Purely Commentary Racial Distribution in Detroit's Public Schools Serious attention should be given the latest report of the Detroit Public Schools on the racial distribution of students and staff. The newest report shows a consistent increase in Negro student enrollment in the past three years. It also shows that in the area of administration Negroes are being placed with greater speed and that there is a gain of students in the construction trades division's apprentice program. In the latter there were 34 Negroes in 1964, 45 in 1965 and 62 in 1966. In the manufacturing trades division's apprentice program the number of Negroes increased from 82 in 1965 to 114 in 1966. The report shows that in the administration area there is one Negro assistant superintendent, one field executive, seven secondary principals, two divisional directors, two directors, nine elementary principals, three assistant directors, two supervisors, six secondary assistant principals, three administrative assistants, 24 elementary assistant principals, 10 junior administrative assistants, 35 depart- ment heads and 81 counselors. These facts undoubtedly are less important than the over-all pic- ture of Negro students' enrollments. The report, as of Oct. 20, 1966, presents a breakdown of Negro student enrollment as follows: There was a 1.9 per cent gain this year compared to 1.8 per cent in 1965, and 1.7 per cent in , 1964. The total student enroll- ment of 297,035—a gain of 2,213 students over the 1965 enroll- ment—breaks down as follows: 126,354 or 42.5 per cent of total White Students 168,299 or 56.7 per cent of total Negro Students .8 per cent of total 2,382 or Others School faculties now number 11,459. Of these there are '7,792 or 68 per cent white; and 3,628 or 31.7 per cent Negro. Classified as "others" are 39 teachers or .3 per cent of total. Racial tabulation in the Detroit Public Schools began in 1961. This followed a recommendation by the Citizens Advisory Com- mittee on Equal Educational Opportunity. Of the 45 schools which in 1966 have fewer than 10 per cent Negro teachers, 35 have a proportion ranging from 5.0 per cent to 9.9 per cent. This leaves 10 schools with staffs of less than 5 per cent Negro teachers. There were 15 such schools in 1965. Of the 294 schools tabulated there are 22 schools with no Negro students. There were 30 schools with no Negro students in the 1965 racial count. The report also cites 14 schools with no white students as compared to 10 in 1965. There is no doubt that there is an improvement in existing condi- tions, with "an increase in the number of schools with more than 50 per cent Negro teachers," with improvement in facilities and increasing opportunities for the less affluent to be trained for productive pursuits. Nevertheless, important questions are posed by the report. It indicates that Negro families are larger, but it also shows that in a city in which the Negro population is approximately 40 per cent of the total, its student population is nearly 57 per cent of the total. This is akin to situations existing in most of the larger American communities and it explains the new attitudes of diminishing opposi- tion to parochial schools, the establishment of new private progressive schools—all resulting from neighborhood changes and a fact that need not be ignored: that integration is not complete, that the reduced _standards of teaching in some schools have induced parents to send their children to private schools with smaller-than-public-school classes. Perhaps time will solve this problem and will again place emphasis on the public school system. Meanwhile the existing situation has brought about the formation of many Protestant parochial schools, the strengthening of the Catholic school system, and may have contributed in great measure towards the formation of Hebrew Day Schools. While the establishment of the latter is due primarily to the urgency of assuring the best possible Jewish training for our children, the status of our schools must have contributed in some measure to Day Schools' enrollment. The community responsibility emerging from the figures that have just been reported is quite plain. It demands that the overwhelming majority of Negro children in our schools should be provided the best teachers and the most inviting facilities on a par with the white element in our population. Every possible facility should be created to encour- age Negro students to train for trades and to be prepared to enter the professions. Negro teachers must have the same opportunities for placement as their white colleagues. We owe these things to ourselves, not as a duty to our Negro neighbors. They are our fellow-citizens, and as such must have the same provisions for the best in schooling as the children of white parents. The Race Issue and Some of Its Lessons As we begin a new year, there is the growing recognition that the race issue will remain one of the major problems to be solved. If we are to have a progressive year, there must be unity in abolishing whatever restrictions remain, in reassuring mutual respect, and re- storing confidence in the American way of life that is so dependent upon just treatment of all - citizens on a basis of equality. The past few months' experiences were marked by renewals of anti-Semitism in certain Negro ranks and by expressions of hatred that were unjustified wherever they were uttered. Some of the demonstrations of hatred were truly shocking and also irrational. For example, a Los Angeles weekly Negro periodical published a puzzling report of the Israel-Jordan conflict under the heading "Israelis Kill 10,000 Arabs." Purportedly emenating from Cairo, that story was such an evident fabrication, such a fantastic incitement to hatred, that Negro leaders deplored it deeply. But in order to grant that periodical the dignity of serious attention, the story was ignored. There have been milder demonstrations of hate and bigotry, and all stand rejected by fair-minded Americans. Most deplorable is the flight that accompanies the race issue. Not only is there an unending movement toward the suburbs in large communities, but Negroes, too, are running from their old sections, some of which are not depressing but need rebuilding and improving. The Watts area in Los Angeles is a typical example of what is presently occurring. It has been reported that 1,000 Negro families have moved from Watts to rural Los Angeles areas and have become "escapees" from the crowded communities. Where there is overcrowd- ing this is understandable. But when the movement is based on fear and on a desire to run away from realities, the existing problem is certain to grow rather than to decline. A typical example of the existence of fear is to be found in the 2—Friday, January 13, 1967 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Racial Issues . . . Our Schools and Community Problems . . . JNF Project . . BG Attitude By Philip Slomovitz very mention of Watts in Los Angeles. Since the riots of last year, people seem to fear to go there. In that area there are tourist at- tractions, and chief among them are "The Watts Towers." Yet only a few — those who know how to abandon fear — go to see the unusual structure that took 30 years to complete. It is a tower—or a series of towers—which were erected out of seashells, broken bottles, dishes, tiles, caps—whatever Simon Rodia could find. For three decades this immigrant from Italy kept building during his spare time while work- ing as a night watchman and construction worker. He purchased the lot, built the towers, then retired, gave the product of his life which he built as a tribute to America as a gift to his community. Now it is a landmark that should be one of the highlights for visitors in Los Angeles. Simon Rodia wrote a piece in which he explained his gift to this country. He wrote these few lines: "I no have nobody help me out. I was a poor man. Had to do a little at a time. Nobody helped me, I think if I hire a man he doesn't know what to do. A million times I don't know what to do myself. I never had a single helper. Some people say what , was he doing . . . some of the people think I was crazy and some people said I was going to do something. I wanted to do something in the United States because I was raised here you understand? , I wanted to do something for the United States because there are nice people in this country." What a remarkable result of fate that this thing he did, dedicated to the nice people of America, should now be located in an area that was degraded by horrible riots but where people can and should live in peace and in amity! There is a lesson in "The Watts Towers." They seem to say to all that there are nice people, and that they are the majority of Amer- icans. That is why these towers in Watts should serve as a symbol— inviting people to join in abandoning fears, in erasing hatreds, in re- fusing to yield to panic and to go to Watts to see the creation of a man who came here from abroad and loved America. Let it be a lesson for all to love all of America and all of its people. Perhaps out of that lesson will emerge one of the encouraging symptoms of a vanishing hate. * * * Important New JNF Gift to Israel Adoption by the women of the Jewish National Fund of a project to reclaim the strategic Gonen frontier region in Israel marks an- other vital step by the Detroit Jewish community in its continuing efforts to assist in Israel's upbuilding programs. This community has traditionally carried on important tasks in behalf of the land re- demption and reclamation fund, and the new task by the women of JNF is a commendable effort in the direction of practical assistance to Israel at a time when the country's frontiers must be protected. The JNF's role remains significant in view of the special tasks that have been assigned this — the oldest — fund of the Zionist movement. On the occasion of the current 65th anniversary of the founding the JNF by the World Zionist Congress — which, in 1902, adopted the blueprint for such a fund set forth by the late Prof. Hermann Schapira — an important statement by David Ben-Gurion is worth resorting to. The former Israel Prime Minister said: "The Keren Kayemeth is justifiably proud that it has already planted scores of millions of trees on an area of over 200,000 dunams, but far larger areas still require planting. The Fund has opened up hundreds of kilometers of roads in the mountains, in border areas and the desert, thus making possible development activities and settlement in of and empty regions. We are still at the very beginning of the work. The Fund is now helping the creation of the city of Arad in the Eastern Negev, but in the next decade we shall have to build at least 15 or 20 similar towns in the Negev, for unless we settle the Negev, Israel cannot survive. "The people of Israel and the State of Israel are still very far from having achieved this. This land which has been ours for 4,000 years is confronted by grave perils from without and emptiness and desolation from within. As yet the vast majority of the Jewish people, over 80 per cent, are still in the Diaspora, subject to others and exposed to assimilation and obliteration. "Without continuing and intensifying the great two-fold change which spells the essence of our rebirth and of our task— the change in the nature of the people and of the land, i.e., without the Ingathering of the Exiles, the revival of the wilder- ness, the building of a new society and a high culture which will be the moving spirit in the life of our youth, of the working masses and of our cultural leaders — without these, all that we have accomplished in the past 80 years, including our great achievements since the founding of the State, shall have been in vain. The road to the fulfillment of the vision of redemption is still remote and strewn with snares and perils. Without constant pioneering effort to illumine the vision of the change, the change in the people and in the land, we shall not reach our historic goal. The Jewish National Fund is one of the instruments in the realization of this vision and the Fund's strength derives from the fact that it has rested on its laurels but when the State was established took into account its new tasks from which it was debarred under foreign rule, and abandoned the old tasks which were fulfilled more effectively by the attainment of our inde- pendence and sovereignty. "Not only by means of tree planting, opening up roads in the desert, clearing stones and reclaiming rocky lands, but in its spirit and method, was the Fund able to serve as a model and example for our generation, the last generation in bondage and the first in redemption. Its policy has been not to be content with maintaining the status quo but to adapt itself to the vision of the change from a people dispersed in the Diaspora to a na- tion thriving in its own country, the change from a desert land into a settled and populated country, the change from a society in bondage, penalized and discriminated against, to a society founded upon co-operation, freedom and brotherhood, the change of spirit, steeped in poverty, ignorance and sterility, to a spirit which is created from the conquest of science which makes man control nature and from the inheritance of the Hebrew prophets towards redemption of the nation and the universe. Then the Jewish Na- tional Fund will indeed be the permanent asset of all mankind." Indeed, the JNF still performs valuable functions, as reclaimer of neglected areas, as work-provider in tree planting conducted by thousands of new settlers and also as an educational agency which teaches the youth the values of land redemption. The new project by the Detroit women adds a good project to this community's partner- ship with Israel in the continuing Zionist endeavors. . B-G Again Hits at Eshkol, Fails to Win Support (Direct JTA Teletype Wise to The Jewish News) TEL AVIV — Former Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion lashed out again Tuesday at the govern- ment of his successor, Levi Eshkol, at a meeting of the Mapai-spon- sored kibbutz movement and was in turn challenged as a divisive element in the Mapai Party. He accused the premier and his colleagues of being "people of no honor," charged again that Pre- mier Eshkol was not fit for the premiership and that the Israeli government had failed in its two most important functions — in- gathering and security. He told the meeting of the Ichud Hakvut- zot Vehakibbutzim that it was not enough to buy arms but that it was also essential to acquire friends. This, he charged, Premier Eshkol had not done. He also said that the postwar emergency immigration had ended and Russia's doors for Jewish emigration were not yet open. Israel's only hope for additional newcomers, therefore, was from the free world but this, he de- clared, could be achieved only when Jews were given a vision and a mission concerning Israel. As long as there were "untruth- ful" people at the helm of Israel's government, he stated, people would not come. He was challenged by members of the movement who called him "the man who initiated the split in Mapai," a reference to Ben- Gurion's formation last year of the dissident Israel Workers party (Rafi). Another critic told him that "you have created the state and won the war of liberation but we do not agree you know every- thing." One of the main reasons for Ben- Gurion's appearance was to win support for his renewed campaign for a change in Israel's electoral system aimed at doing away with the nation's multiplicity of poli- tical parties. After five hours of discussion of the proposals, the former premier failed to win sup- port. NY Savings Banks Solicit Application for Jobs From Jews NEW YORK (JTA)—The Sav- ings Banks Association of New York State, coordinating body of the state's mutual saving banks, has issued an illustrated booklet soliciting applications for jobs from people of "a variety' of ethnic and religious backgrounds." The booklet—the first of its kind —was warmly praised by the American Jewish Committee, which has been active in opposing job discrimination in the fields of banking, insurance, utilities and large corporate business. Representatives of the Ameri- can Jewish Committee have been meeting with representatives of the association on problems of discrimination following a study made by the AJ Committee last year which revealed that there are less than 3.5 per cent of Jews among the 750 trustees of New York City's 50 mutual sav- ings banks, and less than 2.5 per cent of Jews among their 400 top executives. A year after the original report was made public, the AJ Commit- tee reported that these banks had increased the number of their Jew- ish trustees by more than one-third although the number of Jewish executive officers had remained substantially the same. A national survey of executive positions in the 50 leading com- mercial banks across the country revealed last September that Jews were filling only 1.3 per cent of the senior posts and 0.9 per cent of. the ,middle-management posts.