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- NATION, Page 39American NotesNEW YORK CITYTragic Transition
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- After he was appointed the first black superintendent of
- schools in Minneapolis in 1980, Richard Green earned a national
- reputation as a stern and innovative educator. He thus had high
- hopes of muscling New York City's chaotic school system into
- order when he became its first black chancellor 14 months ago.
- But the transition from guiding 40,000 Minneapolis students to
- dealing with 940,000 in New York was a rude jolt.
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- Green was dismayed by the prevalence of drugs, weapons and
- racial tensions in the New York schools. He suspended two
- community school boards tainted by corruption. He was
- disillusioned when only 6% of voters cast ballots for board
- members. Last week a school administrator and a teacher were
- arrested for selling cocaine, and the trial of a principal
- accused of buying crack ended in a hung jury.
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- Two days later, Green died at 52 after an attack of chronic
- asthma. "What surprised me most," he had confided to TIME in a
- discussion about his work in New York, "is how little people
- really care about children."
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