Forum _! " ? Black Man Making ^1 Million Gets Top Post On Clinton Staff Black people who think it is virtually impossible to rise to the' top in Mainstream America should look immediately at the career years old and can top off an illustrious career with four or eight years of top-flight public service on the international stage of world of Clifton Regi nald Wharton, Deputy Secre tary of State in the Clinton administration. Wharton i? second in com mand in the MINORITY REPORT By JAMES E. ALSBROOK, Ph.D. most prestigious department of the president's cabinet. He acts as Secretary of State when Warren Christopher is not available. He today is a hands-on decision maker as the ship of state glides among the world's power leaders with general guidelines he helps to fashion as they evolve and flow from the White House. The Deputy Secretary's main assets are his excellent education, his vast experience, his diplomacy, his leadership qualities and his sheer brain power. His honorary degrees from Harvard and elsewhere cited these qualities and more. " Wharton is the first black executive of a Fortune 500 Company. He is an economist, an educator and an administrator. Born in 1926 at Boston, Mass., he graduated in 1947 from Harvard with honors in history. He took his master's degree in International Studies at the' School for Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins and then earned another mas ter's degree and a doctorate in economics at the University of Chicago. Highlights of his career are that he became first black president of a major univer sity in America ? Michigan State. He was so successful there that he was asked to become chancellor of New York State's vast universi ties system. Successful there, he advanced higher, becoming chief executive officer of the Teachers' Insurance and Annuity Association College Retirement Equities Fund in New York City. This fund is listed in the Fortune 500 and is the third largest life insurance com pany in the United States, with assets of $112 billion. Wharton's salary last year exceeded $1 million, but his salary fell to about one-eighth that figure in January when he joined the State Department. But despite the deep pay cut, Wharton will be moving up in prestige and power in a world of national and international political influence and prestige. Wharton is 66 affairs. He has received dozens of honorary degrees in addition to the one from his alma mater, Harvard. He has been capped and gowned at Amhurst, Tufts, N6tre Dame, Howard, Michigan State, NYU, Tuskegee, Lincoln and many others. He is the board of directors at the New York*Stock Exchange, Ford Motors, Phillips Petroleum, Kellogg Co., and other large corporations. Whereas blacks in the sixties boasted of Dr. Robert Weaver, another Harvard Ph.D. scholar, and Judge Thurgood Marshall as lead ing achievers in the national political spotlight, today we can be proud of new crop of grdund breakers including Dr. Wharton, Ron Brown, Gen. Colin Powell and the fresh burst of suc cessful black candidates now occupying vari ous political offices. If black parents could learn and teach their children about black leaders such as Wharton and other high-level public servants, ^effective steps will have been taken in the direction of higher achievement for oncoming generations. As far as the Black masses are concerned, Wharton is probably the most accomplished but most unknowned black man in America today. One thing the successes of Wharton, Pow ell and Brown have taught is that many of the real "powers that be" in America are more interested in getting their problems solved than in discriminating on the basis of race. Ronald Reagan, who flirted with the Klan and other bigots in Mississippi and elsewhere, chose Colin Powell to be chairman of the joint chiefs of staff because of Powell's demonstrated abil ity and mastery of the theories, tactics, and strategies of defensive and offensive warfare. Dr. Wharton was pulled upward because his abilities were recognized and neecJecT You can't keep a good man down forever. * A Necessary Key To Liberation Miseducation and racial discrimination are tools of oppression. For more than two centuries, people of color in the United States have always known the long lasting value of tion on this master will have to be monitored very closely. The U.S. Department of Justice under the guidance of the previous administra tion did not do an effective job of ensuring acquiring an edu cation as a neces sary key in the ongoing struggle for liberation from the twin evils of racism and economic exploitation. African American leader ship must enter CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNAL By BENJAMIN F. CHAVIS, JR. the current national debate concerning the future of public education. In particular, the rising cost of a college education makes it increasingly difficult for students from African-American or other communities to have an access to higher education. In fact, the notion of "equal opportunity" in education is a cruel myth for millions of students from com munities that have been systematically eco nomically disempowered. At every level of the educational process in this society, from pre-school jto elementary, from secondary to college, graduate and post graduate, more and more doors have been closing in the face of students who should be given a chance of having a productive life through involvement in the educational process, but who are denied access to educa tion bepause gif race and socioeconomic class. During the 1992 presidential campaign. President Clinton made a commitment to help young people in the nation pay for their col lege education by working off the costs in a proposed national community service pro gram. ? Now that Clinton is in the White House, there are millions of persons who are waiting for the campaign promises to be fulfilled, there are indeed very high expectations and on the issue of the government helping tfc> revive and redirect our nation's approach to educational opportunity, there is a critical need to act with some dispatch. Disturbingly, recent rulings by courts at the state and federal levels have not been in favor of the preservation of historically black colleges. The Clinton Administration's posi equal protection of civil rights laws, especially in the area of education. We understand the National Service Plan for Education is still on the drawing boards. According to a statement in USA Today, Clin ton advisors are contemplating replicating model projects like "City Year" in Boston. This prograrri allows students to work on com munijty projects receiving a weekly salary of SI 00 and after a designated period of time, the students in the program will be* eligible to receive a $5000 voucher toward college. A1 From, President Clinton's domestic policy advisor stated, "There is a larger concept here of restoring the civic ethic to the country and giving something back." A1 From is well known for some of his conservative views and the jury is still out on whether his approach will actually solve the problem of decades of racial and economic discrimination. One thing is certain and crystal clear: The CiviTRights Movement must demand equal opportunity and equal access to both education and economic empowerment in the context of moving the struggle for freedom and justice forward. In other words, whatever policies and programs are presented, the African American and other people of color cannot afford to wait another 12 years or 12 months. We want action and we want it now. Education is not a temporary process. It is rather an ongoing necessity for all persons of all age categories, and the denial of access to educatfcih to anyone because of race will ulti mately "be injurious to the whole society. IF YOU'RE SOMEONE I HAVENT) H 5m? FROM IN YEARS, ANP YOU'RE CALHN6 BECAUSE OF MY New JOB, THANKS ANP 6000BYE. [ IF, ON THE OTHER HANP, )ty%Ey AN F.O.J., PLEASE LEAVE A MESSAGE ANPl'LL CALL VOU I RIGHT BACK 1 0YB/ 5 BEEP'S , F.O.J.? FRJENP OF JOAN /E. THEY KNOCU WHO THEY ARE SO WHATOiA WORKING ON THESE PAYS7 I'M REVISITING THE KJM BER LIN CASE . ? REMEMBER THE GUY WHO SAlP HE SOU? POT TO QUAYIE * KIMBERLINS BECOME THE FORGOTTEN MAN, JOANf? HE'S LONG SINCE PONE H&s. TIME , BUT THE * BUSHIES PUT 7h&\ \ F/X/NONH/S BOTH AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL? ANP HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH are consjperjn&pesignat ING HIM A POLITICAL PRISON ER. YOU GOTTA TAKE KJMBERLJN UP WITH BAlRP1 I PONT KNOW, RICK . I'M NEW AT JUSTICE, ANP I ALREAPY HAVE MY OWN CAUSES TO ADVANCE . LIKE WHAT * WEIL, L!KE,TMTRY1NG TO GET M/KB M/LKEN back into jail . / . MAYBE- THE > OOUUfSMTCH ) PLACES SO WHAT PO YOU SAY, BABE? CAN YOUBRJNGUP KJMBERLJN WITH THE \ BOSS ? I'LL THINK ABOUT IT, RICK. I HAVE TO START SLOWLY. I PONT REALLY KNOW THE ROPES AT JUSTICE... also, toe's a UTTLE thfjze PREOCCVPIEP. THERE'S BEEN QUTTE A LOT , OF FALLOUT FROM THE NANNY UP ROAR 1 WANT SOCIAL SECURITY. \ RIGHT WANT ME TV START TURNING POOUN YOUR BEP, TOO 7 SPECIAL OFFER . . Commemorating Martin Luther King Jr. and Black History Month $227r *One year subscription (Regular subscription 30.72) The Chronicle , . . For behind the scenes reporting. Informative, provocative, vigilant! Winston-Salem Chronicle P.O. Box 1636 Wlmton-Mtm, WC 27102 i (919)722-8024 | Name Address City Phone 4 Er>clo?ed $22.72 W?M? MWIih i rtitii W?*my1h Cm mm** WC Winston-Salem Chronicle