nd to ud m ncan n • Ov r75 • 01 trlc wh r mo t African-Am ric n tud nt tt nd chool w r 11 perc nt� ,pain blow th chi v m nt I v I for th tat. • In th 30 dl trlct high t P rc ntag of Afrlcan-Amerlc n tudent , the av rag tax ba e to upport. ach tud nt wa 56,006 Ie than the tate av rage. • IA I, L-Florida tands on th verge of ending i first BI c to the U.S. Congre ince 1876. Last week tate enator Carrie Mee won the Democratic nom in tion to the U.S. Hou e of Repre­ sentative . Since he face no republican ch llenger in the November general election, Meek i ured of taking a seat in Congre in January. Meanwhile, Alcee L. Hast­ ings won October 1 runoff against white state legislator Lois Frankel. . Jack on . to II get-out- the-vote II An.ANTA, GA-Aftercom­ plaining recently that' he had been "excluded" from the Bill Clinton pre idential cam­ paign, the Rev. Je e Jackson agreed last week to head a voter mobilization drive for tlw Democratic candidate. The agreement was worked out between Jackson and Democratic party chairman Ronald H. Brown. Jackson bad complalDcd hat n 1d ._ to woo white voters Clinton had in effect been running "a colorless campaign' that ex­ cluded Blacks and other minority groups. But after the negotiation, Jackson said he was now prepared to begin "working hard to elect Bill Clinton and AI Gore." Meanwhile, Jack­ son and Clinton met and talked last week in Atlanta where Clinton addressed the predominately Black National Baptist Convention. • CarJacklligs li­ The work of bored, jobless Inner city youth NEWARK, NJ- The cur­ rently popular urban crime- . "carjacking"-is being perpetuated disproportionate­ ly by young inner-city males, many between the ages of 13 and 17. "Young, bored and jobless" was the description given by one Washington, D.C. official trying to describe those who brazenly steal cars, which es­ sentially involves walking up to someone just getting into or out of a car, sticking a gun in their face and demanding the keys to their vehicle. A recent National In­ surance Crime Bureau report dubbed Newark, NJ. "the car theft capital" of the nation. In Newark, police spokesman Tom DeCastro described the young men as engaging in a "perverted right of passage" b stealing cars which are not· stripped for parts but normally abandoned when they run of gas. 'Highland Park re Ident receive award mGBLAND PARK - Hi�and Park resident, Marian Kramer received the Sojourner Truth Award from the Detroit Chapter of the National Organization for Women. She was a key speaker at the NOW convention in Chicago in June . "THE INDICATORS ARE that unle thin change, these students are going to be academically crip- pled," Simpkins aid. DARDEN SAID AITER ex- Simpkins said that with the eon- periencing this disparity over time, tinuing disparitie evidenced in the people feel there i no hope and THE REPORT CO· study, those . students affected will respond in many ways that reflect CENTRA TES on aspects of life for carry their cademic inadequacies how they feel incl uding acts of anger African-Americans in Michigan af- into tlle year 2050. and sometime crime. fected byunemployment, residential Joe T. Darden, dean of MSU's Simpkins offered recommends- and school segregation, Black- Urban Affairs Programs and profe _ tions, including immediately in- White health disparities and funding sor of eo h , a that the tegrating public education tax bases patterns, and reading outcomes in D vi eer-�p.�����f!!���� cle� s.ch districts. lth the factors we looked a pond Fourteen intermediate school dis-: we find tlto1lNt'1i .... ·,. __ ,WIIUI_5lA.I ..... yearpe very aggre lve VI y to ese tricts (ISD) were elected for study gap, whichmeamconditionsareget- and hiring more minority profes- problems. They don't deny the in Simpkin's article. ISDs serve stu- ting worse for Blacks In the state," sional into both primary and secon- situation is getting worse; they real- dents who attend school In local dis· Darden aid. dary education. ize that, but they still take no action. tricts compromising the ISO. The specific factors include how Simpkins said the key is to frame "It's up to the policy makers to Thisselectioninclude 97 percent -, the Black student population in the this education debate around quan- take the research and make policy," of the total African-American stu- 14 ISDs tudied fared in the state's tifiable, measurable is ues such as he said. dents enrolled in the state's Kinder- early reading instructional program' immediately addressing the fiscal in- equalities between chool systems. Some do not agree with Darden's garten-grade 12 districts. (Kindergarten through grade 3), as views. Simpkins compared funding pat- measured by the MEAP reading test. At this time, both Simpkins and Darden said they do notthink this is "We Blacks have been fighting terns and reading outcomes in forjustice so long that we oftentimes selected school districts and con- OUT OF THE ZIZ SCHOOL being done. confuse what has been done to us by eluded: DISTRICTS within the 14 ISDs "There is a lack of honesty in this whites as opposed to what we are ·In 1989-90, more than 75 per- who provided MEAP test data, 20 direction," Simpkins said. "There is doing for ourselves,' said Lansing's cent of Michigan'S African- outofthe 30 districts with the highest an attempt to fool people, and people Stuart Plgler, who is organizing a American students attended school African-American populations by' don't believe they're being given a private citizens group called the in central city school districts that percentage in the state had satisfac- straight-forward agenda." Community Input Committee of received at least half their operating 'tory 1989-90 MEAP scores that Lansing. revenue from the state. ranked in the bottom quarterpercen- DARDEN SAID he has not seen -These school districts tended to tile. any action on the report's recom- have high tax rates and declining tax Highland Park City Schools mendations since its inception, al- bases, a combination conducive to placed last with only 8.6 percent of though he remains hopeful. increased local assessments, further its students achieving the "satisfac- "We think we know.what needs to eroding revenue-raising capability. , tory score" of 300 or above on the be done as researchers," Darden said . eport on Michigan' African- r v nu Coqulllard By Nichol • Average chlevement on the tory ection nd 300 or bove on the Michigan Educational sment information ection of th te 1. Program (MEAP) grade 4 t t River Rou City Schoo (9.1 "very low" in the districts erving percent),O Par City School Di . the e tudent, compared ith trict (14 percent), Beecher Com­ achievement in the wealthier subur- munlty School Di trict (14.4 ban school di tric . percent) and Buen Vi ta School -The di tricts here mo t District (14.8 percent) followed African-American tuden attended Highland Par in cending MEAP school in 1989-90 were 11 percent- reading te t rankin of distric with age points below the achievement the top-30 Black student popul - . mean for the tate. tions. -In the 30 di tric enrolling the The combination of the cornpara- highe t percentages of African- tively poor t t core and the fund­ American student, the· df trlct ing disparity figure such as the high average tax b to upport each stu- tax rates and declining tax bas for dent(S39,177)wasS56,0061 than many majority Black chool con­ the tate average tax base (98,183). vince researchers that more attention Simpkins s,aid those findings in- . must be paid to Black communities. dicate many tudents 'will uffer' "I see certain dangers when (state from an inadequate education. government) doesn't act," Darden said: "There i the potential for orne people to give up on the system be­ cause there's no action." "AS A BlACK MAN, I'm con­ vinced it is time for a revol ution in our thinking, " he said. Piglersaid views that state Blacks I .! • .J�1 J ....... phouId 1001(; to the state to ' olve I 'Bla 1> J 'the real n why things have not improved for Black America. Bob Harris, communications director for the State Board of Education, aid the goals of the board include providing an equitable education for all tudent and strengthening diversity. Harris aid there is always room for improvement in those areas and the board always looks carefully at the education reports it receives. Simpkins said he retains hope things will improve for Blacks. "I think that as people get more of thi information, they're going to k some of the hard questions that n cd to be asked," Simpkim said. "(The problems are) there and they're going to be with us." lections hang on state's 'Edge· cites' them. They are worried about their futures, they're worried about their kid's futures." Edge city dwellers have pushed the almighty dollar over to make room for environmental and educa­ tional values, and it is these new values that make them receptive to change, Garreau said. With their concern for the future, Garreau said surburbani may be open to Ro Perot's appeal to red� the national deficit. He said Perot virtually no chance of winning, but the could force the man who does become pre ident to deal with the deficit. I "If be doe that and j t disap­ pears, he will be a great American,· he aid. t. Garreau aid the ubur have emerged as the largest voting block in the country, replacing the metropolitan centers which today contain only 12 percent of tbe population. Once the center 0 . society, the great cities are no on the fringe. :. "WHAT'S NORMAL IS t� Southfield," he id. "That' tand: ard, that's what America 100 like:� In fact, the term suburb itself is� mi nomer, be said. See ELECTIONS 810 LAN lNG-Eighty percent of graduating high chool tudents will not be adequately prepared for their job into the year 2000, a Wayne State University profes or y in a recent tudy. Edward Simpkins, a WSU educa­ tion profe or, based that conclusion in part on findings published in "The State of Black Michigan: 1992." The Michign State University­ sponsored report, published annual­ ly ince 1984, tries to as es inequalities between the Black and white populations and Simpkins' findings show that, based on popula­ tion percentage , more African­ Americans will be inadequately prepared than whites. Indicators from this year's report reflect increasing inequalities be­ tween the races as well as declining competency levels of all state stu­ dents, Simpkins said. The ten-time NBA All-Star Los Angeles Laker Earvin ·Magic· Johnson warmly receives Democrat!c Presidential candidate Bill Clinton during the Congressional Black Caucus in Washlngton,�. Th� us 0 lc Basketball Dream Team player endorsed Clinton. Joined by Earl Graves, Black Enterp�i�:�ublisher Johnson said, ·I'm not just t�lking about HIV and �I�S, (I'm talking about) the whole economy I the whole thing,· said Johnson. We all need change. By ANDY HALLDORSON c.pIt!' N.w. S.rvlce EAST lANSING- The national elections may hang on the votes from Michigan suburbs, a national expert on social geography says. Joel Garreau, a enior writer for the The Washingtol) Post and author of "Edge City: Life on the New Fron­ tier," said the election hinge on ix key heart-of-America tates includ­ ing Michigan, which will be deter­ mined by the uburbs. "You look at the historic patterns of presidential elections and this is where it gets won or lost, between Flint and Detroit," he said. "Show me what happens here and I'll tell you how the state goes." Oarreau said be wasn't making predictions about the outcome in Michigan because this year' election has confounded experts all year. But he said he is fascinated with the chan­ ges happening in Reagan-Democrat areas like Macomb County. -"THESE ARE middle-class tax­ payers who own and operate these places, 0 you would think that a Republican who yells 'no new taxes, no new taxe , no new taxes' would have tactical advantage. Yet what you're eeing this year i that there are some things more important to