I AY 30-JUNE 5,1 4 THE CITIZE P GETHA£E I 'OAKLA D IS MISSISSIPPI I I I � 1 lOr • • ct 0 IZ r ro Submitted by UIauu Howe 7622 I1hur Blvd. Ollkllmd, C4 94605 OAKLAND, C - A city lth �ority ��c population d city council, d B c mayor, the city recently lauded "most integrated" m .. Ten thousand hornel B peopl wander the streets or hole up in one of the city-owned boarded­ up hou , forced to' live like animals. On Friday, 0 em 18, e bodi of a 33 y old B c mother and her 9 year old IOD, Joyce and Jeffrey Wh I· ere found in ch a building dead om e po re and malnutrition. These d are t 0 of many. City develop- Dt p call for . ocating thousands more, pushing Blae orker out and loptna Oakland d ter. FrancISCO Overtown residents national TV: "The 0 y e can get justice i if e go in th street and get it over I ,. The peop e of Oakland are building movement ddressing the root ca of the prob ems, and calling for Blac community control. Since July 1983, organizars from the Uhuru Ho (Free- B dom House) and the nounding Bl c community have seized an abandoned d fixed it up to ho a home- Black mother and her children, built a tent city in city park frequented by home Black people ho then organized a park council to get rid of dru pushers, and rved over 10,QOO m from tb Joyce and Jeffrey eler Free Food Program in a two month period. This mo ement brought the i of homel to national- attention lth featur following the aban­ takeo ere Every on of the projects pported by hundreds of peop , Blac and bite, from throughout the San Francisco Bay Area in the form of food, equipment and cash donations, volun­ teerin and particip tion in rallie, marche 1 gal help, letters and phone h o for The Twin Citie Branch of the .A.A.C:P. will be·ce ebrating the 75th anniversary (1909-1984) of th national iation ith special .A.A.C:P • . Freedom Fund Banquet at 6:00 p.m. on Friday, June 15 at the Ram da Inn in Benton Harbor, ccording to the local pre ident, ary R. DeFoe. "This year' program promi to be one of the be ever," id s. DeFoe. TIl guest spe er for the event will be Attorney rgaret Bush Ilson, former ational .A.A.C.P. Bo rd Chairperson, ho stirred m [or controversy within the ranks hen I she uspended Executive Director, Benjamin Hoo last year . ilson, who re 'de in St. Loui , uri, rved nine term as Chair- per n of th ..A.A.C�. ational Board T." •. .:" .... , •• '" of Director . She . currently a nior partner in the firm of iIson, ith d cCullin in St. Lou' � Ticket for the banquet are S 16.00 for dult and 12.00 for tudents and nior citizens. They can be purchased at any of the following locations in Benton Harbor: Twin Citie Area Chamber of Commerce; Bunting House of Flo ers; Betty's Cleaners; All-Time Pe Control; and Pitt burgh Paints Service Cent r on -139. calls to the city government. Every project viciou y attacked by the police, causing iojurie and destroying property. Over 50 arre have been made. any charge have been later dropped legally invalid. The late development. of ,this move­ merit' call for Oakland Summer Project, . mode d af er the ... ppi Summer Project organized by the Stu­ dent on-Vic nt Coordinating Com­ mi ttee to bring supporte from all 0 r the U.s. to help build the Civil Righ o ement in· 964. Omo efing, Oakland Summer Project orsanifer: "Oakland is like every other city. But in Oakland, e are building a mo ment hich will em­ po er Black people and inspire Black people everywhere to build programs in our own interest. e all know something . terribly ODg. H you want to do mething about it, come to Oakland and participate in the Oakland Summer Project this June and July. Help create the solutions and build the peop '5 movement. " The Summer Project is ppealing to BI ck organizer and cultural or ers as well as white ctivists and students to come to Oakland. Local planning committees for volunteers have been t up in Brooklyn, New York; St. Peter burg, Florid; Seattle, Washington, well as nearby communities such Santa Cruz and Eugene. "Twenty years ago this summer," Omali Yeshitela, one-time S CC. leader from Florida and pte nt leader of the struggle in Oakland and the Black movement in the U.s., states, "eight hundred volunteers poured into Misstssi'ppi to help our people IJl e critical dvances in the organizing wor in the rural are and to take b ck ero the land the realities they had learned in ... ppi. ow our people are mainly in the cities, often in the orth, and still catching hell. The Oakland Summer Project ill be an eye-opner, will allow many progressive to go beyond discussion, study, and intellectual en- . de vor, to roll up their sleeves and o .f I I I I I I I I � I I I I arn the real wor of building rno - ment at the community 1. e ha a . strong Black community ·th a proud history, and we have . solidarity mo ment in th hite community hich provides crucial resourc and political pport." . Projects will include helping to build a Freed-om School, a free medical c and building community involvement with the current progr from the Uhuru Hou ,the Burning Spear Com­ munity Graphic School, and Afri People's Free Childcare CoIuec:�tiYles Participants will do community organi­ zing for tenant' right and or to et out the vote for Community Control Housing Initia . e. Volunteers will undergo training ion in regional center befo e coming to Oakland. A reunion and commemor­ tion -of ississippi Freedom Summer . planned for June . c QUET PLANNERS: Prep· for Twin City Area Bnne AACP' . ersary of MCP committee mben. Seated, from eft, are: Dr. J ,p e Rev. Ellis HuB Sr., public relatio ; ill B b, banquet chairman; Leonard Smit, p tro .�- book; d Dr. Hanel Taylor, e plann.ina. quet will held J ada Inn. Tic etl, S16 for adults S12 for entl and senior citize ,may be pure of Commerce, Bunf Ho of Flo ft, Betty's a� ft, AII·T· Pe Control and Pittsb I pictured· Branch President DeFoe. (H-P Photo)