Saturday, May 22, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Saturday, May 22, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tim, 13, takes a break from his studies in a classroom for the students' leisure-time use. tends past the physical school to include the student's parents. Signs and murals an- nouncing "Black and White is Really Tight" and "Clemente is Love" occupy prominent positions on the school's institutional green wialls. V\ERItYBODY NEEDS an extended fami- ly," says Dulin. "With families break- ing up, there is a need to feel close." Dulin believes a crossection of society is represented in a school such as Clemente, where "we're talking about the traditional black child of Ann Arbor and the Appala- chian white." One third of Clemente's stu- dents have had some confrontation with the police. "Some kids won't go back (to the traditional school)," says Dulin. "If they do, they'll never make it through school. We've sent them back. Some last one month, others a week or a day." UMILLIE SMITH, (not her real name), whose daughter attends Clemente, stands in front of a dozen students during one of the school's frequent parent-child exchanges. Looking much younger than her 37 years, Millie is now a senior nursing student at the University of Michigan. The mother of six, one of her boys was con- victed of the recent kidnap of the son of a prominent automobile executive. "I'm 37 and I did not graduate high kid . .. Now I can't get him out of there (jail). It hurts like hell TO SOME IT MIGHT SEEM like a scare tactic, but Millie's speech fits right in with the Clemente plan of communication - a sharing of one's experiences with the students so that, according to Dulin, "they (the students) don't make the same mis- akes she made." Later, Millie speaks of the school, using the same emphatic tone reminiscent of her previous address. "I think when the teachers in the school system here get a kid who's different, what they call differ- ent, that they'll have to teach, put some energy into, they'll label the kid disruptive so hey won't have to teach him." They're the failures, not the kids," she adds. "This school says kids are not failures." j LEMENTE ENCOMPASSES g r a d e s seven to twelve in a building with an institutional, cinderblock motif. Students attend school from 7:30 to 1:30, but enjoy five minute breaks interspersed through- out the day for smoking cigaretts, listen- ing to blaring radios or shooting pool on a wobbly table. The school offers four re- quired courses: English, math, social stti- dies and science an dtwo electives. "Sur- vival courses" such as auto mechanics are also offered, and two computers are avail- able for the students to freely punch away But the traditionality ends with the mun- dane course titles. Students cluster around the teacher in small groups, free to inter- ject a thought or share an idea. The teach- ers frequently softens the stodgy quantita- tive components of learning with concepts the student can readily identify. Compu- tations measured in pieces of "Kentucky Fried Chicken" are not uncommon. Mike Cross, who becomes more serious outside the classroom, believes there is no limit to the number of ways a student can be motivated to learn. "We coninually try to refine our methods in achieving our goals, objectives, and principles. says Cross. "If I can't do something new in that classroom everyday, that means I have stopped." "They've seen us laugh and they've seen us cry and they're free to speak." says Donna, another teacher, "It's really a unique environment," Maria, an eighteen year old senior who sports a puffy Afro and pink ensemble, lauds the staff as "wonderful". "They're just like me - people," she says, nursing a Virginia Slim and talking quietly. "At Huron (her old high school) it was like dealing with robots; they (the teachers) were all starched up . . . there's no phoni- ness here." Maria, who now plans to at- tend college out west after graduation, passes the cigarette to someone else for a light before she continues, "The school has helped me become a stronger person and see how important it is to learn as much as I can. I'm more aware of things than I've ever been." WEDNESDAY'S NEARING a close when students and teachers begin to file into the building's largest room for the weekly rap session, an instrumental part of Clemente's teaching method. Everyone takes seats around a large circle; smok- ing, sewing, fidgeting. Suddenly, Dulin pops into the middle of the room, accompanied by a chorus of "Hello Joe's" and "Hi Pops". He gazes sharply around the room, waiting for the voices to subside. They do, "Good afternoon, members of the Cle- mente family," he begins, shedding his blue windbreaker. The session begins slowly, with talk of summer school, drivers ed, and having the visitor from the Daily explain why he has been observing the school for two days. Business aside, Dulin becomes sponta- neous and electric. With his voice rising and falling, playing up to the students's emotions ,he brings up the case of three female students who took some money from a local bookstore. Imitating one of the girls with a squealish tone, and crack- ing up the entire room with his showman sense of humor, he recaps the story in an animated fashion. Spurts of applause, boos and cross-room conversation puntuate the hilarity. But just when the group has reached its peak of frenzy, Dulin's tone suddenly drops to a note of seriousness. "VOU WERE taking up people's time," he tells them, seeking apologies for the inconvenience their actions brought to him- self, the staff and the shop-owner. "The thing is we won't let rsrselves get into this position again." he finally concludes. Then it's Chuck's tnrn. A slight fifteen year old, he was caught in a lie when ac- cused of smoking cigaretts on the school bus. But this time it is one- of the other boys who confront Chuck. After a few minutes of conversation, the two boys jump out of their chairs and into the center of the room. The larger boy begins to wrestle Chuck to the ground, coaxing the truth. Chuck's voice begins to break, his eyes moisten. He's being defeated. The teach- ers watch calmly. While students cheer the larger boy on noisly. AFTER A FEW minutes, Chuck is freed; he disappears in a momentary state of embarrassment. Everyone files out of the building. Despite Chuck's temporary humiliation, the incident fit in with the school's script. The lie was brought out into the open tinder a controlled situation. Peer pressure was used. The truth was out. But was "verbal confrontation without physi- cal abuse" violated? "He wasn't hurt," dismisses Dulin. "Chuck knows he can't tell lies. We bring out the truth and he has to deal with it." Chuck returns shortly after, calm and collected. The room has emptied out. "What did you learn from that, Chuck?" the visitor from the Daily asks. "Don't be smoking and lying about ev- erything," he says sternly. Dulin smiles. Chck scampers out of the building to board the school his for home. JayTx vin is o-diorial direr/or of The sumnrer Daly, ilLe C/.1menke By 1ennis There once was a little school just down Textile road. This school was for just the rejects of all the other schools. In this little school there was big kids, little kids, fat kids, skinny kids, black kids, white kids and just about everything else alive, but yet they are not alive cause they've all been rejected. The staff of this school is, just a few, but this staff is the best of all the schools. They laugh, they cry, they learn, they teach, and the thing is they care. We have a mini school and a mean school, but we don't have to worry ahout our so little school cause we care. We are the Roberto Clemente Family. The Saturday Magazine Because of the emphasis placed on "fam- ly," racism is nonexistest in a school with I two-to-one black-white ratio. Donald, a andsome, athletic-looking 15 year old who vas expelled from Ann Arbor's Clay school ar fighting too often, has drastically al- ered his stand on white folks since com- sg to Clemente. "There ain't a lot of prejudice here," e says. "I used to want to beat the shit 't of white people, man. At Clay, they'd o around acting foolish after school. Now, 'hite people are cool-they're about the Mme as black people to me." Clemente is part of the Ann Arbor School ystem, and most of its students are re- erred there by other local schools. Students Ce interviewed before acceptance. And be- ause the school is hampered with a small udget, with threadbare facilities, many are lrned away. According to Dulin, one of Clemente's sajor problems is that the Ann Arbor school eard wants it as a "re-entry school," that a medium for the students to be gradu- ly reinstated back into the "mainstream." school ...," she begins, her voice serious, tinged with emotion. ". .. when you're be- ing denied something, it becomes a passion with you. When somebody stands up and tells me I can't apply for a job to sell clothes on the floor, just because I'm black, it becomes a passion with me to see why I can't sell those clothes ... it doesn't take brains to do many things, only things blacks in my town had to look forward to was to go to work in the foundry and have a baby." As Millie continues her story, the dozen students remained attentive, watching her closely. "Clinton is my 20 year old. He was one of the young men in the kidnaping charge of a thirteen year old in Bloomfield. Hey, do you know how it it to know you're 20 and won't have sex for 17 years? When you're a young, black male, there are many things to feel good about - a car, lady, nice clothes, but if you don't have a job, how are you going to get these things? One of the easy ways was to kidnap this