September 28, 1981
Black College Day '81, the second annual march and
rally, will take place on Monday. September 28, 1981 in
the 16 states under the gun of so-called desegregation
and the White colleges to remain White.
Anticipating the new conservative emphasis of President
Ronald Reagan's "federalism," the return .of
greater spending power to the states, The Project '81
Coalition For Black Colleges, sponsor of the highly sue
cessiui Black College Day *80 in Washiggton, D.C. last
year, will focus on statewide organization in the 16 states
where the greatest peril to the public Black colleges exist:
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisianna,
Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio,
Oklahoma,- Pennsylvania, South Carolina,- Tennessee,Texas
and Virginia.
few of the presidents of these schools who are either out
of step with the times or political opportunists whose ma
NACMW YIIIEW
By interesting ourselves M,
in activities that benefit I
we can avoid the
are prevalent
. nowadays. We can, if we
* will it so, make our per- W
sonal relations the
satisfying aspect of our
lives. It is well understood,
however, in our personal
relations, we do experience I
both joys and disappoint- K. . _ . - ,
.. r f , Naomi C. McLean
ments. In spite of the fact,
in no other aspect of our lives do we climb such heights or
sound such depths, and it is in our personal relations that
i -
wc nave me greatest opportunity 4o influence others.
There is nothing really free in this world. If a person
wants to get, he has to give, and he has no moral right to
consume when he doesn't produce anything.
Emotions are a part of life, but calm thinking and proper
reasoning are vital. Things and conditions tend to get
us down, and the important issue is the development of a
friendly and understanding attitude which helps to make
happiness. It is the element of feeling - of sensitiveness
-that marks the poetic outlook on life. Sensitiveness
grows in the calm air of meditation, and if a person wants
to enjoy the fullness of life, he must make quiet time for
himself - times when he goes apart, so to speak, to commune
with the deeper impulses of his being.
Just as we cannot rightly hope to get material things
wttfcbiit ^Vfh^some s^fyice in return, so it is equally true
that we cannot hope to get real happiness without giving
happiness to others, and it should be sincerely realized,
happiness does not fall into one's lap, but it has to be
pursued. What is happiness? Happiness is something
shared. It arises out of those human, personal relations
that we establish in our homes and in our work. You do
something today that brings cheer into the life of
another. From that experience you get an inner glow
which no amounTof money can buy. When you produce
happiness, you are entitled to consume happiness.You
can produce happiness on vour ioh hv oivino ?
?X7 * ~ J " / 0'""""0 "
fellow worker a kindly word of praise for work well
done. His smile is your reward. Broader still, you can
produce happiness by expressing gratitude for kindness
shown to you by other people. There are so many ways
happiness can be produced. A good way to know - make
a list and go by it. Your reward will be happiness.
( MmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiimiHiiiiiiHmHimnMimiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiNNNNiiHHiiwmiiiiiiiii
Calendar From page 3
Wednesday, September 2
The Winston-Salem Pioneer Lions, Beep
Ball, baseball team, a team comprised of blind
people, will play in Greensboro at the
Warnersville Community Center at 6 p.m. Admission
is free to the public.
Forsyth Technical Institute and Consumer
Credit Counseling Service of Forsyth County
will offer a class entitled "Consumer
Awareness.M The emphasis will be Consumer
Laws, Investments, Food Shopping, Taxes and
Money Management. They will be held at
Dalton Junior High School, 6:30 p.m. until
8:30 p.m., Wednesday evenings for 6 weeks.
Registration begins August 17, 1981. Contact
FTI Continuing Education at 723-0371 to
register.
The Winston-Salem Alumni Chapter of N.C.
A&T State University will hold its monthly
meeting at 8:00 p.m. at Funderburke Paradise
on Old Greensboro Road.
Registration is open now tor Beginning Conversational
Spanish classes at the YWCA.
Juliette Miranda will teach the class on
Wednesdays from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. beginning
September 16 and running through October 21.
For further information/'call 722-5138.
The YWCA Options for Living program wiU
start its new Fall lecture series at St. Paul's
Episcopal Church with "How To Trace Your
Roots" from 10:30 - 12:00 noon. This program
for women and men over 50 is free and open to
the public. It is co-sponsored by the YWCA and
the Downtown Church Center.
sge Day Set
Zjournalj
jor survival tool is dem^goguery.
The presidents of Fisk and Tennessee $tate, for example,
are "bridges to the past." Andrew Billingsley, the
beleaguered president at Morgan State in Maryland, con
tessed to an absolute fabrication in the August, 1981 edition
of Essence magazine when he wrote that "several
strong allies" in the struggle to save Black colleges includes-"the
NAACP's Legal Defense Fund," The yeryiproblem
affecting his own school, as well as all public
Black colleges, stems from?Jack GteeiU^eig'v-ubdutatc
NAACP Legaf Defense Fund.
Billingsley's blessings for Greenberg, obviously
solicitous and political, is synonymous with congratulating
the fox for eating the chickens. His actions
are only matched by the president of Southern University,
Dr. Jesse Stone, who refused to allow a member of the
Coaltion to even speak on behalf of Black College Day at
halftime at the Grambling/Southern Bayou Classic. The
enemy is truly "integrated."
Although the Reagan Administration has sent mixed
signals on their integration plans previously adopted by
the Carter Administration, to bring a majority White
faculty and student body to Black campuses, it has been
consistent in its efforts to carry out then-candidate
Ronald Reagan's promise to give Black colleges a larger
ctioro rtT ?V?<* -1 ? ' Li_ L. 1
111c luitji lcucmi mgner eaucation Duagei.
In Jimmy Carter's first year, he reduced the Black college
share to 4.8 percent from 5.2 percent under President
Ford. When Carter's inept performance ended, Blacks
were getting only 4.1 percent. That was the sorry record
that Ronald Reagan promised the Coalition For Black
Colleges ? in writing -- that he would top.
So far, while the total education budget is being cut by
about 25 percent or $2 billion, Reagan proposed to increase
Title 111 monies, the second largest source of funds
to Black colleges.
For fiscal year 1982, Title 111 monies will be increased
from the current $120 million level to $129.6 million and,
if the administration's budget proposal is accepted, funding
for the work-study programs will remain at $550
million; supplemental opportunity grants will also be
funded at the same level. Ask any student financial aid
officer how important that is.
There are two major areas of conflict between the
Black community and the federal government, regardless
of which party is in power: (1) the share of the total
federal education budget allocated to Black colleges and
(2) the interpretation of the Adams ease on desegregation
by the Office of Civil Rights of the Department of Education.
. .
On the former point, the Reagan people must exceed
the Carter promises or embarrass the president and
damage his credibility with BlaCk America. Of a constant
$120 million allocation for Title 111, under Carter in
1971, Blacks got 42.5 percent and a paltry 14.3 percent in
1982.
On the threat that the interpretation of "desegregation"
schemes which will comply with Jack Greenberg's
NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund (LDF), the
Department of Education seems to be resisting that old
policy of destroying the chances of a higher education for
Black students by eliminating the source from which
America gets over 50 percent of its Black college
graduates each year.
But while an early reading indicates that the Reagan
policies oi increased tunding to Black colleges and a
policy of pjjblic support for the continued existence of
Black institutions of higher learning are compatible with
the basic interest of Black people, another philosophical
belief of the Reagan Administration can, and probably
will, cause conflict. That policy is federalism.
This transfer of power back to the states will make the
state governors, legislatures and boards of higher education
the overseers of a new plantation system. For example,
the state board of higher education in Ohio has
decided that the president of Central State University is
too committed to the survival of his school as an institution
for Blacks and some members are threatening to not
renew his contract next year.
Next Week: Where the Black College Battleground Is.
Tony Brown's Journal, the television series, is shown
every Sunday, on WGHP-TV, Channel 8, at 11:30 p.m.
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