THE CAROLINIAN RALEIGH. ,N. C.. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30. 973 4 "It is the spirit that quickeneth, the flesh profiteth nothing.*’ In God’s drama, the Pha risees, representing mundane and time-serving values, are always His antagonists, while Jesus, as the Agent of God, is the invari able protagonist. By placing the attitudes, re Editorial Viewpoint The Old “Dodge” Against Mass Busing Won’t Work We cannot say that one is am ax ed by the persistence of many white parents in opposing mass busing. They even hire attorneys-at-law to challenge the law enacted to pro vide total desegregation. At least we know that lawyers’ pocketbooks are getting fatter because of this opposition. One black educator is of the opin ion that busing is entering a third phase. The definition of busing is sim ple: “The act of transporting stu dents from one community to an other, especially when the one com munity is not large enough to have a profitable educational unit.” The smaller communities usually lose the school. The larger the school, the more educational units can be provided, and the greatest number of selective units can be provided for the pupils. The first phase of busing in the South’s public schools reveals that busing was provided to transport white children to larger educational units, while the blacks had to be satisfied with the education pro vided in their small and inadequate schools, or move to town and live with relatives, or take long walks several miles to school daily. At one time, South Carolina had 300 buses for white children and one bus for Negroes. For many years, white children rode to school on buses, while many years had to elapse after buses were provided for whites before the same provisions were passed on the black children, living in segregated com munities. In many instances, the well-worn buses from w'hite schools wei’e handed down to black children as was nearly everything else that, was movable. In Chester, South Carolina, during these times, used crayons, old shades, erasers, and desks were placed in black schools, when no longer suitable for white children. At one time, a black community of citizens were going to purchase their own bus, only to find out that no driver would be certified for it if they bought it. It took a long, long time before black chil dren were provided with adequate bus transportation. Next, most states in the South pass ed through a stage of very inadequate schools for Negro children. At the time, most black children became field hands upon completion of the sixth or eithth grades. Usually these children went to work at unskilled Jobs from which they could barely eke out a living. W’hite people then got the idea that blacks can live cheaper than whites. One of the problems of desegre gation of schools is the fact that blacks and whites have traditional ly lived segregated from one another as neighbors. The fact has been in tensified by zoning codes. City and county zoning for reasons oi sanitation and other purposes is necessary and justifiable. However, one element of city zoning which needs the scrutiny of society is the stratification of the population into areas according to wealth and race, That this is an aim of much city zoning seems to be no question. Zoning to prevent Negroes from building in areas is no longer legal, but the rich have almost as much protection of the same kind through widespread economic zoning. After the last: great #» o rthquakfe in Japan, an American mpany was hired to rebuild the city of Yoko hama. However, the plans were re jected because the Japanese said the American plan was aimed at stratifying the population accord Bible Thought Os The Week Zoning To Protect Is Ugly presented by the Pharisees and their op position, Jesus makes it clear that the art of living consists in becoming the object through which subjective guidance passes. Power does not lie in external things, but in inner vision, constructively realized through dynamic ac tion. When fairly adequate bus trans portation was provided for black children, a new era of education' came into existence. Thus, pro vision of bus transportation for black children became the second phase. The South is entering the third phase of school busing. Most white citizens have not accepted the open forum and group discussion as the phase of school busing. Most white citizens have not accepted the open forum and group discussion as the means to iron out differences brought about by so-called mass busing. They are still clamoring for the neighborhood school con cept. We have examined this con cept and know that it cannot solve the program of desegregation of schools, especially in a technolo gical age, Black children must be carried to those educational centers that offer many choices to students as they at tempt to locate that nook in which they will fit as citizens. This calls for equipment and staff that no neigh borhood school can afford. If the neighborhood schools that, we talk about so much these days, are in any way akin to those of yester years, it would mean taking a step backward to the dual system of education. People in the South must not let the issue of busing tear them apart and create hate in the minds of ci tizens and their families. We can not solve our problems in unity, if we ourselves are divided. We must protect the tie that binds, and we cannot afford to let the fires of hate and prejudice stay alive. Black people and white people must remember that we are no more black or white, rich or poor, east or west, and north or south. Ra ther, we are one nation, under God, seeking liberty and justice for everybody. If the issues of bus ing and other problems are to be solved, it will come as a result of full participation by all citizens. Not long ago, we heard a sec tional white leader urge his com munity to boycott the public schools. This is surely unprofessional ad vice to give a group of parents, who may not realize that we have put a man on the moon. The need for busing of school children can be traced to housing restrictions and zoning, segregat ed living and isolation from one another. Open housing when gen uinely put into effect by unified ac tion of all will pave the way for harmonious settlement of the bus ing problem. ing to wealth and therefore was “un democratic.” One city published new zoning laws, arranging zones according to the cost of houses. Zone one was $6,- 500 on up to $25,000. In response to a letter to the City Commission about zoning in this manner, the answer was that they were merely doing what other cities are doing (Raleigh, included), but not so bold ly and unashamedly. Justification was that the wealthy had to be pro tected. A schoolroom full of blue-eyed, white - faced children is beauti ful in one sense, but if it repre sents racial discrimination, it is not considered to be so, morally speaking. (But who cares about morally speaking, these days?) A lone line of $25,000 to $40,000 houses may be beautiful in one sense, but if it represents what it does, and what we know it does, it is morally ugly, and should be so recognized. Only li America BY HARRY GOLDEN CRIME AND PUNISHMENT In Biblical times, the pun ishment for an adultress was stoning. That was indeed a draconian price for a lady to pay but one must remember that the prophets of old did not have to devise punish ments for embezzlement, price-fixing or subversion. As far as punishments go, stoning was reasonable for the law givers thought a man should not have to work and sweat for issue not his own. The crime of adultery victim ized the husfiand and often pro duced another victim, too: the child of an adulterous union was an outcast. It is doubtful, of course, if he who threw the first stone was throwing it on behalf of the little outcast, but then punishment is not always ap plied to resuscitate victims, tims. One of the arguments ad vanced tor a mult: eii'lcient system of law and order is that the police, the courts, and the prisons cease arrest ing, judging, and imprison ing the Demetrators of vic timless crimes. Drunken ness, for example, is a vic timless crime, so is loiter ing, and homosexuality be tween consenting adults and prostitution. The punishment is hardly draconian for anyone convict ed of such crimes, but pro secution does absorb the en ergies of policemen and law enforcers. The San Francisco Committee on Crime reports that more than* 50 per cent of the arrests in that city were for nonviolent crimes. In 1969, the San Francisco cops made 16,500 arrests for drunkenness, 4,900 for drug offenses in which no other charges were Involved, 3,200 for prostitution (one has to say Frisco has a gay night life), and 53 for private gamb ling. A third of the trials in the Bay area are convened to judge the guiu or innocence of a woman charged with prostitu tion and 40 per cent of the inmates in the county jail are there for drunkenness. No prostitute goes to jail A DARK POINT Os VKW BY “BILL” MOSES “FREE AND EQUAL*' Anyone who has looked through the viewing window of an obstetric unit at a hos tital land seen the line up of brown, black, white, red and yellow babies in the nursery cribs, knows that all babies are born ‘Free and Equal. This is the one place where we come nearest to living up to our “Declaration Os In dependence*’, and it becomes “...self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. - ’ However, something happens to black American babies, once they leave the confines of the hospital. Their ‘Freedom and Equality’ undergo drastic changes which follow them all the days of their lives. The taboos and restrictions placed upon them, in America, are more stringent than those suf fered by any other ethnic group in the nation; and they are evidenced in the church, there schools, the market place, in jobs and ordinary social ac tivities. Athletics' seems to be the only field where a noticeable let up In these re strictlons has occurred - and it still happens there. We hear much these days a bout “Equal Employment Op portunity.” Many business concerns, large and small, display the phrase in their ad vertisements and other pub lic relations documents; and I would guess that some em ployers actually put the phrase into practice, rather than use it as ‘window dressing’ to se cure or hold a government contract. Now that, by federal law, the schools and colleges can no longer discriminate be cause of ‘race, creed, or color’, and have opened their doors to black students, some chauvinistic editorials begin to appear in our Southern press (where most predominately THE CAROLINIAN "Covertai Tht Carolina*" by Th* Carolinian FubSishing Company MS X. Martin Street Raleigh. N, C. 27*91 SSalUsiK Address P. O. Bon 35HT Raleigh, N. €. 2781; Secoßil CUis Postage Paid at Raleigh, N. C. 27811 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Six Months Bale* Tax JG TOTAL 4.16 One Tear < 6.5® Bales Tax .7,8 TOTAL «.7S Payable in advance. Address a» eomranitteattans end make sH rheck* _nna money orders paysM* *6 The CAaOSUINIAN. Amalgamated Publishers, Inc., Si# Mafliioa Avenue. New Tork, N. V. 50017, National Advertising Representative. Member of the United Pres* international Phot* Service. The RtkUaker Is not responsl ole for the return of unsolicited news, fslrtwrer or advertising •sopy wales* accessary postage accompanies the copy. Opinio*** oxpra«*aifl hy ce!- wneists m this newspaper do slot necessarily represent the policy of this newspaper. for a first offense-she pleads guilty and pays the fine--and in some states, state trooD ers hand out tickets for drug possession in the same way they hand out traffic tickets. It would be impossible for the county to build the jails to house the people convicted of drug possession for the first time. I hesitate to argue that if we freed the police from the weary task of running in drunks and whores, they would spend their time rounding up Russian spies which ap parently is what every chauf feur in the local consulate is. I doubt seriously that any society will ever control crime until there are more cops than there are potential criminals. This situation obtained In A merica only hi the early colonial days when every citi zens was his brother’s watch dog, but it cannot obtain to day. The dismaying statistic, of course, is that there are more people in jail for perpetrating victimless crimes so-called than thjere are for perpetrat ing crimes of violence and crimes against property. It would be a boon to socie ty if the prostitutes would set up their own regulatory board as the bootleggers once did to delineate territories and fiefs, but I cannot see the drunks terrorize a subway car filled with passengers and in New York, prostitutes have assaulted and killed men not anxious to pay for their favors. If the police never arrest a naive user they will never find the pusher. There is no clear cut answer as to how to deal with the peo ple who commit victimless crimes. But one' step toward such a program is to ask the police to set up priorities. Violent crimes menace socie ty more than nonviolent crimes. More violent crimes menace society more than nonviolent crimes. More vio lent criminals should be in jail than nonviolent. More peo ple Who have afflicted victims should be punished than peo ple who have afflicted them selves. black colleges are located), be moaning the fate of these col leges - they contend that because of the lack of white students and money, many of them may disappear. Their further contention is that stu dents, black and white, will naturally seek the superior in stitution, which implies that the predominately black insti tution is inferior (academi cally, that is). Too many white Americans think of the black college, which happens to be located in their vicinity, as that ‘school for Niggers,' But this atti tude doesn’t explain away the thousands of lawyers, doctors, teachers, scientists and other categories, whose basic colle giate education was obtained in these same black institutions. I guess, in the final analy sis, the quality of a college, rich or poor, can only be judg ed by the quality of the stu dents it has attracted and grad uated. Letter To The Editor: $l.B MILLION FOR SOUTH SIDE To The Editor; For years, the Blacks of Ra leigh have mumbled, grumbl ed, and complained about the city government’s non-re sponsiveness and insensitivity to the needs of the Black com munity. There is a second grumbling and mumbling, di rected toward the self appointed leaderless Black leadership in this town for inflating their-own egos, and pocketbooks at the expense of the field-Blacks. It is the latter, of second grumbling that needs to be addressed by the Blacks if happiness and tranquility are to prevail in the future. The house-Blacks have al ways dealt with the only e quality the Blacks ever had: the political bargaining power* The reason for the continuing control of the power by the house-Blacks is due to the old Black Politicans’ custom of “keeping the masses Ignorant and you can control them bel ter.” Any attempts to edu cate or enlighten the field Blacks are considered to be a challenge to their throne rmd therefore, not good for the Black community. 1 strongly disagree with that concept. For ten months, a few Blacks have been fighting to give *he control of the Black community to Blacks In gen eral. Because of that, all kinds of statements have been made about thse Blacks by Black City Hail. Due to the diffi culty that may develop if the masses become knowledge able o* the works and goals of Black City Hall it is un derstandable why St is im portant that they spread the word among their white As the Inequities become more vivid, resentment follows • • • *THE NEGRO LIVING IN THE GHETTO IS MADE PAINFULLY AWARE OF HIS ISOLATION WHEN TELEVISION, AND MAGAZINES SHOW HIM HOW DIFFERENT THE WHITE MAN'S WORLD IST _ JOECOVELLO, black star ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS What to do about strikes that tie up vital public services and whole industries Involving the employment of hundreds of thousands of people and immeasurable inconveniences to the public has become a crucial national issue. The October, 1971, Reader's Digest contains an article on this subject by a long-time ob server of the labor scene, Mr. O, Glenn Stahl, director of the Civil Service Commission’s Bureau of Policies and Standards, until his re tirement in 1969. Mr. Stahl does a highlv impressive job, of refuting the widely-held presumption that any form of negotiation, other than collective bargaining, is synonymous with antiunionism. While noting that the strike was born as “...a necessarv counterweight to capital’s ec onomic power, it is now often used for pur poses foreign to its original intent.” He lik ens present-day strike tactics to civil rebell ion in which large groups exercise mere stra tegic power to impose their will on the pub lic. He recalls the strikes of government workers in recent tears -- strikes by sub way employees, sanitation workers, school teachers, nurses, social workers, even police and firemen and air - traffic controllers. He asks, "What great cause is served by these explosive rebellions against the people as a whole? Must you be delayed in reaching a dying parent’s bedside because airline pilots strike? Must your wife deliver her baby at home because telephone service is curtailed or taxis are on strike... Must thousands of employees be put out of work because a small group of specialized workers seizes an oppor tunity to bring giant industries to a halt?” Mr. Stahl does not consider such interrup tions to community life necessary. He believes the strike is an outdated method of settling legitimate employee complaints, public or pri vate. Surprisingly, his belief that strikes no longer have a place in labor-industry rela tions is supported by prominent labor leaders. He notes that I.W. Abel, head of the 1.2- WISE VIGILANCE ATTRACTS RESPECT Sometimes, it is all too easy to wishfully think ourselves into a state of blind compla cency over international affairs. With all due regard for the constructive possibilities of improved relations with China—and other communist countries—certain tiard facts must be kept in mind. Admiral John S. McCain, chief of the U. S. Pacific Command, is among the latest, military leaders to warn of the growing military strength of communist nations in the western Pacific. Here, as elsewhere, Soviet sea power is rapidly expanding. Not ably in nuclear powered, ballistic missile sub marines. Naval forces, however, are but part of the sea power picture. Another important capa bility alone, but in terms of the means and the will to exert a commanding influence on com merce and trade, the status of a nations’s merchant fleet is a fair gauge of its long term ability to do business with the rest of the world. By this gauge, the United States, until comparatively recently, had little to of fer the realist in any contemplation of fu ture relations with China, Russia or any of the other aggressive expansionist countries. Until the present Nixon Administration’s ship building program was launched, in cooperation with U.S. shipping lines, the American merchant fleet was headed for oblivion. A turnaround came with the announcement of a ten-year program for the construction of 300 new, high-technology merchant vessels. The new fleet will include tankers as w-ell as cargo ships. friends to avoid, and not to cooperate with any individ ual who is Black and working for Black people, or who is white and working for Black people, it can no longer be assumed because a man’s skin is Black that he is biacK. Black must be defined as one who thinks Black and works for the Black cause. Raleigh’s Black problem is that there are too many Black skins in Black City Hail con trolling the Black political bargaining power. These same Black skins give no indica tion that they are interested in producing tangible results that could possible benefit the Black community. Their game plan is to jgncre the Black community at sUi times when it is for the good of the Black cause. However, if there are RAYS OF HOPE votes to be gotten, then one will find them active, telling half ti utiis that would favor their image and widen the gap between South Raleigh and Ra leigh. The most recent Battle cry of the Black City Hall Is that there is no support ror the Tone opposition in the wish to have a say; neither, are they dissatified with the re cord of Black City Hail. II one examines the record of the Black City Hall, he will find that they have been in terested in solving the prob lems outside of Black Ra leigh and not inside Black Ra leigh. Black Raleigh hasproblem* and need your help. It is verv disheartening to see so many Blacks not involved. Remem ber, these are your problems. million-member AFL-CIO United Steelworkers of America, has said that the strike Is “out moded.” And that AFL-CIO President George Meany has said, "We believe that it is es sential to devise an impartial and orderly procedure to settle unresolved disputes in the federal service which can be an effective sub stitute for the right to strike.” As a matter of fact, nine states have already provided for compulsory arbitration as the final step ln settling issues between municipalities and municipal employees, such as police or fire men. In the view of Mr. Stahl, mandatory third party arbitration is the only answer to the nullification of the principle of collective bar gaining. He says that in the adjudication of differences among men such arbitration has long been a tried and tested method of reach ing fair settlements. He declares, “We would never think of permitting two property own ers to settle a boundary-line disagreement by allowing either on his own authority to deny access to mutually claimed territory until one is forced through economic necessity to ca pitulate. We would not allow public utilities to completely withhold electric power until granted a higher return on their investments...** Contrary to the widely accepted notion that mandatory arbitration would weaken voluntary bargaining, Mr. Stahl reasons that knowledge of the possibility that third-part y judgment may ultimately be called upon “...should be an in ducement to reach agreement.*' He also em phasizes that arbitration procedures must in no way be permitted to Infringe upon setting the terms of their employment. In conclus ion. he observes, “Thev must be assured promptly comparable with the market. Employees, Individually and collectively, are entitled to this much. And, with their having it, the public is entitled to absolute assurance of continuity of service.” The Read er's Digest piece makes some provocative points on labor, Industry and government re lations that deserve the thoughtful consideration of every citizen. One of the most encouraging aspects of the shipbuilding program is the evidence it pro vides that the American people are heeding the warnings of such men as Admiral McCain to remain vigilant even while offering the hand of friendship to other nations. Naval sea power, backed by a U.S.-flag merchant fleet second to none, is concrete evidence of the kind of vigilance that attracts respect as well as friendship, A DANGEROUS AGE Figures released by the National Transporta tion Safety Board, covering a study of 15- to 24-year-old auto drivers, are enough to make parents regret, that cars were ever in vented. Among 17,700 youth fatalities in 1969, there were 7,400 more youthful driver deaths than would have occurred if their fatality rate had been the same as that of drivers 25-years of age and older. The disproportionate loss involves “predominantly the young male.” The Board finds that, “Driving and riding with other young drivers constitute the greatest hazard to survival which American youth must pass successfully to reach adulthood.” No one knows the loss of life inflicted upon other age groups as a result of the suicidal care lessness of the 15-to 24-year-old drivers. The National Transportation Safety Board makes a number of recommendations aimed at young drivers. These include; licensing, driver education and improvement, alcohol safety action and vehicle Inspection, Those who wonder about the high insurance rate on youthful drivers can find their answer in the carnage youth commits everyday on the na tion’s highways. Southside Is every Black’s problem. There Is $l.B million for Blacks in "Southside that Black City Kali and the City do not want them to have. Since January, 1971, they haVe known that $l.B million will be made available for South side Black homeowners and tenants when and if the cltv will appropriate matching money of $600,000. Black City Hail has not solicited support for Southside. If Southside is to be helped, then you and I must join together and let it be known that $43.3 million was needed to solve the coun ty problem. What about $l.B million for Southside. Let’s get involved brothers and sisters. We need each other. Ed, Carson Raleigh. North Carolina