a board m eeting with
School advocates and hav­ ‘whose atrocity was w orse’.
ing tw o for the first tim e And frankly you don’t have
ever, find its e lf w ith only the right to conduct your­
one, am id a Jackson d e p a r­ selves in a way that jeo p ar­
ture? W ill this occurrence dizes the ultimate well being
b e c o m e a tw o -s te p s fo r­ o f children. You c a n ’t es­
w ard, 10 steps back e x p e ri­ pouse respect and parity,
ence for our com m unity as whi le at the same tim e being
a w hole? And the biggest disrespectful and callous -
concern o f all: W hat w ill be it’s incom patible; you c a n ’t
th e r a m if ic a ­ affirm if you are putting
tio n s fo r a ll down. What this climate does
children whose to the heart and spirit o f
e d u c a t i o n a l children is at minimum pa­
future is being thetic. We can only begin to
d i r e c te d
by imagine the damage that this
p e o p le w hose spell over has on children, to
tim e, focus and those that teach them and to
m onies are b e ­ those that support both.
ing spent on an
From all that I ’ve seen,
u n n e c e s s a r y heard or been witness to over
reality?
the last year, I ’m not so sure
Like m any, I that Jackson is the only bad
understand the apple in the bunch. All I know
so u rc e
o f is that it’s time not ju st to
Ja ck so n fru s ­ make a change but to be
tratio n s: not ju s t the on-go- changed. Individually or col­
ing achievem ent gap but the lectively, we all have defin­
reaso n s for it; findings o f ing moments in life and to
v io latio n s for seven years the PPS Board, I say this is
by th e O ffic e o f
d e fin ite ly one o f
C ivil R ights re ­
th em . M a rtin
g a rd in g ESL
“ S ticks an d ’ L uther K ing
children; the
Jr. show ed
stones may break
o n -g o in g
us
th a t
my bones, but
stru g g le for
p re ju d ic e
parity in edu­
words will never
can le a v e
cation... How­
y
o u
hurt me.”
ever, we get into
sc a rre d , but
certain roles in life,
s tre n g th e n e d .
and being an elected of­
T h e re ’s an o p p o rtu ­
ficial is definitely one o f them, nity here for the board to
where you do not have the show us all w hat th e y ’re
luxury o f venting anger and m ade of. Even m istak es
frustration. W hen you are en­ can turn out to be the one
trusted with the educational th ing n ecessary to m ake a
direction and future o f chil­ w orthw hile achievem ent.
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D E A D L IN E S
FOR ALL SUBMITTED METERIALS:
A lot of things, from the growth in high-tech industries to increased
population, tell us the energy crunch our region is facing right now
will continue for awhile. Dealing with it means that each of us has to
change the way we use energy. And we have to start now.
Here are some changes and tips that will make a difference now
and in the future:
ARTICLES:
Monday by 5 p . m .
ADS:
Friday by noon
■ Switch to compact fluorescent
bulbs in lights that remain on
three or more hours per day.
They use only one quarter
the energy of regular bulbs.
The Portland Observer wel­
comes freelance submissions.
Manuscripts and photographs
should be clearly labeled and will
be returned if accompanied by a
self addressed envelope. All cre­
ated design display ads become
die sole property of the newspa­
per 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
of such ad. © 1996 THE PORT­
LAND OBSERVER. A LL
■ Clean lightbulbs and fixtures.
Dust can reduce light output
by as much as 10 percent!
■ Him off one 60-watt light that
would normally be on during
the peak summer hours of
2 p.m. to 8 p.m. If every one
of our 1.5 million customers
did, the energy saved could
power about 45,000 homes.
RIGHTSRESERVEDJIEPRO-
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Oregon’s Oldest Multicultural
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Founded in 1885, and The National
Advertising Representative Amal­
gamate» i I*1iblislteTv I ik . New York,
NY, and The West Coast Black
Publishers Association • Serving
Portland and Vancouver.
■ Install dimmers. The amount
you dim equals your energy
saved. For example, lights
dimmed 15 percent reduces
energy consumption up to
15 percent
■ Install motion sensors or
timers to automatically turn
lights on and off. Motion
sensor lighting is great for
outdoors and in your work­
shop or laundry room.
Timers are the right choice
if you'd like an indoor light
switched on and off at
specific times.
■ Make saving energy a habit.
Do the bright thing.
Call us at 1-800-222-4335,
and ask for a copy of our
Bright Ideat booklet.
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