home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- NATION, Page 17American NotesRACENo Place For Mankind
-
-
- Mahin Root's father is white; her mother is black. So when the
- 14-year-old girl tried to register this year as a junior at Page
- High School in Greensboro, N.C., she faced a problem: a form that
- asked her to specify her race. Instead of filling in the blank, she
- left the question unanswered. School officials politely suggested
- that she make a choice, since the U.S. Department of Education's
- Office of Civil Rights requires all public school systems to submit
- racial data on their students. Mahin, who had attended private
- schools since moving to Greensboro in 1985, just as politely
- declined. She and her parents, both born in the U.S., follow the
- Bahai religious faith. Explained her mother Brenda Mahin: "Our
- family believes very strongly in the oneness of mankind. There is
- but one race -- the human race."
-
- That satisfied school officials, who let Mahin enroll, but not
- the Washington bureaucrats. They advised Greensboro schools
- attorney William Caffrey that Mahin should be racially classified
- by using a "rule of reason" or an "eyeball" test. Caffrey did not
- consider that helpful. Finally he was told that the Education
- Department is trying to develop a policy on how to count children
- of interracial marriages. School officials are now waiting for
- Washington to apply its own rule of reason.