BUT AMAZI GLY enough, orne job applicants forego this elf-coaching and go out of their way to .flaunt their idiosyncrasises. Robert Half International, Inc., a San Francisco head huntery, surveyed top person­ nel executive of 100 major corporations. RHI asked for storie of unusual behavior by job applicants. �e ponse was enthusias tic and abundant. Some of the more amazing, believe it or not, are as follows: "The candidate told me that her long-term career goal was to replace me." "Stretched out on the floor to fill out the job application." "She wore a Walkman and said she could listen to me and the music at the same time." "Balding candidate abruptly excused himself, returned to the office a few minutes later, wearing a hair­ piece. "Announced she hadn't had lunch and proceeded to eat a hamburger and French fries in the interviewer'S of­ fice. " "Man wore jogging suit to interview for position as Financial Vice President." "Wouldn't get out of the chair until I would hire him. I had to call the police." "Took a brush out of MY purse, brushed his hair and left." "Pulled out a Polaroid camera and snapped a flash picture of me. Said he col­ lected photos of everyone who interviewed him." "He took off his right shoe and sock. Removed a medi­ cated foot powder and dusted it on the foot and in the shoe. . Whi'le he was putting on the shoe and sock, he mentioned . that he had to use the powder four times a' day, and, this was the time." These people are certainly amusing, unconventional and memorable. They are also probably still unemployed. HILTON: HIGHER EDUCATION is designed to dialogue with college and world readers. Education is ongoing and certainly not limited to classroom study. Let's talk. (714) 899-0650. crisi . Throughout the 1980, international ctio gai t the apartheid regime nd dome tic protes by Africans disrupted the nation' economy. Thou nd of white prof ional nd worke 10 their jo European and American firms caled b ck or eliminated their investmen in the country. BY THE EARLY 19905, the economic crisis bad hit rural areas, VIEWS 'OPINIONS " W mi take nd vote for repression," Mandela warned, "the country is in for a hard time." ny parate but un Most u.s. schoolkids can find notations in their books (or computers, perhaps) which recount the 1954-55 decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court outlawing racial segregation in public chools as I "separate but Wlequal" and ordering, in My 1955, that all U.S. public school district cease uncons titutional education programs and construct integrated learning opportunities "with all deliberate speed." The decision became known as a "landmark"-Brown vs. the Board of Education. Today, almost 40 years later, the "landmark" ruling has blended into the landsc pe, and although mis givings and subtle disagreements with Brown's reasoning may persist, it has become legal rote in caseboo ,the tuff alllawyem must know, and all judges must accept, coming, as it did, from the nation' highest tribunal. WHO REMEMBERS now, that in 1956, over 100 Southern U.S. Congressmen called for "massive resistance" to the U.S. Supreme Court desegregation rulings? Now comes educational researcher and writer Jonathan Kozol to set the record straight-that in America, as it nears the next century, the public educational -system is "separate but unequal" --6till. Over a generation ago, Kozol and Piaget were required reading in education tudies, and the Kozol book, "Death at an Early Age," shocked a generation into attempting to reform a system of education in America that wa demonstrably unjust. . Hi late t book i "Savage Inequalities," and it promi es to expo e America' "public" education system one designed to enhance white student learning, as it inhibits the mental life of Black students. In press intelViews about "Savage Inequalities," the former teacher describes a "haunting" two-year trek through 30 public schools which left him is "despair." "IN PUBLIC education, (social policy) bas been turned back a full century," Kozol said. "It really is incomprehensible that in the U.S. we pend twice much on an affluent white child in New York u on a poor Black kid in New York." (USA Today-Sept. 20, 1991, p. 1D) At \Ie is how public schools re funded, and that' by property taxes. In rich districts, the resources are there to provide the state) revenues to ensure that the students of wealth We might be ending ODe chap r ofracial opp ion, butanotherlona text awaits in the struggle for Black freedom. �r /yAJlG Is 'RE V'I\J LE.S MARCHI • PReTTY IIJ THE- FAa - 70 4.&A/)· THe hle& " M Y B£:.S T nl'J(;llE� _ WER.E SOU1}JElWR?l� - ) Dlb ,+I Y 7}/l,fE - , /;Y (H)1I-"'EAlTL.I�S: J 7r) t;l'T"", Y �u e _ FOIL TV tcfc.TU:S �NO '" MwU, MY Or-JCK Do�'T I'tR..C.H- ,fPD SII'I"LJ!T'.j M"P.CH /" AiJr> JtS FoR. yOUR. 7;lIC/(� l>DWAI ••• - , •• III1I1'S �/Jj YOuCLOwAlr! l receive the reward of such resources. in poor and working-class districts, where many homes are rented, the resources are scarce. This central economic feature, Kozol argues, insures that 40 years after the Brown decision wu handed down, little has. truly changed, for BI ck and white public education, by custom is not by law, remains "separate but unequal," as illustrated, for example, by expenditure in two New Jersey school districts: 1) Camden, NJ- $3,538 per child annually, and 2) Princeton, NY 4J- $7,725 per child annually. ' CAMDEN, NOT urpriJingty,' an Afro-Hispanic urban school MUMIA ABU..JAMAL ON DEATH ROW di trict; Princeten i white, with mostly middle- and upper-cl residents. What Kozol demomtra . that those who need the resources most, the poor, get the least. And those who need the re ources least, the well-to-do, get the m t. In Kozol '. oIds, "The tate, by requiring attendance but re to require equity, effectively � inequality.·(USA Today) One is reminded of former Harvard President Derek Bok'. obselVation, "If you think education is expensive, try ignorance."