U-IHE CAROLINA TIMES SAT.. SEPTEMBER 27, 1980' .SOMETHING BLACKS CAN DO NOWFOB THEMSELVES... REGISTER-VOTE YOU MUST REGISTER '-YOU MUST VOTE YOU MUST LEAR NC0N0R$5 ACTED SUIFTLY IN PASSING THIS ACT INTENP TO ACT WTH EQUAL DISPATCH IN ORPER TO Durham Moves Backward The appointments that were made on the three committees by a majority of the Durham City Council members, Monday night, September 15, should be regarded as an offense to both civic minded whites and blacks who have worked untiringly to create a i climate of racial harmony and p-i "prosperity for the City of Diirham. , .i''The old statement that "the .tlfest persons were chosen for the , jbbs" is paternalistic at best and b atant v racist at worst, it im- our failure to create a political system that includes all of Durham's citizens has played a major role in constituting the pre sent political situation. The city government of Durham belongs to all of the peo ple and the time has long passed for all of Durham's citizens to in sist on a government that is sen sitive to their needs. The gains that were made by, women and minorities in the six ties, gains that are steadily eroding, came out of a determina- To Be Equal GOVERNMENT'S RIGHTS ROLE IMPORTANT v By Vernon E. Jordan, Jr. The experience of the 1970s erosion of limited black gains, urban decay, and a growing conservative national mood has led to disillusionment and to questioning civil rights strategies. Perhaps the single most important factor in the growing cynicism is the rightward drift of American political opinion. The over whelming majority of blacks reject the new conservative thrust, but perceive the wall of white resistance as higher and stronger. So some blacks and whites question the valye of federal programs and even the wisdom of looking to the federal govern ment for answers to problems faced by the black poor. Traditionally, black people have equated states rights with state's wrongs, and have looked to Washington and to the federal courts for protection from local abuse. The failure of the private sector to generate enough jobs and to give blacks their fair share of the available jobs has led to em phasis on federal job programs. There's also been an emphasis on federal transfer programs such as welfare, food stamps, health assistance and others. While some have charged such programs breed dependence, most blacks look upon those programs as essential survival mechanisms in a society that refuses to encourage in dependence through job opportunities. Affirmative action is another area in which black people traditionally look to the government for action. Left to themselves, most employers would probably be indif ferent to black demands for equal employ ment opportunities. The threat of federal ac tion has been a major factor in private sector affirmative action efforts. The conservative view appears to be that black progress has been limited because federal programs are ineffective, and therefore those programs should be aban doned. But it would be more fair to say that black progress has been limited in part because federal programs' effectiveness has been limited, and that a massive federal effort to bring equality to blacks was never im plemented. Job programs, for example, serve only a fraction of the unemployed, but that is no reason to de-emphasize o creation. The fact is that many black people were helped by those programs, people who would be much worse off today if those programs did not exist. The answer lies not in abolishing the programs but in expanding the ones thai work while fixing the ones thai don't. We should not forget thai good programs have been torpedoed by Congressional politics and by executive penny-pinching. Some promising programs wore underfund ed to the point where liiey could not make an impact. Others were broadened to the point where they became so diffuse i hat they failed to help the neediest. For political purposes, definitions ic target populations are often broadened to in clude more people and more congressional districts, so funds are diverted from truly needy areas to better-off ones. Federal programs leave much to be desired, but they shouldn't be replaced by panaceas and slogans that appear to offer even fewer prospective gains to blacks. Just dumping on government isn't enough; we have to ensure that government programs work the way we want them to work. . And no one should write off the private sector, as a contributor to future black equality. The 1980s should be a lime of building coalitions and creating public and private programs that result in black advances. WORKERS AND DEMOCRACY By Bayard Rustin A. Philip Randolph Institute There was something immensely in vigorating and exciting about the recent strikes by workers in Poland. Although the strikes occurred in a faraway country whose people live under a dictatorial regime, every American, black and white, could identify with the drama that daily unfolded on our television screens and in our newspapers. What began ostensibly as a strike for higher wages, and against the Communist equivalent of inflation, was transformed in to a struggle for democratizing an authoritarian society. When finally the strike was settled and the workers went back on their jobs, they had succeeded in extracting wide-ranging concessions from the Polish government involving the right to trade unions independent of government control. If the Polish government lives up- to the terms of the agreement, Poland will have taken a significant step in the direction of democracy, -: Qualified "blacks, whites are the only qualified persons. still Moreover, these appointments in the aftermath of the statement by the Durham City manager, Mr. Del Castilho, "that Durham has not moved rapidly enough in its hiring of minorities and women," do not demonstrate that all of the members of the pre sent City Council are dedicated to a fair and equitable climate for the City of Durham. These appointments, never theless as insulting as they are should cause us to evaluate ourselves and to determine how trie - nature o politics. It involved the conscien tious efforts of those in high places to protect the rights of those who were less fortunate. Now, we must ask ourselves whether or not this trend still prevails, or whether or not too many of those in "high places" have forgot that they must be responsive to the process that yielded their "high places." It. is truly time for soul searching, after which there must immediately follow a decisive order of business if this backward movement is to be stopped. rtt tithflw Fniisrr leadersnir. . , nressurca ov me Soviet Union, may revoke the terms of the strike settlement and plunge Poland into a period of social unrest and harsh govern ment repression. This is why newly-formed Polish free trade unions need the support they are, getting from American organized labor, now more than ever. Blacks who remember,, the days of the freedom rides and of the murders of black civil rights activists in the fifties and sixties , understand the true heroism of the Polish strikers. They literally were risking their lives for a better, more democratic, and more humane society. Of course, the repressions and harassment which black and white civil rights activists suffered in the United States was not the consequence of official federal government policy, and so the situation is not entirely equivalent. Yet the courage that was required to take on Jim Crow is similar to the courage that was required in 1980 to force the Polish Communist Party to relin quish some of its dictatorial control over Poland. The strikes in the Polish shipyards are a significant historical event because they re mind us all of the commitment of workers and independent trade unions to the democratization of society. Workers and workers' movements have historically raised . ticonomic questions. And workers often f . HffrtljftjitfN their- ecQhpjfnw5iwje woefully ignored by the press and the public is the commitment of free trade unions to ex tending democracy. Organized labor has a proud history of fighting to defend and broaden civil human rights in the United States. Labor organiza tions like the AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers arc also in the forefront of defen ding the human rights of imprisoned and beleaguered trade unionists and democratic activists in such countries as Cuba, Argen tina, Chile, the Soviet Union, South Africa, and Poland. Union members and union leaders know that without the freedom of trade unions to function democratically and without government interference, there can be no true advancement of workers' in terests. Thus it was both ironic and hypocritical that Ronald Reagan should so vocally claim to support the interests of the Polish workers, for Reagan and the conservatives around him have traditionally adopted a hostile attitude toward trade unions. Reagan is a firm supporter jf so-called "right-to-work" laws which seek to weaken unions in the United States. And in the past he has even proposed utilizing anti-trust legislation to bust unions. So there is no small measure of irony in the fact t hat he is a staunch supporter of the efforts to establish -fFe&4radeHinkms in-faraway lands, and yet .xppbses their interests in his o-wn country. Blacks and" other workers who watched the heroism of the striking Polish workers understand that unions free of government harassment are a cornerstone of democracy. They know that without strong and free unions society itself cannot be free. Unfor tunately this is a lesson that Ronald Reagan has failed to learn. Business In The Black ANDERSON HAS AN ANSWER, RONALD REAGAN IS SOME KIND OF STRANGER By Charles E. Belle A New Building At Last After forty years, North Carolina Central University's Albert Louis Turner Law School finally has a new $4.25 million building of its own after dedica tion ceremonies of the facility on September 19-20. Chartered in 1939 by the North Carolina General Assembly, only one student showed up. Thus, the opening of the law school was postponed until September 14, 1940. Since the 1940 opening, the NCCU Law School has tread a path strewn with rocks and full of potholes disastrous fire, threats and. efforts to close the school by former Governor Dan Moore, and others. The institu tion has undergone three name changes, i.e., North Carolina College for Negroes, North Carolina College at Durham and North Carolina Central Universi ty. Yet, dedicated faculty and staff members have trained black, white, and Indian lawyers who have raised the legal representa tion of these groups in the state of North Carolina. After the initial instruction by Duke and University of North Carolina faculty members in the early years, Dr. Albert L. Turner became the first black dean in 1 942. He served until his retire ment in 1965. ; Daniel G. Sampson assumed the deanship in 1965 and served until July 1, 1969., When LcMarquis DeJarmon became dean on September 1, 1969, sixteen days later, a disgruntled student set the raging fire that burned out the former law building. DeJarmon's tasks, under these conditions, were to rebuild the old school, and con struct the needed addition to the existing facility while fighting for funds for a new facility, and to keep the school from being clos ed. Under his leadership, the stu dent enrollment rose from 68 to 300. With all of the criticism heaped upon it, and with all of the limita tions of faculty, staff, funds and facilities, the law school at North Carolina Central has trained the bulk of minority lawyers in North Carolina. Between 1940 and 1966, only NINE blacks received their training exclusively at the state's threemajority schools, UNC. Duke and Wake Forest. NCCU trained the first Lumbee Indian lawyers in the state. One serves as a judge and another as a legislator. Facts reveal that the number of black law graduates from the ma jority schools is still small in pro portion to the majority group and the great majority of blacks do at tend NCCU due to its special mis - sion. The new Law School Building is indeed a welcome facility and is long overdue. It must continue to stand for opportunity for those who have long been denied a legal education. Ronald Reagan is actually running after the black vote like no other Republican Presidential candidate, since Abe Lincoln. Linking up in broad daylight with Benjamin Hooks and Vernon Jordan is no joking mat ter, it's making modest progress to gain black American acceptance. There is some real substance to the statements by Reagan like his "black Americans don't lack capability. They lack opportunity. Given adequate opportunities, . black Americans can be as successful as anyone else in this country." These words by him were spoken before the aghast audience of the Annual Convention of the National Urban League in New York City. Considering there were no promises in Ronald Reagan's platitude, it was a plausible performance. Presidential candidates have: come before previous predominantly black American audience howling to the moon, making a "sound and fury, signifying nothing." No one truely knows if Ronald Reagan will run to the right so far as to sink social security and other social programs. Progressive social programs certainly have not been one of his strong points in fhe past. Presidential candidates often take cover behind Colossians 3:12 "Put on . . . .compassion, kindness, lowliness, meekness and patience." Take notice that progress is not one of the words to live up tol While Reagan is running for the White House, it is wise for black Ar ericans to peer back at his past. President Donald Reagan might well appoint more black Americans in . cabinet positions than the current President of the United States. The former California governor appointed four more black American state department chiefs than his predecessor Democratic governor. Getting the Reagan for President Committee to come up with key black American member ship will make the difference in his campaign results in November. There will be no need .. to argue if he promises as much as Carter. A little! No black American can conceive of Ronald Reagan as a friend until Reagan can, like every previous Democratic Presidential nominee since FDR see fit to select black Americans among his advisors. A stranger, according to Webster's New Ideal Dic tionary may be a "guest, visitor or in truder." Invariably Reagan will be con sidered an intruder by Democratic regulars, an uninvited guest by intellectural snobs who 'take the black American vote for granted and alas a "visitor" to those who have "no pertinent friends only pertinent interest." President Carter should not be allowed to . take wholesale advantage of the entire black American vote. The black American vote in this country is not some old hag who is helpless to save herself. Sacrificing in the short-term, a term or two for a responsible Republican administration after these many score years ago might just be what 1 he doctor ordered for Democrats. President Carter has hand jobedthe black American community with record ' unemployment and no future promise to even stop misusing the people. Presidential candidates Carter and Reagan are both by passing the swelling unemployment problem ,' of black Americans. All the average black American can ask for in this agonizing situation is to see the appointment of concerned black American citizens in presidential cabinet positions. President Carter "previously" had his "personal" one black American friend. Ronald Reagan cannot just visit for the summer in the black American community. Comes the fall, he must have already proved he is really ready for all the people by placing some black Americans on his high echelon staff. If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who pro pose to favor freedom and yet depreciate agitation are men who, want crops without plowing up the ground, they want rain without thUnder and lighting. They want the oceans ma jestic wqves without the awful roar of its waters. . Frederick Douglass Standing in the wings waiting for -ai answer is John Anderson. 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