• mis tcommaiii ELducation’s New Challenge By Hoyle H. Martin Sr. Post Executive Editor In years gone by, before the “white flight” to the suburbs - at least in the quasi-liberal North, public education was characterized as having dedicated teachers; eco nomically, socially, racially and at least semi-culturally integrated stu dent bodies sufficiently motivated to the pursuit of knowledge; and school boards committed to quality educa tion while being unintimidated by political ideologies or preoccupation with personal political ambitions. Last, but certainly not least, parents gave their wholehearted support to the educational system by encourag ing discipline, participating in PTA activities that contributed to the learning process, and making “homework” a family learning ex perience. Today, many believe such charac teristics of our schools are the exception rather than the rule. Paraphrasing one writer, but more bluntly stated, public-education is nearly a catastrophy. School boards cannot seem to cope with problems. Teachers have an “I don’t care” ' attitude (which is partly justified). Too many parents are apathetic and “social promotion” has dampened the motivation of our youth to learn. Considering this state of affairs, is there any reason to wonder about the level of school vandalism, the high drop-out rate, teen-age pregna ncy, drug traffic, teachers who don’t teach and students who don’t learn? * A concern over these issues has led Operation PUSH director Jesse Jackson to start a crusade to im prove inner-city and largely black schools. “Everywhere I go, kids walk around not with books under their arms but with radios up against their heads,” Newsweek reports. “Children can’t read or write, but they can memorize whole albums.” In his crusade, backed up by a $200,000 Ford Foundation grant, Jackson has called upon parents to set aside two hours nightly for “serious study” and the return of tirmly enforced discipline in the schools. Ironically, teen-age youth and their school administrators appear to accept Jackson’s ideas, but some politicians, teachers and their union leaders object to what they call “conservative pedagogy” and argue that it takes more than “electrifying speeches” to achieve academic ex cellence. The attack on the so-called “conservative pedagogy” does stop with Jesse Jackson. William Raspberry of the Wash ington POST reports that the princi pal of a Baltimore city high school has received praise for “the order, discipline and pride he has brought to his school.” The students - black and white - like the principal by rea soning that w^nie his rules are tough he is fair and predictable. The teachers on the other hand, don’t like the principal and his tough minded autocratic leadership. A part of this leadership requires that leacners write on the chalkboard before each class precisely what the day’s objective is for that class and teachers must make at least three homework assignments per week. This kind of tough-minded leader ship includes using national stan dardized test to measure student programs not on the basis of the tests’ relevance but because, as Raspberry quotes him, “They are the yardsticks that are used” by society. One result has been that last year only 58 percent of the school’s llth graders passed a functional reading test. This recently ended school year 84 percent passed - fourth highest in the city. All the problems of this inner city school are not over but a good beginning is in the making. If “conservative pedagogy” means strengthening the teaching of the three “R’s,” building character and discipline in our youth and improving our nation’s human re sources, it is. good for black youth and the Post supports it. This is important too because education is not the last hope for black youth, it is their only hope. Walton Gives Issue Priority The latest of the Walton-Booe alliances centers around the county budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1. Particular emphasis is on the issue of whether school teachers should be granted a pay increase of 5 percent on top of a 6 percent increase from the state while appa rently other county employees are receiving no pay raises. The merits of the issue were lost in a rowdy debate, supposedly over the ethics of Commissioner Walton voting on the pay increase question because his wife is a school teacher. However, the real issue was apparently an effort by Chairperson Liz Hair to prevent a vote on the teacher pay question. She is apparently opposed to the pay increase but does not want to vote on the issue because “of its possible impact on her congression al aspirations.” Since Walton and Booe were known to favor the pay raise it would take a motion by one and a “second” by the other to force a vote on the issue. Thus, one way to nullify the vote was to raise the ethics question with Walton and keep him from voting. While the POST deplores the manner in which this matter has been battered about by the Commis sion, we applaud Mr. Walton for his integrity in standing by his convic tions instead of playing partisan politics at the expense of our school teachers. 66 percent of murders in 17 cities committed by blacks killing blacks. FROM 4 STUPY 0Y THE N Y. TIMS WHITEY COULD, FOR ALL INTENTS AND PURPOSES PUT HIS ^ GUNS AWAY. WE’VE A ALWAYS BEEN ABLE W TO KILL OURSELVES K BETTER THAN HE f CAN. . M CLAY JON RILEY, LIBERATOR V M d FOR HBj BLACKS IN 9HB| city 8 JBm TIMES THAT H|g FOR WHITES. ^ THE POWER O the Cfc GLORY By Dr G.E.A. Toote Fhe Silent Invasion Do illegal aliens compete effec tively with and displace large num bers of American workers? Is the social cost of illegal aliens residency counter balanced by their availabili ty as needed low cost labor? Will the new influx of illegal aliens remain here, and impose increasing long term burdens on municipal and federal budgets, to which they are not proportionate contributors? CHEAP LABOR Inflation - deflation has caused many industries to relocate to areas of cheap labor, such as Mexico or the American side of the Mexican bor der. For $2.30 an hour, thirty five women sort and box shrimp on the Texas-Mexican border. They can package for freezing and grade six thousand pounds of shrimp an hour with machine help. On the Mexican side of the border, one hundred and sixty women, peel and devein shrimp without ma chines, remove shells and back veins from two thousand pounds of shrimp an hour. Their base pay is 99c an hour. MEXICO Mexico is struggling to survive a serious economic crisis. More than half of the work population is unem ployed or underemployed. At least twenty percent of its population depends upon wages earned in the United States. The Mexican population has al most tripled from twenty million in 1945 to sixty three million today.' As a nation it has one of the worlds highest birth rates. Next year, its population will increase by two million more people. The Mexican government predicts a population in excess of one hun dred and twenty million by the end of the century. NATURALIZED AMERICANS Four hundred thousand foreigners become legal residents each year. Most of them seek employment. Many seek welfare and unemploy ment benefits. One out of every five persons who surreptitiously enters from Mexico, if caught, face little punishment other than deportation, which has proven not to deter their attempt to return the next day. CONFRONTATION Next week this column will discuss the abuse of travel visas by more than three hundred thousand Colum bians. The dismal plight of the black unemployed is compounded by the silent invasion of job seeking illegal aliens. We must help to forge a national policy that will reduce the number of illegal aliens who enter our country, before it becomes an issue of racial confrontation. AMEN TO BE EQUAL j Vernon E. Jordan Jr. | Southern Africa Policy Advanced The Carter Administration is pursuing a re vised Southern African policy that will hopeful ly liberate blacks there from minority rule. Given the rigidity of the South African govern ment, it is hard to say whether change can come peacefully to the region, but American pressure is a vital ingredient. South Africa’s Prime Minister John Vorster is the key to change in the entire region. He’s staked his policy on helping to achieve a settlement in Rhodesia. In return, he’s banking on American gratitute that will leave intact minority white domination of South Africa. ^ That’s an offer the United States can, and reportedly has, refused. Vice President Mondale has informed Vorster that nothing less than majority rule will do. There are four major elements in the Southern African pot - Rhodesia, Namibian indepen dence, South Africa’s apartheid, and South A _1?_11 11 • ... o ui ^cpdicuu ueveiupmeiu. All are agreed that Rhodesia’s break-away regime has to give way to majority rule. And Namibia, illegally held for years by South Africa, has to have UN supervised elections that permit free participation of all groups, not just those the South African government sanctions. Rhodesia and Namibia are pawns in Vorster’s game. He’ll buckle under on those if he doesn’t have to compromise too much on what he considers internal South African affairs, j The vicious apartheid system is probably negotiable. The South Africans have sent signals indicating they might relax some of the more objectionable features of the system. When I was there last year it was clear that some of the petty apartheid rules - especially those affecting blacks working for foreign businesses - were not strictly enforced. But without massive foreign, especially Ame rican, pressure, South Africa is likely to persist in its separate development policy. This carves out parts of the cduntry for so-called indepen dence for tribal “homelands.” With this, South Africa’s black majority is fragmented into tribal groupings and denied South African citizenship. ine masses of unbamzed blacks are still confined to black townships, are still forced to become an army of underpaid cheap labor, and still refused recognition as South Africans. In effect, separate development means making people foreigners in their own land. As “citizens” of some fictional “homeland” they may never have seen, blacks are denied the right to vote or to participate in civic life. If they become involved in political or union activity, or even if they lose their jobs, they face being deported to the “homeland area.” Separate development is a shell game design ed to pacify the international community while assuring permanent minority rule in South Africa. It’s the real issue in South Africa. Apartheid, a serious affront to any concept of morality and human rights, is a system that supports minority rule. It makes it easier to implement, but even if apartheid were to vanish minority rule would continue. Separate development, though, is a policy that is at the core of the South African system of « subiucatine thp hlarlr maiApihi mk THE CHARLOTTE POST “THE PEOPLES NEWSPAPER” Established 1918 Published Every Thursday By The Charlotte Post Publishing Co., Inc. 2606-B West Blvd.-Charlotte, N.C. 28208 Telephones (704 ) 392-1306, 392-1307 Circulation, 7,185 58 YEARS OF CONTINUOUS SERVICE Bill Johnson..Editor-Publisher Hoyle H. Martin Sr.Executive Editor Bernard Reeves.General Manager .Circulation Director Albert Campbell.Advertising Director Second Class Postage No. 965500 Paid At Charlotte, N.C. under the Act of March 3,1878 Member National Newspaper Publishers Association North Carolina Black Publishers Association Deadline for all news copy and photos is 5 p.m. Monday. All photos and copy submitted becomes the property of the Post, and will not be returned, i National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Publishers. Inc 45 W. 5th Suite 1403 2400 S. Michigan Ave. New York. N Y. 10036 Chicago. 111. 60616 (212 ) 489-1220 Calumet 5-0200 Burrell Calk For Greater Government Commitment (Washington, D.C.,....At a taping of the nationally syndi cated television program, A merica's Black Forum, Dr. Berkeley G. Burrell, 10th Pre sident of the National Busi ness League, called for great er commitment by the federal government in assisting the minority business community. On the program, to be broad cast this week in 12 cities. Dr. Burell emphasized that only through increased govern ment assistance could minori ty enterprise attain economic parity for the nation's 17 per cent minority population. Dr. Burrell stated that the prospect of future increases in productivity throughout the total national economy de pends on boosting productivity in the underutilized minority business sector. But the NBL President was quick to point out that there was more to gain than boosting production and cutting inflation. Dr Bur rell contended that streng thening the minority business community was the only way to guarantee the survival of the fret enterprise system In ar. wer to reporters ques tions. Dr. Burrell explained that minority business has a lot of catching up to do Minority firms grossed $7 bil lion last year, while gross receipts for non-minority busi ness totaled $1.4 trillion. The minority parity share should have been $900 billion in gross receipts. According to Dr. Burrell's analysis, minority business needs capital to expand and in so doing create new Jobs and lower the nation's high mino rity unemployment rate. ‘‘There are 400,000 minority businesses in this country. If they could each hire just two more people, we’d have new jobs for 800,000 people in the minority community,” said Dr. Burrell. The NBL President explain ed that it was up to govern ment to set the tone for the nation's reaction to the efforts of minority enterprise. "The government provides the markets and climate for corporate business,” Dr. Bur rell explained. “What it has done for defense, airlines and railroads, it must do for mino rities. make it possible for minorities to participate in large scale revenue industries like health maintenance, transportation and defense ” In response to questions about what the government has done so far. Dr. Burrell explained that since 1953 the Small Business Administra tion has provided only $17 billion in total loans and loan guarantees, to minority enter prise, adding that SBA cer tainly does not have the re quired resources as a single agency. "In order for the minority business sector to achieve parity by the year 2000, it will be necessary to invest $440 billion in minority enter prise" Dr. Burrell stressed the im portance of government pro curement policy in assisting minority business. "The go vernment must commit itself to spending greater procure ment dollars with minority firms while providing for a full range of support services in enabling minority business to fulfill each contract.” Dr. Burrell pointed out the minority procurement provi sions in the Railroad Regula tory Act of last year which guaranteed minority partici pation in upgrading the na tion's railroads. The NBL President restated his belief that time is running out for the government to take decisive action in assistng minority enterprise Some Blacks hate the sys tem." said Dr. Burrell "be cause they don't have a part in American business And young Whites are asking me why do you support free en terprise which they feel hasn't done anything for minorities in this country. They are using us as an excuse to attack the system,” Burrell emphasized. "But we must preserve the system and the only way to do that is by minorities participa tion in it. For the system to survive, a number of Blacks are going to have to be highly visible so that other Blacks can see that there are oppor tunities.” Dr. Burrell asked for ex panded government assis tance in providing equity capital, debt financing and technical assistance to the minority business community, calling for the kind of program that created the Alaska pipe line and revitalization of Ame rican railroads. In answer as to whether the Carter administration will be responsive to minority enter prise, Dr. Burrell indicated it was too early to tell, but did say that being a small busi ness man, the President un derstood that you have to make an investment in order to get back a return...” NBL, founded in 1900 by Booker T. Washington, is the nation's oldest national busi ness organization and serves as the national advocate for minority business enterprise. Dr Burrell was questioned by Glen Ford and Ben Frazier of the Black Forum and Lou Law of the Mutual Black LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Support Welcomed 927 Drummond Avenue Charlotte, N.C 28205 Charlotte Post Publishing Co, Inc. 2606 B West Blvd Charlotte, N.C. 28208 Dear Mr. Bill Johnson I think that the paper that you have is real good And some of the things that are in it are real nice tolcnow about But I v.ould like to tell you something about a friend of mine that is just unreal but it is very true His name is Norman Bussey and he is a very smart black male that I think that you should put in your paper and call it an. "Outstanding Sen ior," because he will attend the University of Hawaii be cause he has received a four year scholarship to this school where mostly all smart people attend Because this school is for people that want to major in the field of Air Traffic Control, and aviation. He plans to attend this school in the fall At school Norman has better than a 3 0 average All the classes he has were advanced Chemistry II and Analysis, Physics. Frg lish VI T D he plans to major in Air Traffic Control Before I ne does he will be in the U.S Army and they found out ■bout his plans so they will send him to the school for (4) years, and they will pay for his , ■chooling That is why I think that my brother is the smart est Thank you, _^eVerr^^Bussey. Keep your out-of-town friends informed on what's happening in Charlotte by sending them a copy of the Charlotte Post each week The cost is only $8 per year.