Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Saturday, April 9, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 'Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Ci tien input needed in area mass transit planning SOMETIME IN JUNE, the Southeast- ern Michigan Transportation Au- thority (SEMTA) will decide on one metro-area mass transit plan to sub- mit to Washington for federal fund- ing. Sixteen plans are presently under consideration, ranging from the sim- ple increase in bus lines to a more comprehensive heavy rail (subway) system, with price tags running from $1.3 billion for a basic package to $2.5 billion for the heavy rail. Of the fur final proposals, one stands out as the best in terms of rider service, cost, and economic de- velopment of the seven-county metro area - a combination of light rail (modern streetcars) and buses. The light rail will offer many rid- ers the service of fixed rail without the huge cost of heavy rail. Although expected to finally fall in the $2 bil- lion range, the savings from the hea- vy rail system are considerable. Also, recent information out of the Capi-, tol shows that the Carter Admini- stration is finding many mass transit .systems "overdeveloped" and extrava- gant. The light rail system will be much easier to justify to the cost- conscious Administration, and. also to the public, which will end up paying much of the tab, especially in con- tinuing operating costs once the sys- tem is built. Economic development is also a consideration. Although a system en- tirely dependent on buses offers flexi- bility and relatively low cost, it does not provide private investors with the guarantee of service for both workers and customers alike, that a fixed rail system would. THIS PRIVATE development is a key to the entire metro area. With- out it, any mass transit system would be subject to the same inevitable de- cay accompanying an abandoned city.- Mass transit is on its way - as one local official .said, it's "politically in- evitable." For a region with a pro- jected 1990 population of 5.7 million, an economic, efficient and feasible system must be implemented to han- dle these increases. The light rail/ bus combination is just such a sys- tem. Before SEMTA makes its decision, it will reevaluate and revise each of the four sketchy proposals presented here. Citizen input is invaluable. If you plan on continuing to live in the metro area, their final decision will have a 'tremendous affect on your -mobility and lifestyle in the future. Don't just sit back and watch, let SEMTA know what you want from a mass transit system. If you want to have a say in your sAuture, the time to act is now. Doors EDITOR'S NOTE: This installment of a five-part ter series on the faith of b deals with their ascent to a and improving level of life rising. By GEORGE W. CORNE AP Religion Writer Doors were opening and ther passages beckoned. obstacles and constric against blacks slowly rec in America. It was not ye them that longed-for "da jubilee." Stumbling-block mained. But the external t ings had fallen away. An old yoke had been lifted. It had happened in ac paratively swift span of his within 20 years. Not the e century since the Civil War matched that modern peri reforming the horizons< race. *The Lord has brought mighty long way," says Rev Dr James C. Sam Jacksonville, Fla., preside the National Baptist Conve of America, a predominm black denomination. Bishol seph A. Francis of Nev N.J., one of four black Rc Catholic bishops named in country since 1965, says, something like coming out tomb." "At least the stone has rolled away," says the Rev C. Eric Lincoln, a fore black sociologist and onec blacks on the Duke Unive faculty, which had none in "The rising is on the way. This explicitly was n equate the infinite signific seen in Christ's resurre from death with the ti forming status of blacks, y a temporal sense, they, have surmounted the pit o versity and emerged fro into new, more promising p bilities. They'd found broader di sions, a fuller present an expanding future. breathed a freer air. The change hadn't beer ished, not by a wide mark. idly entrenched prejudices festered in many whites resultant rebuffs to bL They, in turn, cradled cc wing resentments and dis and faced widespread s and economic drawback: was partly an inner hindr the sediment of the past ging a different day. It had been that way, when Christ triumphed ove grave, a murky, clouded I of uncertainty, fears, susp and skepticism, even amnor closest followers, before new reality broke through. But it had happened. signs and substance a, that in an agitated, relat brief episode in U.S. histo basic metamorphosis ha curred for its black citizen "It's no utopianism, b chastened expectation," noted black historian Lawi Jones of Howard Unive "It's like peeling an.onio various manifestations o pression are recognized, are dealt with. Blacks have a feeling of being p America, yet still of not part of it. Yes, things changed, but we have no Black Salvation -- 3 Long Closed to Blacks Start Opening third Eas- Iss acksI:'"-_ ,=r new 4 U LL AO J' f\" r >r - The ! ,.tt' s ~f~ tions ,eded age 4 ' cor- ^ tory, Contact your reps Sen. Donald Riegle (Dem.), 1205 Dirksen Bldg., Washing- ton, D.C. 20510 Sen. Robert Griffin (Rep.), 353 Russell Bldg., Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C. 20515. Rep. Carl Pursell (Rep.), 1709 Longworth House Office Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20515.- Sen. Gilbert Bursley (Rep.), Senate, State Capitol Bldg., Lansing, MI 48933. Rep. Perry Bullard (Dem.), House of Representatives, State Capitol Bldg., Lansing, MI 48933. suma m* 7............. ann n~s -'- arrived." It was an oddly mixed, am- biguous interval of now and not yet, a paradoxical, uneven time of transition, yet the evidence of it multiplied nearly all around, North and South, in governments, in business of- fices, on college faculties, on police forces, in the military, on, school boards, in broad- casting and on television screens, among executive per- sonnel of church denominations and councils, nationally and lo- cally, on sales staffs, in class- rooms, at bank windows and on high court benches. Blacks werethere, where large~ly they had not been be- fore. In cases where they still were kept out, social forces, in- cluding the law, discerned a lapse, a wrong - subject to ap- peal, litigation and correction. Figuratively blacks have en- tered "on a threshold of resur- rection," says- the Rev. Dr. Grant Shockley, president of the Interdenominational Theo- logical Center in Atlanta, part of an educational complex of predominantly black colleges. It's also one of the mnost critical periods, both with more rea- sons for hope and more reasons for concern." Across the nation, 3,979 blacks held public office in 1976, up from only a handful at the start of the civil rights struggle in 1960, and more than three times the 1,185 total as recently as 1969. Black-held posts included 152 mayors, 276 state senators and representatives, 1,442 munici- pal council members, 201 state judges and 168 on local court benches, 25 police chiefs, 939 on local school boards-figures all up from virtually nothing 20 years before. Still, the black proportion of public offices was less than 1 per cent of the total, not even a tenth of their 11.5 per cent share of the population. But the small foothold carne with a rush, and*grew rapidly. Sixteen blacks held seats in the U.S. Congress, where only three sat in 1965. A black, Jus- tice Thurgood Marshall, was on the U.S. Supreme Court and a black, Edward Brooke of Mas- sachusetts, was in the U.S. Sen- ate, both where none had been before 1967. Three blacks have served in the president's cabi- net since 1972, currently Secre- tary of the Department of Housing and Urban Develop- ment, Patricia Roberts Harras, where none had served before. A black United Church of Christ minister, Andrew Young, who had been a close aide of the te civil rights leader Mar- tin Luther King and who had repeatedly gone to jail with him, became in 1977 the U.S. Ambassador to the United Na- tions. It was only the heavy black vote cast overwhelmingly for Jimmy Carter in 1976 that pro- vided the decisive margin in several states that made him the 39th U.S. president. Black leaders, in discussing the changing circumstances for their race, almost invariably mentioned the high confidence they put in Carter to further justice for blacks because of his Southern affinitywiththem. "He is the highest symbol of the previously unrecognized un- derstanding and love between blacks and whites in the South that bloomed almost overnight, once segregation was re- moved," says Bishop E.P. Mur- chison of the Christian Method- ist Episcopal Church, a pre- dominantly black body. "The good will that many knew was there has now come out in the open so that relations now are better in the South than in the North." One of the most positive in- dications for the future of blacks was in their surging en- rollment in higher education. About 1,675,000 blacks were in college in 1976, more than six times the 234,000 in 1964. Near., half of black high school graduates were going on to college, equaling the propor- tion of whites, while only 17.7 per cent of blacks had done so in 1960, far less than the 41 per cent .f whites then. Educationally, the proportion of all blacks, young and old, who have completed a year or more of college nearly doubled from 10.8 per cent in 1966 to 18.8 per cent in 1976, while the proportion getting graduate or postgraduate degrees also near- ly doubled from 4.8 per cent to 8 per cent. Among whites, the increase was much less, the proportion with one or mores years of college rising from 20.8 per cent in 1966 to 31.1 per cent in 1976, while the propor- tion with graduate or post- graduate degrees rose from 9,7 to 16.3 per cent. Overall, the median years of education for blacks rose near- ly two points in the 1966-1976 period, up from a median 10 years' education to 11.8 years, while it inched up less than a fraction of a point for whites, from 12.2 years to 12.4 years. Comparatively, blacks were moving ahead much faster edu- cationally, narrowing the small margin held by whites. "The future is pregnant with promise," says the Rev. Dr. Charles E. Cobb, chairman of the United Church of Christ Commission on Racial Justice. The numbers of blacks on college and university faculties more than tripled in the short span between 1969 and 1976, ris- ing from 9,680 to 32,220. This still was only 7.8 per cent of the 440,000 on college faculties, but the rise was ,steep, the gap swiftly narrowing. Desegregation of elementary' and secondary schools came at a strikingly faster rate in the South than in the North. Be- tween 1968 and 1972, .the per- centage of black pupils in all- black schools plunged in the South from 68 per cent to only 9.2 per cent. In the North, the proportion declined only from 12.3 to 10 per cent. In the area of work, the pro- portion of blacks in professional vocations - lawyers, doctors, s u r v e y o r s , drafters, tech- nicians, nurses, dieticians, teachers and counselors- nearly doubled in 10 years, ris- ing from 7 per cent of the na- tion's blacks in 1966 to 12 per cent in 1976. The proportion of whites in those professions had inched up only 2.5 per cent in that period to 16 per cent of the white population. In all white-collar jobs - managerial, sales, technical, clerical and professional - the proportion of .blacks in them rose by two-thirds between 1966 and 1976, from 21 to 35 per cent, while the proportion of whites in those white-collar jobs edged up only slightly, from 48 to 52 per cent. A-gap still existed, but it was closing. In that same period, the pro- portion of whites in unskilled labor rose from 4 per cent to 4.5 per cent, while for blacks it decreased from 12 to 8 per cent, but they still made up a disproportionately large share of unskilled labor. "They're slowly but steadily catching up,' says Harvey Hamel, a. U.S. Labor Department econo- mist. Despite the faster black prog- ress, they had been far behind, thrust aside, and they still had much overtaking to do. The change had come late, and the cumulative erosion of centuries did not fade- readily, nor was the repair near completion. Unemployment among blacks averaged 13.1 per cent in 1976, nearly double the 7 per cent among whites, a relative differ- ence that generally has pre- vailed at least since 1950, al- though jobless levels, of course, have varied. Among low-paid, unskilled laborers, blacks still made up 18 per cent of the to- tal, nearly twice their 10.8 per cent of the labor force. The median annual income among blacks in 1975 was $9,- 321, compared to, $14,268 for whites. The gap was not as great comparatively as in 1965, when the black median annual income was $3,993, barely more than half the $7,251 of whites, but the contemporary lag still left' blacks a third behind whites generally in income. Melvin Humphrey, research director of the Department of Labor's Equal Employment Op- portunities Commission, says that at ;the present rate of eco- nomic improvement for blacks, it will take them 43 years to close the cap with whites. "There's been progress, but it's too little and too slow," he says. By the Civil Rights Act of 1964, bolstered by the Voting ,Rights Act of 1965 and sub- sequent legislation, equal con- sideration and access became the supreme law of the land in every sphere serving the pub- lic, on jobs, in kmbor unions, merchandising, banks and ho- tels, in broadcasting, education, housing and other fields, with broad powers of tenforcement, and federal and state commis- sions operating to prevent vio- lations. It was on the statute books, a democratically established principle and authority to carry it out. It often was ignored by habit or design, and it was hob- bled by the prolonged social deprivation of many blacks. But it was the affirmed con- science and will of the nation, and it produced wideningly radiating impact. The "broken covenant," as s o c i o 1 o g i s t Robert Bellah termed It, which for 200 years had denied blacks the parity assured all members of society in the U.S. Constitution, had now been mended and the new coherence brought healing, but it still was to become whole. TOMORROW: The Black Church. Dear. Anita Bryant: Gays have rights too By KEVIN SWITZER A FEW WEEKS AGE, after a Dade County (Miami area), Florida ordin- ance banning discrimination against ho- mosexuals in the areas of housing and employment was passed, Anita Bryant, former Miss America and current citrus queen, came out of her orange groves and started yowling. She was admantly opposed to gay rights even before the bill passed, mouth- ing such misconceptions as: "If this bill is allowed to become law, you will, in fact, be infringing upon my rights ... as a citizen and mother, to teach my children and set examples, or point to others as examples of God's moral code as stated in the Holy Scripture." In case she doesn't know it, the laws in this country were formed to support individual human rights, not the moral codes of major religions. Her so-called rights should not include imposing a fanatical bigotry on other people. After the passage of the bill, she founded a group called "Save Our Chil- dren." Its stand was that homosexuals were out to molest or convert the youth of America in order to "freshen their ranks." An unfortunate number of peo- ple are believing her. The facts are that most homosexuals don't molest children, and most child molesters are not homo- sexual. There are molesters of all types: homosexual, heterosexual, and bisexual, and the largest percentage of child mo- lestation is heterosexual in nature. Anita's campaign continues: each day brought more twists in reports to avid newsreaders. A few days after Save Our Children was announced, it was re- ported that Anita's long-time friend and her agent's wife, Ruth Shack, was one of the sponsors of the law. Later, Anita was fired from hosting her long-hoped-for talk-show series by her producer, Barry Drucker, who wrote in a telegram that If Anita argues that the law condones immoral conduct, what's to keep her and people with similar beliefs from, banning such other "immoralities" as drinking alco- holic beverages, smoking tobacco and play- ing cards?' Homosexual acts may be abnormal to this society, but that doesn't necessarily imply that they are immoral. In many cul- tures past and present, they are considered not only normal, but among some tribes such as the Keraki, necessary to make the- young grow strong. In this country, accord- ing to statistics published by the Kinsey studies, between two and 10 per cent of the population is predominantly homosexu- ally oriented, and 35 per cent of the males have had at least one homosexual experi- ence. So if oppressive laws are to be con- tinued, what proportion of the society should be branded as criminal? How much better it would be to condemn dope pushing, race baiting and poverty - or such mind trips as greed, hunger for power, or cruelty? After a recent meeting between presi- dential aide Margaret Constanza and vari- ous gay activists, Bryant audaciously wrote up a protest against the White House staff for "dignifying these activists for special privileges with a serious discussion of ther alleged 'human rights.' " She added in a speech that gays are, "Really asking to be blessed in their abnormal life-style by the office of the President of the United States," and: "What these people really want is to propose to our children that there is an acceptable alternate way of life - that being a homosexual or lesbian is not really wrong or illegal." For once she's made a decent observa- tion. Full equality under the law and the freedom to live "alternate" life-styles are major features of the gay struggle. As for recruiting children, if a person isn't gay already there won't be ' an attraction to the gay lifestyle. If she/he is gay, then more liberal laws and more understanding VJ I\. M t11 T AS, PP F 550 5O\JRANt .' o N M'{Mv Ta ' R~C T. mo 3Y 50U C Ap'AUGt. ;' 'N 'N .. *E? .V4, f 5. L. s ucu