February 2, 2011 The Portland Observer Black History Month Page 5 Community Events Enrich Black History Month brings films, concerts and lectures The city of Portland is sponsoring Black history month with free events open to thé public, ranging from historical films and figures, jazz con­ certs and musical tributes, African American biographies, intellectual speakers and lectures, poet laure­ ates of the Harlem Renaissance, and much more. against violent violent racists. racists. In In doing doing so, so, against Williams not only challenged the Klan-dominated establishment of his hometown of Monroe, N. C„ he alienatedthemainstreamCivilRights M ov em en t, w hich ad v o ca te d peaceful resistance. Documentary plays Thursday, Feb. 3 at noon at the Water Pollution Control Lab, Bybee Conference Room. film gives gives the the long-overdue long-overdue recog- recog- film nition to one of the seminal figures of American literature. Margaret W alker has been described by scholar Jerry Ward as "a national treasure" and by Nikki Giovanni as the "most famous person nobody knows." Documentary plays Tues- day, Feb. 15 at noon at the Portland Building, 10th Floor, Lodgepole R(x>m. • In Search of History: The Night Tulsa Burned. Eyewitness accounts, archival film, and dramatizations recount the 1921 race riots in Tulsa, Okla. Film plays Wednesday, Feb. 16 at 11 a.m. at the Columbia Boule­ vard Wastewater Treatment Plant, Mt. Hood Room. Check your calendar during the entire month o f February, and mark down these event dates that you can't afford to miss! Community Events • Black History Month Proclama­ tion, Wednesday, Feb. 2 at 9 a.m., City Council, City Hall, 1221 S.W. Fourth Ave. • Portland’s Lost Black Neighbor- hoods: Guild s Lake. Vanport City and others, Wednesday, Feb. 9 at u 3.?P m to7 :3 0 P m ' KaiserTown Hall, 3704 N Interstate Ave. Exhibit of historical photos shows people and life in once proud communities devastated by industrial develop- ment, urban renewal and flood wa- terS' Films . Marcus Garvey; Look for Me in the whirlwind. Garvey was a vi- sionary and a manipulator, a bril- iiant orator and a pompous auto- crat. In jusl , 0 years fonowmg his emigration to the United States as a laborerin l9l7.M arcusG arveyrose lo ,ead the )argest Mack organiza. • Brother Outsider: The Life of tion in history, was taken to prison Bayard Rustin. Docum entary pre­ sents a a vivid vivid dram dram a, a, com com bining bining sents the personal and the political, about one o f the most enigm atic figures in 20th-century Am erican history. One of the first "freedom riders," an adviser to Dr. M artin Luther King Jr. and A. Philip Randolph, Rustin was intelligent, gregarious and charism atic, but was denied his place in the lime- Music light for one reason - he was gay. Film plays Thursday, Feb. 17 at noon. W ater Pollution Control Lab, Bybee Conference Room; and Tuesday, Feb. 22 at noon at the Portland B uilding, 10th Floor Lodgepole Room. • Fatal Flood: In the spring of 1927, after weeks of incessant rains, the M ississippi River went on a ram page. Racing south from Cairo, 111., the river blew away levee after levee, inundating thousands of farms and hundreds of towns, killing as many as a thousand people and leaving nearly a mil- lion hom eless. By the tim e it reached New Orleans, the flood had not only altered the landscape of 27,000 square miles, it had w id­ ened the abyss of race relations in the Deep South. Documentary airs Thursday, Feb. 24 at noon at the W ater P ollution C ontrol Lab, Bybee Conference Room. • Jazz with Thara M emory, Wednesday, Feb. 2 at noon at the Portland Building, 2nd Floor, Audi­ torium. • Sherman: A Jazz Opera, Friday, Feb. 18 through Sunday, Feb. 27, 7 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays and Sun- days at Ethos at the Interstate Firehouse Cultural Center, 5340 N Interstate Ave. Tickets are $ 15 gen­ eral admission; seniors and students $10. • Reception and Musical Tribute to Black Jazz Music in Portland; Wednesday, Feb. 23 at 4 p.m., hon- continued on page 6 in handcuffs, and was eventually deported. The documentary plays Tuesday, Feb. 8 at noon in the Port­ land Building, 10th Floor, Lodge Pole Room. n ERICA READ I • H u g h e s’ D ream H arlem . Langston Hughes was one of the most prominent figures of the Harlem Renaissance and is often referred to as Harlem's poet laureate. This film shows how Hughes successfully fused jazz, blues and common speech to celebrate the beauty of Black life. Plays Wednesday, Feb. 9 at 11 a.m., Columbia Boulevard Wastewater Treatment Plant, Mt. Hood Room. • George Washington Carver, a documentary of his extraordinary journey from being bom a slave to the end of his life with presidents and corporate titans.who valued his friendship. Millions of Americans benefited from his innovations. His scientific genius is legendary, but less known is his remarkable path to greatness, defined by a life-long passion for serving others. Plays Thursday, Feb. 10 at noon at the Water Pollution Control Lab, 6543 N Burlington Ave.; and Wednesday, Feb. 23 at 11 a.m. at the Columbia Boulevard Wastewater Treatment Plant, 5001 N Columbia Blvd. • • Rob Williams Biography. A dra­ matic story of the often-forgotten civil rights leader who urged Afri­ can Americans to arm themselves • For My People: The Life and Writing of Margaret Walker. This African American Literature is for everyone! Come hear local celebrities and community leaders read from works by their favorite African-American writers at the 15th Annual African-American Read In. Sunday, February 13,2010 from 2:00 - 3:30 pm For children and adults. Hosted by: Concordia University Hagen Campus Center 2811 NE Holman Street Portland Oregon 97211 O N C O R D IA V E R S IT Y iOABSE Î Owgnn AMerweof Mart trfvxdFdmatnr^ n B I V R A A K | Y "\ L. I O A \ >' >