Front Street Weekly; 522
- Transcript
Oh. Abortion it's an emotional issue. The pro-choice and the pro-life activists are standing firm in increasing numbers all over the country. Luckily the two sides are facing off at the side of a clinic in Forest Grove Oregon where a large percentage of this state's abortions are performed. And you'll meet one of America's most respected architects. And if you're able to walk you can dance. That's how one ballroom dance instructor persuades people to kick up their heels.
You'll see those stories tonight on Front Street weekly Oregon Public Television's news magazine. Good evening. I'm grad gabber boo. I'm Jim Swenson and welcome back after weeks absence. Well in 1985 four bombs were pulled from the U.S. mail in Oregon. They were addressed to abortion clinics in Portland and one clinic in Forest Grove abortion is legal in the United States millions are performed each year in 1900 for over 13000 abortions were performed in Oregon. But legal or not there are still many who feel that abortion is wrong and they're making their views known anyway that they can. Tonight we'll see how the abortion issue is being dealt with in the rural community of Forest Grove. ALIBEK reports the. Why. Abortions have been performed under the law in the United States for 13 years now. But what used to be a very private matter between a woman and her doctor has recently caused an
increased amount of protest and even violence. The anti-abortionists and the pro-choice activists continue to stand toe to toe in communities where abortions are being performed. For several years. Clinics in larger cities like Portland have been the targets of pickets and demonstrations but in small rural communities. Conflict exists as well. I have a problem with the slaughter of innocent lives as a as a source of income for a physician and I cannot I cannot call in a man who makes a living on the lives of unborn children. A physician at all would call a murder two days a week. Dr. Peter Bors performs abortions in his family practice clinic here in Forest Grove on those same two days. Members of Catholics United for Life and women for the protection of the innocent gather as what they call sidewalk counselors actively
protesting what they feel is the murder of over 1000 innocent babies a year here at Bohr's clinic. On. Richmond Virginia. If you're going to be. Born babies are being killed. And we are standing out here to. Let. Portions boars and. His patrons but I mean we know that we disagree. Actually. I don't really care what anyone feelings are about abortion I just that to me the basic issue I mean I do care but in terms of my relations with the community I just think the best if it was do I have the right to carry on my business and stand breathless in the face of a rather organized attack by a group of people that clearly want to put me out of business. We. Don't wish for his practice to. Fold up or anything but we do want. This practice abortionist.
But Dr Bohr's says you will not stop performing abortions. He's been providing what he calls a needed service here in Forest Grove since 1977 until a couple of years ago Dr. Boyce kept a low profile about his abortion practice was really well for his abortion practice was really well hidden it wasn't till we went out there that it got. Brought to the light I mean that parking lot was full of people all the time. And by the time the picketing and protesting was done and. What was really going on there was brought into the community. You've got to be pretty empty parking lot. It wasn't widely known in this community that I was performing abortions in my office because I mean I never attracted a lot of attention and I never advertise that my notoriety if it were ever was really brought on by their targeting me. Shortly after the counselor started showing up on the sidewalk there were two arson attacks on the clinic. Death threats to Dr Bohr's and his staff and most recently an
attempted mail bomb in December of 1995. Keeping a low profile wasn't working so boars felt the time had come to speak out publicly on the pro-choice side. Growing one it became impossible to keep a low profile. You can't keep a low profile when people are sending bombs to you and to us I guess. I feel there's some safety and I personally think there's some safety in speaking out and taking a stance and I really don't want to I just think that the right for women to choose is just too important and let it be overrun by a small group of fanatics. The people that are really out there are causing all the trouble. Clearly represent a very small percentage of the population. Even of a town like this where. There's such a high concentration of such churches and religious groups. So with each side standing firm a line has been clearly drawn. To try and stop Dr. bores from performing abortions. The anti-abortionists are making themselves difficult
to ignore. This demonstration held last January at the clinic on the anniversary of the legalization of abortion in the United States was countered by pro-choice activists. Was. Not on board. Fetus was already on of the human family rides. On a regular basis. Pro-life sidewalk counselors try to show women alternatives to abortion but first of all to. Have the opportunity to intercede on the baby's behalf and. Give the women the alternatives that we don't believe they're being given the facts that what they carry is not a blob of fetal conception that they are carrying a child and that that child if they were given the opportunity. I certainly consider myself the counselor in this area. I spend a lot of time counseling people about options. I think that they are the real key to any aspect of counseling and I think that is what you're trying to do is hope then
figure out what is right for them and not only do the counselors talk to women planning abortions but tell women coming to boys for obstetrical care that he is killing babies. Well my feeling is that there has been a horrible I'm out. Demonstration there and that there has been a some kind of a movement to terrorize all the people going into PETER BOYCE clinic. Whether they're going there to have an abortion whether they're going there to have a baby as I was last year and was terrorized by demonstrators who were screaming at me and my 5 year old son as we went into the clinic. Many on the pro-choice side disagree with the counselor's tactics. Well I really disagree with them is a fact they think they can impose their moral viewpoint legally by law on all the rest of the country. And to me that's where they really are wrong. There is this urgency in these people this fanaticism to
try to demand that everyone see things their way and share their opinion. What they're trying to do is. Instilled guilt and confusion in these women and not counsel them at all. How can they call themselves counselor it's just an euphemism there. There picketers their harassers. Beverly Burke sees the protesting as an invasion of privacy in the real basis of that issue. Is that an abortion decision is a medical decision which a woman or a woman has medical confidentiality. It is a spiritual decision which is a inner feeling decision between a woman and herself. What it means to her to have a gotten pregnant and B decide what she's going to do with it.
But while some are angry at the interference in the invasion of privacy others accept the words of the pro-life counsellors in those cases where women are talked out of having an abortion at war's clinic. They're often taken to see pro-life Doctor James Seraiah cough and osteopathic physician here in Forest Grove. Obviously they're here because they're contemplating changing their mind about abortion. And and so we talk about the baby. We talk about the bay we listen to the baby's heartbeat in terms of my my personal persuasion abilities and persuading a lady not to have an abortion. I am not very successful at all. No and I and I and I wished I were I was somebody who were very successful. But you know we do see some ladies change their mind once in a while since they've been out on the sidewalk. The counselors say they've talked 30 women out of having abortions at the clinic. Maureen Frye was one. She went to Dr Bohr's for an abortion over a year ago. At age 21 with three children already and two abortions behind her she didn't want to be
pregnant again. But Maureen changed her mind. She had a baby boy in December of 1995 and now thinks abortion is wrong and knew that what I was doing was wrong. Whereas I think that before when I had had an abortion before and I actually went through with the abortion I I didn't know what I was doing. It was a place where you know it was. Quote OK in the world the world says this is OK if you want to have an abortion do it. You know this is your choice and God doesn't say that. But for the 1000 women who didn't listen they pray they would be forgiving. I just know father that the Satanists use this place as a place of condemnation not only of children's lives but mothers I think it's fine for them to protest I just wish they would watch what they say a little
bit. And that's in response to the acts of violence against clinics in Oregon and across the country. Dr. Moore spoke to the National Abortion Rights Action League last January in Washington D.C. The pro-abortion that people might be trying to make Dr. bores into something that he might not be but they're trying to maybe hold him up as an example or something. And so that might be one of the reasons why it's so hotly contested here on a local level Bors is trying to stop a ballot proposal which would eliminate state funded abortions. He also wants to hold down the activities of the protesters in front of his clinic. I certainly agree they were never going to get rid of them then but maybe we could bring it down to some kind of peaceful coexistence. But I would really like to see as far Personally as far as Peter Bors is concerned. I prayed many times God to make him a pro-life doctor. The conflict over abortion has been going on for years and it resurfaces in force
every year on the anniversary of its legalization and some feel that Oregon's current problems are as a result of this being an election year. And the fact that we have at one of our major candidates has taken a strong stand continually on abortion. That's right. It's really volatile. Well he's one of America's most respected architects and his multifaceted career spans years of design success. He was dean of the MIT School of Architecture and planning. And in 1972 he won the American Institute of Architects a gold medal. Just one of his many honors loose his imprimatur can be seen on such diverse projects ranging from the Pan Am building in New York to the Air Force Academy in Colorado. I.
In the field of architecture he is a monolith. His genius is internationally recognized and his influence on architecture is felt worldwide. We visited this charming man in a house he designed for a client 40 years ago. Constructed on a cliff in northwest Portland. The elegant wood structure is now owned by Bill Lucy and his wife Marge. Still active in 86 blue ski exudes a quiet wisdom about his profession. I could picture you say. It's the probably the. Most basic of our human. Activities our exercises because it means. Being. Protected from the rigor of nature. And in the process you express your most intimate feelings
about how you run to behave as a young man from Italy. He was fascinated by the Oregon countryside. No it scared me I didn't like it at first was to rial it too scary. My point. Has been coming to Oregon. Which is so. Different from the say the landscape in Tuscany or in Italy. That I was more right and the people reporting here about. The difference in the potential and they for creating a roads to rival they were already going to. Landscape in nature so that my impression nowhere more vivid differentiated and therefore he's wrong. His love of nature is reflected in the structures he created. Often of wood he sees nature is integral to man's most pressing needs.
Well it's the very to the very core of that location and frankly. With the design of buildings as to create the work of art to design a building for a purpose. Number one number two you have to pay respect to what's around. The character. The people believe these designs range from single family homes to shimmering churches and major private and public buildings. His 1931 design for the Portland Art Museum was recognized as among the 100 best buildings of that period by the American Institute of Architects. He also designed the Agnus tele Harley and the Juilliard School of Music and much much more. Saint Thomas Moore was your first church here in Portland wasn't it. Yes. What did you think of it as you put your pencil to the earth. I was running early could build anything for 17000 hours for seven hours that was the main runway and so that forced me to to go to this to the
basic of it and have just simply there are other structure exposed so it would be exposed and but then we would become much more. Rare and the importance of having. The lighting come from the right place. The person being the right one and then there were all the things that make an environment without. Fear or to be concerned to make it very rich you don't use fancy marble or fancy driving fancy or graphic details just go down to basics and therefore it has that quality. I would say a sincere quality of having met the problem doing the church for I think was 300 people over there it was the time for 17000 hours or so. People don't realize how much of it.
Discipline course to impose has never been Portlanders lanolin check and Gideon Bhaskar collaborated recently on a history of Portland architecture for Western imprints. The publishing arm of the Oregon Historical Society and titled frozen music. This beautiful book's preface was written by Pietro believes the authors told us why they asked him should stand at the beginning of a book which tries to explain an architecture from a multiplicity of point Bhaskar and then check used Portland as a metaphor. They see the city as a microcosm of architectural styles. Amusia of architecture if you will. I think you would. I would. Put in there. Three. Of the old masters and a modernist. I think when discussing blues kids important to realize that really he transcends labels of any kind and I think he would say so himself. I think the reason for that is that he
always resorts to first principles when he. Sort of err against simplicity when he conceives his architecture when he discusses it. But architecture is so much more than the building of buildings. Said Bellew ski with the natural light that he wanted to provide the visual experience forever. The succession of of moods as his son. Moves from one part of the sky to the other. There is no certainty anywhere in nature and the nature is a series of. Experience and there's a ray of hope for you for you are rather more diverted the results will be satisfactory and there's no guarantee that it will be unless. There is that spirit of that bright equality that part this part of the
architecture. Real. Work otherwise you'd be a builder not an architect. Buildings are expressions of their own time. But like their creator they are timeless. His grace and dignity of style respect the spiritual nature of mankind. His work quite simply. Will endure. He continues to be actively involved with architecture and his current projects is the chapel at the University of Portland which is now under construction. And in March 1986 Lucy received the governor's arts award that recognizes people who have made significant contributions in the field of cultural life. Certainly he has done that and totally appropriate or just yeah just great. Under speaking of significant contributions we have a bit of a history lesson for you right now. The 15th century was the age of Joan of Arc Leonardo DaVinci Christopher Columbus and
yes ballroom dancing in the 14 hundreds for the first time men and women danced together in the palaces of France and Italy's aristocracies Well before long social dancing had spread to the middle class and reporter hope Robertson tells us the 500 year old art form is still with us in a world all of its own. OK. It's a different world out there on the floor. A world of long flowing downs of rhinestones and sequins a world of tales and ties. Of glitter flash. Maybe a little elegance. It's the world of ballroom dancing. Dancers and dancers to be from all over the Northwest gather Oregon Washington Canada all have made the trip to Seattle for this dance competition and for their share of the spotlight.
Everybody has their Snow White or the princes or something and we all have those beings but a lot of people are just afraid to try it. Thank you dancing it's always been around for the last Micheles 1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 by kind of going to be going off. Before he came to Oregon 13 years ago. Ramos Reynoso was a dance instructor in Chicago. Among those he taught were blind deaf and other handicapped children. When he entered them in dance competitions Reinoso says no one knew that some of the students were blind until they went to pick up their trophies using canes to walk. And ballroom dancing because. Anybody can dance. If they're not afraid. Older people say well that's just for young people. Are you saying I look at Mrs. Pierce
she's 85 and she's still doing that. Yeah. I mean when you're younger. Oh no my DIDN'T START. I didn't start. It was 58. All right listen. I just want to watch. She really. Was. I don't want to think about it when I was younger I wanted to get into dancing and wished my parents would have been meat and sauce. But with seven children from my you know I always get what you want. And so therefore I didn't but my mother did teach me. Ballroom dancing square dance among the rest of it so that we had from that home. And. Went and dance this way. But then. I just never did take any professional instruction. Until. Two years ago. I
would like to be able to go out Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday night dancing. But. Where do you go. I'm single. It's just hard to try and find single people as single men to that song. There aren't that many that are. Single people and single men then single out Rodney. Although men take lessons too they're outnumbered by women students. So why spend all that time learning new steps and practicing them. If you can't find a suitable dance partner. The answer for Doreen and many others is competition. Back a dance showcase like this one gives even novice dancers a sense of
accomplishment. Can the judges lets them know how well be performing each dance step. First place goes to the ones who execute their chosen routines correctly. A second place award means you need some work. There is no third place. The students dance with their teacher but only the student's work is graded. Just because your Foxtrot isn't up against someone else's foxtrot that doesn't mean students are any less nervous. One does serious. You do things like put Vaseline on your teeth because you get so caught a mouth that your lips if you get a smile on your face your lips the actual stick and you can't get from. It's awful. It's a terrible thing. My sister. Just. Stage fright. On acid. I've been told by the people you're just trying to relive your youth you know well. Maybe inside you are I don't. Like that I don't feel that way but. I suppose there's an. Elegance about it. You can see the fans in the world. Come.
Visit Mary Ellen. Well you might want to keep your eyes open for dance competitions and showcases coming up in this area later this month. A tired company will hold a showcase of ballroom dance and the Reno School of Dance important that we saw in this piece holds its exhibition in August so going to get your dancing shoes on. OK Arthur Murray I bet you've got a pretty mean figure on the dance floor. Well here's what you're going to be seeing on the next edition of straight weekly logging and fishing. Can they coexist under Oregon's forestry laws. Some environmentalist say no but the State Department of Forestry disagrees acceptance of interracial marriages is growing but mixed couples still risk society's disapproval. And Portland boasts many fine art galleries one particularly zany off the wall salon. Well that's our program for this evening. We'll be here next week. We hope to see you then good night
tonight.
- Series
- Front Street Weekly
- Episode Number
- 522
- Producing Organization
- Oregon Public Broadcasting
- Contributing Organization
- Oregon Public Broadcasting (Portland, Oregon)
- AAPB ID
- cpb-aacip/153-375tb6kp
If you have more information about this item than what is given here, or if you have concerns about this record, we want to know! Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip/153-375tb6kp).
- Description
- Episode Description
- This episode features the following segments. The first segment, "Standing Firm," investigates the abortion debate as groups on both sides face off outside a clinic in Forest Grove. This includes interviews with both the protesters and the physician performing abortions. It also shows clips of the anti-abortion and pro-choice protesters facing off. The second segment, "Incomparable Architect," is a profile on famous Italian architect Pietro Belluschi. The third segment, "A Little Elegance," covers a Seattle ballroom dancing competition and its participants. Front Street Weekly is a news magazine featuring segments on current events and topics of interest to the local community.
- Series Description
- Front Street Weekly is a news magazine featuring segments on current events and topics of interest to the local community.
- Created Date
- 1986-05-05
- Created Date
- 1986-05-06
- Created Date
- 1986-00-00
- Asset type
- Episode
- Genres
- Magazine
- News Report
- Rights
- Oregon Public Broadcasting c. 1986
- Media type
- Moving Image
- Duration
- 00:28:39
- Credits
-
-
Associate Producer: Condeni, Vivian
Director: Graham, Lyle
Executive Producer: Graham, Lyle
Guest: Belluschi, Pietro
Host: Swenson, Jim
Host: Booth, Gwyneth Gamble
Producing Organization: Oregon Public Broadcasting
- AAPB Contributor Holdings
-
Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB)
Identifier: 113109.0 (Unique ID)
Format: U-matic
Generation: Original
Duration: 00:28:06:00
If you have a copy of this asset and would like us to add it to our catalog, please contact us.
- Citations
- Chicago: “Front Street Weekly; 522,” 1986-05-05, Oregon Public Broadcasting, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed December 3, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-153-375tb6kp.
- MLA: “Front Street Weekly; 522.” 1986-05-05. Oregon Public Broadcasting, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. December 3, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-153-375tb6kp>.
- APA: Front Street Weekly; 522. Boston, MA: Oregon Public Broadcasting, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-153-375tb6kp