December 9, 2020 Page 2 Relics of Past Coming Down The Week in Review Grant murals seen as promoting racist culture Historic mural art from Grant High School’s audito- rium that many students saw as relics of a racist culture narrative are coming down. The Portland School Board has approved Superinten- dent Guadalupe Guerrero’s recommendation to remove the two larger than life works depicting Native Ameri- cans and white settlers on each side of the school’s au- ditorium stage. The decision at the Nov. 17 school board meeting came more than a year after the student-led Indige- nous Peoples Student Union made a request to remove the 90-year-old murals. Both students and communi- ty members have called the murals hurtful to Native 90-year-old murals depicting Native Americans and Americans and other students for portraying stereotypes white settlers will be removed from Grant High School’s deemed historically inaccurate. auditorium after the school district determined they were problematic for not rising to standards for promoting racial C ontinued on P age 10 equality and social justice. Tolbert to Lead Vancouver NAACP Jasmine Tolbert, a Vancouver native and long time champion of social justice issues, has been elected the new president of the Van- couver NAACP. On Nov. 21, the local chapter held an election for officers. Members overwhelm- ingly elected Tolbert who previously served as branch vice president. In other positions, Joseph Hernandez was elected the chapter’s new vice president; Ruby N. Lewis as secre- tary and Bryant Enge as treasurer. Jasmine Tolbert Tolbert is a graduate of both Clark College and Washington State University-Vancou- ver and serves on the Board for the YWCA of Clark County. She is also a member of WSU Vancouver’s Equity Diversity Advisory Board. In her statement for election as Vancouver NAACP pesident, she pledged her commit- ment to racial equity. C ontinued on P age 10 Red House Eviction Enforced At least seven people gathered to support a local Black and Indigenous family on North Mississippi Avenue fight- ing a foreclosure of their historic home over claims of fraud and deceit were arrested for trespassing early Tues- day when law enforcement officers worked to “re-secure” the “Red House” and adjacent property where protesters have camped for months. Remedies for Police Violations One week after U.S. District Judge Marco A. Hernandez found the city of Portland in contempt of his restrictions on police use of less-lethal impact munitions during pro- tests, the judge has set a Jan. 8 hearing to determine what “practical remedies as opposed to punitive” ones to im- pose. The judge’s order came in response to a suit filed by Don’t Shoot Portland, a Black-led nonprofit that advo- cates for social and racial justice in the city. Call for Justice in Vancouver About 200 demonstrators gathered Sunday in Hazel Dell, northeast of Vancouver, to protest the death of Kev- in Peterson, a 21-year-old Black man who was fatally shot by Clark County sheriff’s deputies during a drug sting operation on Oct. 29. Organizers made speeches calling for justice for Peter- son, and his father, Kevin Peterson Sr. thanked the crowd for their support, including donations that have created a fund for his daughter.