II pen The Police 32,000 ho " State d uad" files ta­ a organizations names were indexed to the me be permitted to receive a copy of their me. Becaus the me ere extensive in n ture, many per ns d organizations may have been indexed for cro - reference even though no ctual me wever main­ tained on them. on­ quently the per ns and organizations will soon receive this tice alo with tho for whom a Hie was maintained. In ddition, notice will b published in various newspap r throughout the te on 0 ember 23, 1980, and again prior to Thanksgivin D y. Per ns who wish to kno if their name is inde ed to this me may return a coup n from the published notices no telephone inquirie will be ccept d and coupon must be returned in order for th reque t to b honored. All requests mu t be re- , ceived by January 15, 1981. Shou d there b a large response to the notices, or should ding be limit­ ed, considerable time will be needed to provide cop' s· of the files to those requesting them, according to D/Lt. orman Smith of the State Police Investi­ gative Services Division at E st Lansing.' Honor Chicago police for gang arrests , enty-fi e officer of the C' go, II. police department, who . ted th ichigan State Police and Berrien County u tho r- itie in criminal ca ugu t in Berrien county, were honored for at istance at a dinner tin Thursday evening, ovember 13, 1980, t the Holiday Inn t St. Jo ph ichigan, In ddition to the dinner 001 tribute, the Chicago officers ere pre nted certificates of profe 10 excessence by the ichigan State Police wh repre ntatives included ajor Lewis Smith, commander of the inve tigative rvice divi- . on t East Lansing, Capt. illiam Chandler, comman­ der of th fifth district at Paw Pa , and Lt. Carl Hulander, commander of the Benton Harbor post. di play due • lona The Benton Harbor Area Schools' Title One Pre hool, athematics and Reading departments re ho ing parent wor shop ond y and Tuesday, 0- vember 24 and 25. The orkshop . being h ld at the Di trict's Staff Develop­ ment office, next to Seely eCord Elementary School on eCord Street. Coordinator of Titl One e hool program, rs. 1 udia Vescolani 'd,' e are giving p rents and op­ portunity to see the great variety of educational toys I ailabl from local mer- chants. The toys are dur b and safe and are the type th t most capture y the interests of children between the age of 4 and 11. , ith prices of all toy going up, parent should consider that the items that they give to their children at Christmas are really and inve tment th t can be made in their learn- program," said rs, Vescolani. Monday's ' n begins at 1 :00 p.m. and runs through 8:00 o'clock. Tues­ day, the doors of Staff Development will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. "If any parents need a ride to see our display of educational toys, or ants to work ith us in m � The ichigan State Police said that the youths, member of a street, gang in Chicago, had committed a rie of home invasion , armed robberies and crimi­ nal sexual assault in Benton township, Berrien Springs, and at Lakeside in Berrien county. Evidence at ili scene linked the subjects with the Chicago are, prompting request for Chicago PD a' ceo ma toys or games that they can take home for their children, they should call 926-7149," said Mrs. Ves­ colani. The today program is open to all paren ts living within the Benton Harbor Are Schools community. Questions concerning this Educational Toy Workshop for parents ould be direct­ ed to Mrs. Claudia Vesco­ lani, 92�273. • e want people to feel free to drop in anytime during this two day wor - shop. 0 one needs to feel that they should tay any longer than they want, a few minu te or veral hour ," said r. Vescolani. Blae amilym half of edian family income for Blac families in 1979 was $ 11 ,650 according to a report from the U.s. De­ p rtment of Commerce's Census Bureau. The 1979 median for Bl cks was 6.7 percent higher than the 1978 median of 10,880, but when djusted for inflation the 1979 figure showed som evidence of a 4- percent decline in real dol­ lar even though the year­ to-year change as not "sta istically ·gnificant. The 1978-1979 changes in real dollars for White and Hispanics were also no statistically significant. The 1979 median for Whites was 20,520 and for His­ panics, 14,320. In 1979, Bla median family income wa 57 per­ cent of that for White families. This w not significantly different from 1978 ratio of 59 percent. According to the report, the 1979 income figures do not reflect the influence of the rece 'on which began in the spring of 1980. E can't IF YOlfVE EVER failed to get a ne job or promotion becau you eked "academic creden- " you're goin to ugh (or cry t this: Since 1971, it h been con . dered illegal for an employer to require a diplorn or degr as a prerequi ite for a job or po ition if the duties of th job don't m e such credentials nece In oth r ord it' u illegal for a com- pany to discriminate gain t a per for a I of education it' to di criminate on the b ' of x, r e, national orism, or religion. That doesn't mean a per n can qualify for any job. But it doe mean than no employer IeplIy can place a superficial barrier between an appli­ cant and a job he or e could do, given the chance. THE REASO you're probably laughing or crying is that hundred, if not thousand of jobs and pro­ motions ar denied on such abe ch year. The la h n't been follo ed. But it ha been te ted in court. Th United State Supreme Court w ed to re ye this' e during its October, 1970, term. The court delM!red its opinion the following March. The c was Grigs . Duke Power Co. The QUestion was this: I an employer prohibited by the Cibil Rights Act of 1964, Title VII, from requiring a high School education or p of a andardized general intelligence test as a condition of employment in or transfer to jobs when neither is related to success- fuljob perform ce? _ The court's resounding "no" changed employer testing procedure, but it didn't change and em­ ployer's picking and choos­ ing secretly among appli­ cants lety on the basis of educational attainment. OST EMPWYE� are a are of this c because it w a landmar decision. Out 'de of cor­ porate and personnel offices, however, little is known about it. A suit brought against Duke Power by a group of bl employe working t the company's power generating station in Draper .C. The Di trict Court found tha t before July 2, 1965, the effective date of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the firm openly discriminated' on the b of race by employin« bl s only m tlte company' tabor depart. hit • mcom • I eo e The report al sho s that an e tirnate 25.2 mil­ lion per ns of all race were below the poverty level in 1979, of whom 7,8 million were Blac . The number of Black married­ couple familie bela the . poverty level inorea d from 370,000 in 1978 to 440 000 in 1979, reversing a de­ crea for this group between 1977 and 1978. However, the app rent incie of . 200,000· between 1978 and 1979 in th total number of Blac below the poverty level was not ta tistically , gnificant. At the beginning of the decade, 56 percent of all poor Black familie ere maintained by women; by 1979 the proportion h.ad grown to 72 percent. Al­ though the report notes no significant change in the overall number or propor­ tion of persons belo the po erty level since the 1975-76 period, certain population subgroup showed changes be een 1978 and 1979. For example, the number of poor person 65 and older incre d from 3.2 million in 1978 to 3.6 million last year. As part of an effort to improve the quality of it income and poverty atistic , th Brue u intro­ duced veral important modifications in col­ lection and pre ntation of the data. The change included larger sample, a more de ' d income questionnaire, 11 of n hou hold . cl • . Ication concept, more detailed in income late for" . income groups, and farm definition, A in all sampl rvey , the data in th report are subjec to sampling vari­ ability and errors of re­ spon , including under­ reporting and nonreporting. Single copi s of the report, Mon y Income and Poverty Status of Familie� and Per n in the United States; 1979, P-60, o. 125, m y be purchased from the . Superintendent of Documents, UiS. Govern­ ment Printing in major citie throughout the United States. The price is $2.25 per copy prepaid. a. continued to perform well in their jobs and, in fact, were promoted. THE CHIEF justice found the evidence showed neither the high school compl tion requirement nor the general intelli ence test bore demon trable relationship to successful performance of the job for which it u d. In short, what Con­ gre commanded in Title VII is that any tandard used to me re a person for job must measure him or her against the cifi du of th job itself and not gainst m a tr tion. ment, where the highest paid age were lower than in "white's only" depart­ ments. Promotions were made ithin each department on the b . of seniority . When the company changed its policy of restricting bl ks to its labor department, it did, however, continue to require a high school diplo­ ma for transfer to other departments. FRO THE TIME the high hoo1 requirement instituted at the company (in 1955 to the time of the trial, however, white employes hired before the requirement w made