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Page 4 Portland Obaerver, June 17, 1982 EDITORIAL/OPINION oise: Over the top The achievement o f Boise's eighth grade class in making better than average scores in language arts cannot be overemphasized. Not only has the eighth grade class gone over the 50 per cent mark but the entire school has gone into the mid-range. No longer is Boise at the bottom of the district. Boise’s achievement refutes many o f the ru mors that have been kicking around the district for so long. Boise— the d istrict’s blackest and poorest school—has hit average. Blanchard was thoroughly convinced—and fostered the idea— that black children could not learn in a majority black school and that poor children could not learn unless integrated with high income chil dren. Boise has proven that theory wrong by surpassing several “ all white’ ’ middle income schools. Boise made its progress with little help from the school district. Under threat of a closure for at least 10 years, Boise’s dingy building has re ceived no “ renova tion.” W hile surrounding schools were nearly rebuilt, Boise had a coat of paint. We once asked why there were six stories in the school newspaper about painting the lava tories: the answer is that this was the first “ reno vation” Boise had seen for at least ten years. The neglect o f the building is a symbol o f the neglect o f the children and the community. Boise’ s “ fundam ental magnet program ,” which began as a straw to grasp to keep the school alive, never received district support. There was never the e ffo rt to bring white stu dents into Boise that there was for Jefferson. There was never the publicity that was given to Lincoln, Cleveland and other magnet programs. Boise was an embarassment. There was never the moral support or the words o f encourage ment. Boise was not important. Boi* vas always a club over the community. When .e Board lost the struggle over the racist Newman plan, Blanchard said that something must be done about Boise. When the Commu nity C oa litio n for School Integration sought “ equity” Blanchard reminded the community that something needed to be done about Boise. When, in response to a Black United Front boy cott threat, the Board began work on its “ com prehensive desegregation plan,” Boise was the problem to be eliminated. When the Board de cided to put Tubman at Boise, Board member Joe Rieke expressed the sentiment o f some Board members: “ Boise is a terrible program: it’s a failure. We need to get rid o f it.” In the end, the community gave up the Boise K-8 program at great sacrifice in order to place Tubman at E lio t. Boise— the last symbol o f community resistance to the Blanchard p la n - will soon be gone. Even now Boise is being disregarded. At a re cent staff meeting to discuss merger, our new superintendent discussed the delicate programs o f Tubman and E lio t and how they must be moved carefully and gently— but not a word about Boise. The community should be proud of Boise. Its staff, its parents, its students are responsible for its growth. The students have not been unaware o f the district’s disfavor. They have been very aware o f the activities o f the board and adminis tration toward them and their school—each year they have heard the discussion on how to get rid o f Boise. We can only hope that no other school, no other community, no other group o f students will have to face such overt neglect and discrimination. Black families and the Reagan budget by Norm an H ill It is widely accepted by both lib erals and conservatives that no insti tution plays a more critical role in shaping the developing personality than the family. Sociological analy sis conclusively has dem onstrated that stable fam ily units create the most auspicious conditions for the re a liza tio n o f a c h ild ’ s p o te n tia l. In p art this stems fro m parental supervision and the importance o f fa m ily figures as role models fo r a young child. Econom ic w ell-being is an important factor in maintaining the s ta b ility and cohesiveness o f the family unit. O f equal significance is the fact that stable fam ilies fre quently enjoy the benefits o f two- incomes and therefore are able to provide fo r children a better stan dard o f living. Thus the state o f the fam ily is a crucial indicator o f the well-being of a society. But families do not exist in a vacuum. They are profoundly affected by econom ic and social trends and by governm ent policy. From this point o f view it is import ant to take a look at the effects o f the Reagan A d m in is tra tio n ’ s p o l icies upon the family unit. According to a recent symposium organized by the Leadership C o n ference on Civil Rights, an umbrella group o f over 150 civil rights, labor and com m unity organizations, the effect o f the President’s tax cuts and budget austerities has been to further exacerbate the economic and social inequities between black and white families. The researchers and scholars who ■ mi E d it o r ’s note: N o rm a n H ill is President o f the A. Philip Randolph institute. The P o rtla n d Observer (U S P S 959 6801 it published every Thursday by Exie Publishing Company, Inc , 2201 North Killings worth, Portland, Oregon 97217, Post Office B om 3137, Portland. Oregon 97208 Second class postage paid at Portland, Oregon »0*1 Subscriptions *10 00 per year in the Tri County area P o st m aster: Send address changes to the Portland Observer. P 0 B om 3137, Portland, Oregon 97208 M EM BER PER NêWAL Founded / has been highlighted in the writings and research o f University o f C h i cago Sociologist W illiam Julius W il son. Professor Wilson has pointed out two divergent trends which in recent years have manifested them selves in the black community: the growth o f a black middle class and the simultaneous growth o f an “ un derclass” o f black poor. S ignificantly, Professor Wilson notes, the growth o f this underclass o f black poor is directly linked to a process o f disintegration o f family structures. He demonstrates, for ex am ple, that while 90 per cent o f black children from middle-income families live with both parents, only 18 per cent o f the black children from low-income families live with both parents. C le a rly , econom ic pressures brought about by living in poverty or on its edge have a devastating ef fect on fam ily stability and on the possibility for black children to live a life in which their basic needs are essentially satisfied. Regrettably, the policies to which the current A dm inistration is com m itted do nothing to address this disturbing trend of disintegration of fa m ily life am ong low-incom e blacks. Despite President Reagan’s rhe toric o f commitment to the values of the family, in the first 18 months of his A d m in is tra tio n he has shown himself to be callously indifferent to the consequences o f his policies for the family life o f the poor. Portland Observer Met >■ Oregon 1 Newspaper Publishers Association A ttoaatlon participated in the Leadership Con ference symposium point out that today 41 per cent o f black families are in the bottom fifth o f the income scale, while white families make up 95 per cent o f the highest fifth. Un der such circumstances, the effect of the Reagan across-the-board cuts has been to cut incomes twice as much for white families as for their black counterparts. The Leadership Conferences dis cussion o f the consequences o f the a d m in istra tio n ’s budget cutbacks indicates that they disproportionate ly place budens on areas with high concentrations o f urban poor black fam ilie s. T o a large extent such areas have few taxab le resources and face heavy burdens o f govern ment services which cannot be met without transfering payments from the federal government. Families o f poor blacks therefore have been hit hardest by the cuts in funds for so cial services, public education, voca tio n al tra in in g , and low -incom e housing. M oreover, the Leadership C o n ference points out th a t these new setbacks are occurring at a tim e when in the last decade the median income for black fam ilies has de clined in real terms by 6.3 per cent. W h ite fam ilies have also exp er ienced a decline, but it has amounted to considerably less— 3.7 per cent. The end result of the last decade’s economic trends has been to open even wider the gap between black and white fam ilies. We have reached the point where black / fam ily income is less than 58 per cent that o f white families. A substantial factor in this decline TMS A l McGilberry, Editor/Publisher A ! Williams, Advertising Manager 283 2486 National Advertising Representative Am algam ated Publishers, In«. N ew York i Congressman Ron Dallums of C alifornia w ill ba the featured speaker for the O bserver'» Achievem ent Awards Banquet on July 16th at the Hilton Hotel. Honorees are: Earl Wantland. president, Tektronix: V.F. Book er, president. Am erican S tate Bank: Harry Qllckrtian, execu tive vice-president of the Trail blazers; Cora S m ith , ow ner of Cora Sm ith Hair Design; State R epresentative G retchen Ka- foury; County Executive Don Clark; City Com m issioner Charles Jordan; Edna R obert son. Coordinator for the North east District Neighborhood O f fice. Woman of the Year: Linda Williams. The Oregonian; Man of the Year, Ron H erndon, co- chairm an, Black Unltad Front; O utstanding C om m unity Sar- vica: Ruth Haefnar. Tha banquat w ill ba hald at 7:00 w ith no-hoat cocktail hour preceding. Tickets will be avail able after June 21st. CONGRESSMAN RON DELLUMS Boise surpasses school district average [Continued fro m page ! column 2) son’s social studies class also em phasizes multi-cultural education. Patty Z im m erm an, who teaches language arts, integrates other sub ject areas. “ W e o ften use health books fo r read in g — to teach h e a lth .’ * In reading class, N ellie Larson uses a broad range o f books from the well-stocked library. T h ere are some who believe Boise’s students are deprived by not having the science, shop, homemak ing and other specialized classes that are offered in middle schools. " M y philosophy is that i f a student can read and write, he can learn science or any other subject. I f he cannot read, he cannot learn anything; he will be left out. We know that when these eighth graders go in to high school, they can read and they can learn.’’ 44 4 43.7 48.2 12 9.0 10.3 6.0 10 5 Boisa 6.0 District Fifth Grade 4.6 5 6.3 3 7.0 5 District Sixth Grade 8.8 6 7.6 2 7.6 2 District Seventh Grade 6.5 4 3.8 2 6 2 District 6 5 3.9 2 7.7 2 District grade year as the eighth graders did in the fall o f their eighth year, will surpass (his y ea r’s eighth grade class. Although staff morale has hit an all-time high and teachers are excit ed about the child ren ’ s achieve ment, there is concern about what w ill happen a fte r next year. " I t seems like now that the program is succeeding and we can see the re sults, it w ill be gone,” Patty Z im merman said. The sta ff is worried that when Tubman and Boise upper graders are merged the “ fu n d a m en tal” program w ill be lost and children who need the emphasis will be lost. Language Reading Math 38.5 46.2 43.0 Fourth Grade Bolsa Bolsa Boisa Boisa The above chart shows that Boise students exceeded the district average In improvement of scores between fall of 1961 and spring of 1982 in all but one category (Fifth Grade Math). In some cases Boise growth doubled or tripled the district average growth. Boise’ s “ P-scores” fo llo w . A score o f 50.0 equals district average. Arts 43.1 45.6 44.5 45.9 47.1 50.9 Reading Eighth Grade M rs. Glosson agreed. " I tell the students that if they can read and if they can express themselves in w rit ing and o ra lly , they can read any book and can learn anything.’’ Third grade: Fourth grade: Fifth grade: Sixth grade: Seventh grade: Eighth grade: Language A rts M a th 44.6 47.2 42.2 44.9 43.4 46.5 The trend— with the higher scores in the upper grades— is opposite to the usual trend in “ disadvantaged” schools where children fall further behind the average each year. M cC rea predicts that this year’s seventh grade, which scored as high in the spring test o f their seventh "M a n y o f Boise’s students are ex trem ely bright and w ill do well in any middle school,” M cC rea said. " B u t there are others who need the special emphasis on reading and writing to ensure they have the ba sics. These are the children we feel need the type o f program we have at Boise." Boise students do find time to ex cel in other areas: the 6th grade boys and the 6th grade girls took first place in the city basketball league, the fifth grade boys were second. The 7th and 8th grade volleyball team — the school’s first in some years— reached the semi-finals. The school took first place in the Urban 4-H track meet. The newly organized m arching rhythm band won a second place award in the Junior Rose Parade. The student council sponsored many activities and raised money to purchase M a rtin Luther K in g ’s bust. The school publishes its news paper, Boise Speaks. Letters to the Editor To the editor: Only three years have passed since the A ya to llah Khom eini assumed power in Iran, and yet the war with Ira q — with at least 130,000 deaths and four million refugees— 50% o f ficial unemployment rate for a work force o f 12 m illion, reduction o f oil prices and production, food short ages and long lines, infighting with in the regim e, and c o rru p tio n in government institutions, all added to the repressive rule o f the mullahs and their guards, have forced the people o f Ira n to seek an a lte rn a tive. In these circumstance, the opposi- tion forces have united to form this altern ative in the body o f the N a tio n al C o un cil o f Resistance. The N .C .R ., which has been successful in establishing itself as the only pop ular and leg itim ate a lte rn a tiv e to K hom ein i’s rule o f terro r, is com posed o f many popular and progres sive forces and personalities. Initiat ed by the People’ s M ojahedin O r ganization o f Iran, the most popular social force in Ira n , this fro n t in cludes p ro m in ent figures such as former President Bani Sadr, as well as forces such as the Kurdish Demo- cratic Party, the strongest regional force in Iran, its popularity rapidly growing among the people and even am ong the A rm ed Forces, the N .C .R . has dealt many serious and strategic blows to the regim e, de priving it o f a future. U n lik e K h o m e in i’ s regim e, the program o f the Provisional Govern ment o f the N .C .R ., which w ill serve as a transitional government a fte r the d o w n fa ll o f this regime, guarantees the freedom o f ideas and parties; the rights o f ethnic, relig ious, and n atio n al m in o rities; as well as equal social, p o litical, and economic rights for women. In ad- ^ t^ .^ ^ n n M jK e d b j^ M o ja h e d r i , i i i i i i i i M a s ’ ud R a ja v i— in charge o f the C oundil— the Provisional G overn ment o f the N .C .R . favors a non- aligned, n o n -in terventio n ist, and non-adventurist foreign policy aimed at international peace and co operation. F in ally, whereas Khom eini and his aides u n rig h tfu lly seized the leadership o f the 1979 Revolution without any piogram for the future o f Iran, thus bringing anarchy and despotism to the country, this time the organized, nationalist and dem ocratic o p p ositio n , the N a tio n a l C ouncil o f Resistance, w ill bring peace, order and democracy to Iran. Julie A. Jessie Subscribe today I Receive your Observer by mail. Only $10 per year N a m e _______________ ___________ Address City____ .State. Portland Observer Box 3137 Portland, OR 97208 -2ip