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11-19-1971 The iH lltop 11-19-1971 Hilltop Staff

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' Alumni club stirs conflict by Robert " The a_1ack" Taylor Mrs. Panzy H . DeHart. definitely be open to members An apparendy . devisive president of the H oward in January of 1972. in-group struggle has erupted University Club wrote the Wing also advised that any within the Howard University• HILLTOP this week charging students interested in joining the club should send their mem­ Alumni club of . that the advertisement which it • bership coupons and inquiries to The catalyst to the division ran in its November 12, issue ! appears to be the proposed was not authorized by the club. the new office at 610 W ~st 174 est a bl ishmen t of a pJ ush · She wrote, " We had studied Street, Suite 1C. Howard Club (see advertise­ the possibility of establishing an News of the New York ment on page 4 ), si.milar· to the alumni house in New York City. developments have not been Play Boy Clubs, in mid-town At our November meeting it was limited to the " Fun City," Manhattan. The division se,ems .decided not to proceed with any however. At the recent meeting · to be occurring along age lines plans for an alumni house." She of the Howard Alumni Club of with the older, more established continued "Our club does not Philadelphia, news of the New members of the club being skep­ have an alumni house." York developments were tical about undertaking such a However. during a HILLTOP revealed. venture and the younger mem­ telephone conversation with The Philadelphia Tribune, a bers attempting to give the club Theodore Wing in New York Bl ack newspaper, reported that . a new direction and pur- an entire different set o f facts it was announced that New pose. Present indications are . was revealed. York Howardites had secured a that the division has already Wing, Director of Publicity building at 52nd . and Park I taken place. The older group for the Alumni Association. Avenue in expensive downtown cal Is it sci f The Howard Un iver­ stated that the Association was Manhattan. The New York Life sity Alumni Club while the in the final stages of acquiring In surance Company had picked newer faction is kn own as the all the facilities pictured in tpe up the mortgage and was giving Dr. and Mrs. Jam~s Cheek arrive at a benefit performance for Ho ward ·vniversity Alumni advertisement. Anc he declared the group a long term lease to the Howard University Alumnf Association. Featured entertain­ Association. that the Howard Club would (Continued o~ page 11 ) ment: " Fiddler on the Roof." R .D.Ph oto '• l THE I ... ,. .. .. I • 1 OED/CA TED TO THE BLACK FACTS - l FOR ONCE AFRICAN PEOPLE KNOW 1 THE fRUTH THEY WILL FIND THEIR WAY TO FREEDOM. HOWARD UNIVERSITY STUDENT NEWSPAPER • l •

~------~------~~----~------~~-:--~:-=:-Howard Un iversity, Washington, D.C. November 19,1971 Volume 54, Number 10

- From N. Y. 's 'East' ' • . . 1n Les Campbell raps by Robert "The Black" Taylor The jury composed of ten Blacks and two whites. mostl:y by Gwen Scotteri " Runald Biddle. the student women. deliberated for less "If what I am going to say charged with last ~emcst'cr's ar­ than twenty minutes and retur­ tonight has been said before med rohhcry of three fclllH\ ned with the ~1ot-guilty verdict. then respond with. "Amen." If 'ltudcntl> in Cook Hall was Asked if he held any anger you don't agree with what I am found not guilt} 11f all charges · for Evan s because of testin,1pn} sayiAg. I appreciate the concern l a !> t • " c e k 1 n \\' a s h 1 n g. t n n . against him. Biddle replilS'.(,I. .. I you've shown in just being here. d1).trict court lost a lot of time and money hut If you agree. then let's get down Biddle had heen accu!>ed of I just say fuck it. it"s over·· to some work." These state­ • hu'>t1ng into the T felt that even if I \\as the gu} \\ 1.' for people ol African decent." nC\Cr ahle to produce. rhcn he could have settled it at HPward. in Brooklyn . New York. The .llkdgcdly hound. gagged and There was no need to go 111 the simplicity and sincerity of {hese rPbhcd at gun point Herripg. man. opening remarks characterized • Steve Poston. and Neamiah Biddle also revealed 111 th1.• Campbell's entire speech· last Evans. HILLTOP i he evants which led · Wednesday . night at 8 :00 in • The rohher} to o k place to his arrest. He said that ahout Rankin Chapel. during the early morning hnurs . _.....---r a week after robbery took place Campbell describes himself as " ... worker, student, soldier." a "worker, student. and soldier of Saturday. Jaunary 30. "' he received a note from his c1or­ which The East was established. Most 0 1f the testimony during Ronald Biddle mitory head resident at Sli)WC in the fight for the liberation of ''In order to have Bl<1ck the trial centered around· this almost entirely around Evans· Hall that .Assistant Dean of Black peoples in the jungles pf 'awareness. we need Bl ack in­ date and time. Biddle 1nain-­ Students Lane wanted to sec North America." He spear­ testimony. stitutions." he stated.• "Let us- tained that he was n b~ where Biddle produced two wit­ him in his Administration headed a confrontation of the take the money being thro""n near Cook Hal 1 at that nme•• but nesses, Arthur Ward and building office. ~ s-201, a memorial to Malcolm away in iiur con:1m unities an Neamiah Evans. on ~he other possible sentence of anywhere building to avoid a possible a nevertheless, expounded to sacrifice time. energy. and hand alledged that he had seen from one year to life in jail. disturbance. lengthily on t.he concepts upon money 1n a community effort. and talked to Biddle at a party Campbell stated that he had • at "The Place Where" on First come out of a teaching situa­ and Bryant Streets ear Iier that tion, and like otlicrs. utilize~! same nig~t. HILLTOP goes international his earnings in efforts tll help Evans then positively iden- organize The East. He added tified Biddle as the student who tember but technical prob~ems But according to T aylor, his of­ that we cannot look H> the Ford robbed him and the two other In an attempt to increase its and shakiness on o ur :part fice only receives about six or Foundation for what we can students. However, neither of sources of news and to make a prevented it. The reason for the seven a week in return. co~tribute o urselves. By relying the two other robbery victims. concrete step toward its com­ expanded circ·ulation and, He further added that the upon the enormous amount of Herring and Poston, could mittment of Pan-Africanism the hopefully, expanded news s0ur­ future will sec the HILL TOP at­ ¥ur in the West In dies and Third World peoples and basis. The organization no~ and half of his wardrobe) even and one each in Russia. Cana­ we simply decided to do some­ "There is a Pan-African c ul ­ provides work for Black refused to come to the trail and da, Cuba, England, an.d the thing about it." tural . economic. and political musicians, otherwise expl oited testify because he said he was People's Republic of China. The HILLTOP al re3dy is sent revolution to be fought ." by the system, while at the same not sure. HILLTO P editor Robert to the campus newspapers of declared Taylor," and com­ time, providing an entertain­ Consequently the Taylor stated, "We had intend­ every predominately Black col­ munications will be a vital link ment and cultural center for prosecution's case centered ed to make this move last Sep- lege and university in America. in that development." (Continued 0 11 page 3) • .• I • .. .I . ., • Page 2 The HILL TOP Friday, November 19, 1971 • • I .. • ' • • us u e .1n o .ar (

1 SOBU New journal P.I.C. Dance Concert ~ King David' ' . • .. ATTENTION SOBU (Student Organization P.I.C. (Peop les Jnvolvesment T he Hood College Chorus o f for Black Unity•) will sponsor a The H owar d University All Students• Corporation) will sponsor a Frederick, Md. will join the D ay of Solidar ity C ultural Committee Presents: and Faculty Members mod dance Friday, Nov¢mber Georgetown .,University Glee wi th 19, from I 0 p.m. to 2 a :m. at Club, under the ilirection of Paul The Goerge Faison the P eo ple of G uinea the Peoples Involvement Cor­ H ume, in perfon n ing parts I and T HE DEPA RTMENT Universal Dan ce OF AFRO-AME RICAN poration building 2146 Georgia Ill of King l David, Arthur o n 22 November 1971 to com­ Experience STUDIES Ave., N.W. '• Honegger's l 9?.1piece which tjle merate the G uinean peop le's Entertain ment by the · gen­ composer calle a "sympho nic Lecture and Demonstration, vict©ry over the invasion by is no w tlemen who are add icted to psalm." T he roductio n ~ will November 20. Ponugal. The agenda for the soliciting material music, " T he Add icts Band and include costume, choreography day will include an information to compile Show." and narration !10 reflect the Perfor mance, November 21. table,. speak e r s. dorm- raps, a · Tickets are $ 1'. SO in advan ce ~ theme of the life of King Da\id. panel discussions, films and BLACK SC HOLASTIC and $ J '7 5 at the door. Tickets T he perform~ce will be .at 8:00 Tickets _wit.I be given o ut at communication ues among the JOUR NAL may be purchased at 21 46 p.m., Sunday, November· 21, in Cramton Auditorium betwe.en community and o ther colleges \ Geo rgia ·Ave., N.W . or by Gaston Hall o n ·the Georgetown and universities. the hours of 10:00 A.M . and campus. T her~ will · be no Please submit articles which you Calling 232.8020. . 4:00 P.M . . Participation by the student would like published to: The pr oce~s from this dance admission charge. bot.ly as a whole will be greatly "I wi ll he lp buy Thanksgivin g and J 1 '' appreciated. Tttc location will T HE AFRO-AMERICAN Christmas baskets fo.r inner city he announced later. STUDIES DEPT residents. · Founders Library • ·Room 300 Campus Pals THANKSGIVING • Veterans FLY TRAIN ROU NO· T R tf' The Campus Pals will have a RA TES There will be a meeting of all • meeting with all of their N EW YOlllJC T veteran students at 12:15 p.m. Trip cancelled 1 21.00 nn Friday. November 19. 1971 respective freshman pals on NEWARK All Norm1t Slop• M1d t • in the Pentho use Auditorium of Sunday, November 21, 197 I in 120.50 D ue to the tardiness of the R No Auport H1ul1 t the Student Cen tcr. the University Student Center al • TRENTON student body in paying fees for 3 :00 p.m. Report to the Center $ 18.00

A•h"n T11~ Anylim• ro, 0 1yt the Jamician and European and you will be directed to your PHllAOElPHIA a The Chilites trips. they will be cancelled. Pals meeting place. Come out 1 13.00 A With heart felt regret the and meet your Pa l if you haven't WILMI NOTON lr41n' l ••wt Tut,. • nd Wed No• 2:1 6 14 1t •, J PM from Union Stetron The Libt:ral Arts Student· chairman of the trips had to already. or just come a·nd talk if 1 11.50 Council Presents ·'The Chi­ cancelled them. you've already met him . • Students who have paid a I Compe re Stude nt Att F i re 140 .00 A T lites" in concert at Cra mton F resh men . please attend! , Re9. Tre 1n 12t.oo R. T. I Auditol"ium on Wednesday. deposit for the trips should con­ , • December 8, I Q7 I . tact Gay Pop: Cook Hall. 292: . 4110 M l (Attlllur lt•d • • Cempw t " • Pt E xtra 636-4636. ·Draft N .. Comediam " Barefoot" • Soul Searchers Students with questio' ns con- S()CCer playoffS cerning the draft and 1n ilitary DISCOUNT 2 shows affai rs are invited to consu lt the 7:30 p . m. show $2.00 Assistant Dean o f Students, I I :3 0 p . m. sh ow $3.0 0 R oom 211 Administ r atio n C A LL :tlJ 1 131 .. OA FUR THEA IN FO. It's going to be an X mas Building. kil ler!! In the even t the soccer • playoffs are held at Howar'd CAll 331 I UI FOA fUATHEA INFO. • Unive rsity, there will be a La~guage general admission fee. G eneral - s2.oo In the Spring semester 1972, Student - s I .00 any student who enrolls in the (includ ing Howard students) lower level courses I 'o r II. in \ each language wi ll be able to A fee is being ch'a rged because choose the laboratory section this a a NCAA event. T he first he will attend. The Laboratory playoff game will be tomo rro w, sections will be listed in the November I 9 at H o wa rd time schedule. Students should against W. Virginia. Kickoff is consu lt the listing 'carefully set for I :30 p.m. during the pre- registration A. B. c. period. .. ' T-Day reception P<)litics The Liberal Arts Student There wi ll he a meeting' con­ Council is sponsoring a cerning the 1972 Second An ­ Prc-T h:inksg1ving Reception on nual National Black Political Friday November 19. 1971.' Sckncc Students Cnnfercnc.c o n from 12-4:00 p.m. The Nnvcmher 20. t 97 I at 4 p.111 . in Reception is open to all students

the Joung\.' of Collk Hall. and it is free. Turkey, macaroni \ This b a very importao t and cheese. beer, rolls etc. will p,1licy-111aking meeting. Your be served. I E. F. presence \\'l1uld he greatly ap­ D. preciated. Ir yn u know of an yli ne else ''ho might he interested in this ,' ~ Playh<)y pnijcct. pkasc advise them to T he Playhoy foundation is spons~ring a young vntcrs drive for the 1972 Presidentia l F lee­ T()Urname nts t ion. The University Center Plan ­ Various po!.ters and a y1,ung ning and Advisory (\1uncil will voters c; u idl' l o \' o ti ng Ri gh ts h11hl a meeting llll r-.h,nJay. a nd R l·sidl' IH' \ have been :"J nvcmhcr ~ 2. at -+ p. 111 •• 111 Jistrihutcd tl1 all the dnr- 111 itlHiC). , rt1(lfll I I~ in the University G .. H. I. Ccnt\.·r. 1 h\.· purpl1sc ,,f the r'l<'l'llllg j, tl1 fl1rm the guiJc­ 100/o Di5count for Howard Students. A. 99.50 l1 nc~ flH a campu~ - wide billiard. p1ng.·f1Png. anJ chess tl1ur­ Convenient Budget Terms .----- B. 12.5.00 • na111cnt Ill ht: held in December. HlHll T o c. 150.00 ·\II intc rl'Stcd participants arc' i\.1r ._. & i\1rs . Vi1H:L'1H Jlihns JEWELERS D. 175.00 111\ ited 1,1 attend Rt:freshmcnts l\.hH1da'.>'. Nnvl'.mber 15. 1971 • E. 200.00 '~ill he served. One Fine 13 ab) Bll) 938FS'{.~W. F. 225.00 · For further in formation. . \\~eight 8 lbs .. 9 ozs. please contact Roger W. Burke • Mr. Johns is the G. 225.00 in the . Office of Student Life. Director lff Student ~vEB-6hs . H. 150.uu ' 636-700. Activities J.ewelers Since 1932 I. 300.00 • \ . ,

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r ' Friday, November 19, 1971 ... The HILL TOP Page 3 Harris -- _ new~ director · Financial aid f s are low . . . . of the HU Press • by Pat Johnson Press Release managing editor of Rand om '~ industries, and graduates. House's juvenile division, he . Howard University is not the f Charles F. Harris, a former created a . 'Series of books for When asked how the money only college that is having editor o'f Random, House-!. Inc. children on the U.S. Jookedfo rnext·semester,"Bad" fin ancial problems. Most publishers in New York City, has Constitution. was the reply from Mrs. Goldie schools are having simil ar been appointed Executive Prior to his association with W. Claiborne, director o f finan ­ problems but Black colleges Director of the New Howard Random House, he was vice cial aid. more so than white colleges. Cf.niversity Press. His president and general manager of ~ Ne.xt semester Howard One reason is that "the Black aepointment was announced by P .or ta l Pr ess, l n c., a University will be , depending schools do not have the en­ Dr. James E. cheek, Presiaent of wholly-owned subsidiary of heavily upon· National Defense dowment funds that' wnit,e ' \he University. John Wiley and Sons, Inc., Funds as a source for receiving schools have." No one leaves .. Nir~ Harris, 37:wha.jor the where he had chief operating money fo r financial aid o ne million cfollars to a Bl ack .. months has servedas the ~ past f 8 responsibility for publishing st udents. Also, they are depen­ inst~tu tion . Because of this "<\~ enior editbr of the Adµlt Trade supplementary materials for ding on collections from former fewer Blacks are attending Division at Random House, e lementary and secondary H oward students who owe Black colleges. In 1970. o nly assumed his duties at Howard on schools, and rnaterials for Head money to the University. " If ~ thirty-four percent of the Black N.ovember 8. Start, the Job Corps, and adult , there is no i.ncrease in collec- aiborne • students 1n college were Qr. Cheek said the Howard education programs. tions, there will b~ no loans --+-----...,,,------enrolled in Black colleges. University Press will publish · For nine years. Mr. Harris was given next semester," said Mrs:--~ r . When a stude~t cannot Many Bl acks want to go to books an·d other publications by an editor in the pu~lish1ng Claiborne. • ~ ceive this loan, usually, he has Bl ack colleges but when a white • the University faculty and division of Doub..leday and Award·s a_t.e- divided into to get a State Guaranteed Loan school offers him a scho larship st udcnts and other authors, in Company · where fie was semesters ....-A~ent who,J?s a whose interest rates are 7-1 / 2 and all that a Black school has - addition to University journals, responsible for the evaluation--sctlo arship rec~ves flalf of the whereas, a National Defense to offer .him is a loan, what ' abstracts and other documents. and editjng of manuscr1pts amount awardetl to hi m the first Loan interest rates are three choice does he have? ' The University will not establiSh · which were published as hard semester and receives the other and one-half percen't. : . a printing plant, he said. 1 cover books- for th ~: adult half of the money the . ~eco n d If a student's parents mak~ The colleges do not draw up A n( advisory board of market.: . A~~,,,..,;.- semester. If Howard d·o~s '. n_o t less than $9,000 yearly, he is the guidelines that exolain whq students and faculty wilL pe A uatt·\11! ol Portsmouth, Va., receive more money, the money eligible for .. an Econ <} mic Op­ Ii · e fo.r aid. The Ap­ " • appointed to assist Mr. 1Harris in M.r. H arris graduated from from collections will have' to pe· portunity Grant. T he 11umber of s Committee draws · 1~. ..._,., --r--...... I developing a definitive program Virginia State College at used to give students the Jast children in o ne's family o r the '-gll'JEll'e' lines and presents 1 for the .H o~ard Univer~ity Press, Petersburg in 1955. He has done half of their awards. n·umber of children in school in ~~m~ ess where they ~ Dr: Cheek added. graduate work at New York The work-study pr ografu·~ one's family has no thing to do are vote'd on. Mr. Harris has had extensive University. He a·nd his wife have loans, grants and scholarships with his chances of rece1v1ng 1: x pericnce ii:i publishing. As two children. all come under the heading of aid. Colleges thro ugho ut the Financial Aid. If the University gives an nation have formed a Financial There are certain guidelines · illegal recipe int aid, they loose Aid Administrator Association. for choosing who is the receive their opportunity to Pfirticipate In March or April of 1972. aid. Mo ney is given according in any of the programs. Every Mrs. Claiborne. who is a mem- to availibility, students year the University is audited to ,..ber of the· FAAA. will play host academic average and his need. see if any of the funds were ~ to Black needs. She will ask 250 Black Wo men Participating • allow white men such as Nixon A student has to be from a lo w illegally appropriated: If they ·· Black members of the FAAA to ' will ho ld a large demonstration and the Congress to legislate income family. were, the University must pay meet in Washington. D.C. They • at the Elispe Saturday at I 0 a.m. and gerrymander our bodies. Howard recei.ves funds from back every "misused dollar." will write to Congress telling ' t<~ demand (I) repeal of all anti­ The .march has been endorced feder al su pportec:I programs. M o ney for scholarships them of the special needs o.f abortion laws (2) no forced by Shirley Chilsom among other These funds are used to employ comes from budgeted money. Black colleges. They will ask sterilization and (3) no con­ students fro m low income Each school is budgeted a cer- for changes and agument_ed traceptive laws. n'at io.nal ~l ack figufeS. , I . " families. tain amount of money to pay a financial aid guidelines. Mrs. ,"The sisters · say 'they are· Following the demonstration In order for a student to certain number o f students Clairborne hopes to have" the organizing around the country they will march to the White> qualify for a National Defense tuition, fees, etc. Scholarship' meeting in the District so. that "·to dem~nd the right to control Ho use. They are asking Howard Student Loan, his parents' il)­ money ' al sci comes from the heads of the loan programs our bodies." We will no longe_r women to participate. ~9me cannot exceed '$ I 0,.000 a ' donations from corporations. can attend. ' • • , . ' ·campbell '"Mississippi 81' c~ntest • • EN61NEERIN6 6RAOUATES f C0 111i11ued jro111 page I ) .. Blacks who wrsh to be en­ • state's election results lightened. by Linda Newton wide range publicity. The He spoke of sixteen-hour Coordinators 1)f the Miss­ student's iclaims have been work days for the faculty of T he , voiced in a number of North­ issippi trip recently held a press East, and a consequent increase eastern newspapers, on Miss­ conference in which they cjted in enrollment during a year's issippi radio stations and o n the numerous violations that were time from 30-250 students. D istrict's radio stat ion committed against Black Miss­ .Speaking of the money hang WTOP . Acco rdin~ to Lightfoo t, issippi voters. The students ups most Bl acks have. Campbell the gro'up has also received cited a number of violations emphasized that The East or inquiries from ~he office of. which include: any Black institution, does not Mississippi Senator James Sten­ I . Whites were carrying have the resources that the: n IS. shotguns and threatening ·the enemy has, and that Bl acks can­ Howard students arc not at­ physical wet I being of Black not afford to "go on the trip" tempting tn bring suit against · people. that they . can pay the same Mississippi electibn officials. 2. Federal observers failed to salaries as the enemy. . Stu9ents are atlempting to find control white clerks at the "We cannot compete," he ad ­ a basis so that Black Mississip- various polling sites. Accor.ding ded. " We need Blacks loyal to ., . pians can, according to Light­ to Bill Lightfoot, County coor: the cause of a better life for all foot, "seek to overturn an un ­ dinato rk one obsel"i.ver stated Black people." "we're not involved in this mess specified number of local elec­ Campbel I then elaborated It's find out time!"Time for you to find out the role tio ns, especially in those coun­ upon The Bl ack News, a pub­ do wn• here." you might play in the company that ha~ desi9ned ties· where Bl acks outnumber lication of the organization ' 3. Black people were or constructed over 8 billion dollars of fossil 1ue . threatened with economic whites." with a circul ation of 35,000. He Quitman Co unty coordir:iator. called the publication the basis hydroelectric an9 ~uclear pJants. ' repercussions if they voted • (especially in rural areas). Chuch Cochrane, recorded the for a ··universal level of con­ There's neve.r been more exciting time tc joi1 4. Threats were made against number of Bl ack and white sciousness" universal because it a student poll watchers. One voters at his voting station. Ac­ reflects the views of Blacks all Ebasco. Ftlrecasts call for electrical power cording to ochrone, "Black over the world. sister, Bonita Bolden, was systems 3!12 times. the size of our present I arrested by Mississippi - voters 9 utnumbered whites by This theme of ·universality national systems. As an engineer at Ebasco was evident throughout Camp­ authorities. 50 but no Bl ack candidate won. you'll be In the forefront of this-activity. Eb eisco Acco rding to county coor­ Trip officials are organizing bell's speech. He declared. "I engineers always have been. dinators, the . 'Mississippi 8 l' all information concerning have reached a.higher level than the one \v.here Blacks still think. knew the state's voting laws these elections that has be~n S'ee your Placement Director soon to arrange a ga,thered by Howard students that one .day · we will all come because each st udent had been Q&A session with the Ebasco representative on educated concerning these laws and other groups. "We have under ,one roof. I happen to enough information to back up rhink that no man has the right the above date: If this is not convenient, write to and each student was given a College Relations Coordinator, Ebasco Services poll watcher's manual. "We any or all of ocr allocations," 'answer. If he did, the revolution wanted t<5 make sure that we stated Cochrone. would be over." Incorporated, TV\O Rector Street, New York, When asked whether much o t ' New York 10006. An Equal Opportunity Employer. - knew the law but we found out "There are two separate lawS' that they (the po ll clerks) didn't his ideology had come ffom in Mississippi, o ne for Black Elijah Muhammed, Campbell know the la~ ." stated Bobby. peo ple and one fo r white Reed, the trip's coordinator. answered. "Yes;" later adding, : EBASCO SERVICES INCORPORATED people," stated Light foot. "The " Black institutions must borrow In spite of the small collec­ laws for Black people are prac­ tion by news media .represen­ from each other and no t spend @a Boise Cascade Company tically non-existent and we their time criticizing. In. that tatives, the accusations o f the want to make the general public Mississippi group have received way a 11 of us wi II be aware of this." strengthen ed.".

• • • Page 4 The HILL TOP Friday, November 19, 1971 •

• T he Hc>'Nar

Whc:,n you present your key c.an.1. you f •I ' .,. ' · ' ' \ •) H O\\·ard Club._ Sc:nd for your Goldc:n can orc:n rhc: doors to any one:- of the: 8759008 Bison Kc:y Card to

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, - n------>------.- ____utml • 1 . ~ • . .> . - - • • I I Christmas Gift Membership Coupon I I Pose Office Box l); Lincolnton Station New York, N. Y. 100) 7 I D Student S l 0.00 D Alumni $20.00 . I O Friends of Univers~ $50.00 , I Enclose C:heck or Mone'' Or.der I • J I ,;I l • • • N At\-t~ _ ------' I . I . ADDRESS ----.:_ I . CIT)' STATE _ --~ ZIP I 1 .. . .• I. I b y Bobb y Isaac partnership betwee n the. . When a person asks where the university and such locai Wilberforce, Centeral State fi; ie~ds again action is o n Howard's campus, organizations as the1 Blackman's depending on his interests, he is D evelopment Cent er, the A plea for' calm and a call for liable to get , all sorts of . Learning Disabilities Center at future friendship has followed responses. • 'children's Hosl>ital, the Peoples the death o f a Wilderforce One might be that ACTION, Involvement Corporation, and University studen t who was shot wh i ch i s short for t he t he Ca pitol East Community during a brawl between students "University Year for . Action" Organization. from Wilberforce and Central program, is housed in the South T hese and other organizations State Universities of Ohio. . along with individual faculty Building across from Rankin • The student body presiden ts Chapel. • . ,s p o n s o rs s u p e r v i s e an d of the two Black universities, Th e fledgling stud e nt coordinate the activities of the Robert Hentz ,Wilberfo rce; and • vo l unteer program here , students after they have chosen ·· William Swift, Central;. spoke administered by the office of the or have been assigned to any and exchanged Black po wer vice president for academic agency. handshakes during a special affairs, is financed from a The volunteers are reported convocation for the dead $ 5 00,000 federal grant. The active ly partic ipat ing in student. program is similar in function to community efforts to deal with The dead student was a fresh­ the non-student Volunteers in various urban proble1ns. Some man from Baltimo re, Marylana, Service to America (VISTA) are working with addicts in drug trea tment centers, some are Mantel Crewshaw. . Student body heads Robert Hentz of Wilberforce University and program in which participants spend ' a year volunteering their working with public school It could not be learned William Swift of Central State University shake hands in a gesture whether anyone had yet been services to local communities youngsters who have learning of reconciliation following the death of one brother in an inter- charged with his death. throughout the country. disabilities, others work as • • school rumble. ACTION, a national program "urban legal advocates," and which began here this fall only v·a r i o us ,,,o t her ' t y p es of counse!,o.f5. • after some "frantic gearing up," according to its director David ACTION is ''not a panacea" S()uthern·LSU merger p<>sp<>n ed, NAACP sues Forbes, is in the process of for getting rid of community ills, sending SO selected student says· Forbes, but both the volunteers to work in various and greater cooperation ._ cent of tne student bity o p- university and the community community organizations in the The proposed · merge r of However, to the disappo int­ posed the merger. city. · benefit. The program holds a predominately Black So uthern ment of SUNO students. the Ther iot also revealed that the The objective of the ACTION "treme ndous amount of University of New Orleans state NAACP has stated that it SUNO ad min istration opposed promise" in bringing about new effort, according to progra1n (SUNO) with the predominately wants a merger o f the schools the original merger pr9posal :1s approaches to allocating coordinat or Donna Cox, is white Louisiana University for the pu rpose o f integration d id the white stud ents at uni ve rsi t y resources in the providing student service in system has been struck down. and plans to fi le suit to force Lo uisiana State University. com1nunity and the efforts relating to health, legal, for the time being, by the state the merger. As a matter T heriot stated. advancement of novel legislature . economic, and educational needs In a telep ho ne interview. " If the white folk had no t taken of some of the city's low-income approaches to education within At a meeting last month the the university, he says~ Dwight T~eriot , editor of the that stand, they· may have gone communities, while at the sa1ne legislature voted down the ahead and merged us." campus newspaper. declared . time offering students a unique o riginal merger pro posal and that this proposed action of the SUNO . is a branch o f the The progra rn reportedly has instead recommended that the learning experience, allowing received the ~nthusiastic NAACP has greatly angered the Southern University system an·d them academic credits in their state Black and white schools SUNO campus. He stated that in has a population of nearly 2000 e n d o rs e m e n t o f U n i ve rsi t y course o f study. President James Cheek. The establish closer relationships a recen t campus poll 95 per students. ~ Mainly it is to "deliver program is one of a growing university resources lo the number of con1munity efforts in community," she says. which· thl' university 1 and its Bl ack N.C. C()lleges hold '"Black M()i:iday' rally The Ho ward progra1n is hut resources a're. currently involvl!d. one of three similar efforts in a T hl' University Year For at the state capitol steps that the predominantly Black· consortiu 111 Act ion progra 111 is onl' of a Nearly 4.000 st udents atten­ Attending the rall y were bill lied when it maintained that of the District's Fl'deral cl'!y number of voluntl!L'r programs ded a Bl ack. Monday rally in_ Howard Lee. Black mayor of it was reorganizing education College and Baltimore's Mo rgan that were' last st~111111cr brought North Carolina to protest the Chapel Hill; 0 .A. Dupree, local for the benefit of all. He stated. State College. Dr. Lawrence tugl'thcr undl!r a new fl'dL·ral tate proposed Reorganization president o f SCLA. and Owusu C ary. an urban planning • " If you have learned any thing agency. AC'TlO . whosl' stated of Higher Education bill' which Sadakuk lqwnd ot ~225 and rl'main in are prominent programs 111 till' by EYita Paschall t hl• prO!!ntlll for o n<> year. ACTIO gr<>UI'. In .1dd1tio11 l(1 • according to Forbes. ;tdrninistcring programs whit:h "OASAT Al:J (The Organ i­ Duri ng Lheir intL·rnship the have previously exi!.tl'd within Lation of African and Afro­ ""'""'"" 1 studl'nts \\'ill L'ach participate other lcdL· ral dl'part111cn1.· . ' Amcr ica n St udents at the full -ti llll' 111 o ne or eight ACTIO has lhl' fl''iponsibilit~ American University) arc now non-profit C0 1JllllllJ1it y of l'rl' ~lt ini.: lll'\V voluntl'l'I' L,· 1~t invo lved in a struggk fntr c;o n­ Or t--oa 1'• 1·1.at 't<> ns.·. su111111er thl' l'rograms w1· l I11· 11 l )1c 1·raml'wor k'" tro l over their money and the program's administratorsworked o f existing. kgisl,1ti on. Thl' right to use it as they see fit. ha rd Io !>l' t u P an active University YL·ar For Adic111 t'- ln the past Black stud~nts the first such proi;ram. paid fees · 10 the Student Asso­ ~~/Ji ri I U11l j<1zz ci.ation of American University -· , every semester and then had to C & H PSYCHEDELIC practically beg to get funds for ;is (;oltr'1nP OASATAU's desperately RECORD Sl1 01' Alice Coltrane stand's as 011c needed programs. There is\ a 3017·19 - 14th S ... N.\V. proposal by the Steeri~g Com­ of the truly spiritual jazz musicians or our age. Her music mittee of OASATA U to not pay Records 64d any more mo ney to the Student is absolete in the sense that it Association. Instead. it is sug­ ignores all the traditional boun­ Black Lights Posters gested that Black students fund daries of jazz. Many jazz buffs their o wn o rganizatio n. find it difficult to relate... to Open Sundays 12 noon-7 p m Alice, as the style that she uses On Oct. 14th, a secret OASATAU Steering Committee at hearing. Mon.· Thurs. 12-noon-9 pm is iri defiance of those same meeting was called o f the $600 loan and the impossibility OASAT AU pleaded no t gui.lty. Fri.-Sat. 11 am-10 p.m. Student Association to review of the SA to determine the ac­ standards. OASATAU was not allowed Phone: 3 3 2-519 1 "ir~egula r ities,, ~nd admi.n~s- curacy of OASATAtJ summer The personnel o n the album trat1ve roblems in the admin is- workers' time sheets. M iller to publical ly present any are among the greatest in the tration o f the OASAT AU ac- -:' urged the Senate to immediately evidence in its defense, al­ wo rld of jazz: Pharoah Sanders, .. LAW BOARDS" count. The report, compiled by freeze all OASATAU a llo­ though the Senators were. sup­ on soprano sax and African WO RKSHOP the Associlation Comptroller· cations d irect the OASATAU plied with documents before the percussio n ; T ulsi o n tamboura; start of the session, according to In p reparatio n for Law Dennis M ~ ll er. not only in-_ secreta;ies to cease wo rking, Cecil Mc Bee, bass; Rashid Ali the Steering Committee. School Admissio ns Test for eluded speC'ific "p r ~blem are~s" suspend service o n the o n drums; Majid Shabaaz, bells Informatio n write o r cal l but also conclusions which OASATAU telepho ne and to· "Although o ur budget was and tambourine; Vishnu Wood_, stated. "OASA1:-AU's leadership close the OASATAU gas charge not frozen , the hearing clearly Oud; Charlie H ayden, bass, and is failing ro carry o ut its account. His recommendatio ns shows that the SA is trying to Alice Coltrane. piano and harp. Ba r R eview, Inc. respo nsibility to its membership fai led in a 9 to 8 vo ted. p ut • brakes on the o r­ 1346 Connecticut Ave. N.W. and to the Studen t Association In the days that fo llo wed, ganization," stated the Steer ing "Journey in Sachidananda" is Suite 2 1 7 , which r esu lts from its OASAT AU was brought before committee. " T he o nly way an inspirati'on to the spirit writ­ allo~a t io,n ." . a Special Committee of Inquiry to get whites off our bac and out ten by an indescribably creative Washingron, D.C. 20036 Miller s report included such and was directed to plead guilty of our pocket is to fu.nd our sister who defi nitely sees a bet­ Phone: 833-3081 (code 202) • • accusatio ns as fa il ure to repay a o r not guilty to charges. own on~ an i zation." ter world . Let us follow!

\ • .~ ' .. } •

• Page 6 . The HILL TOP • Friday, November 19, 1971 • ·~ I

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/ • • '. , ' Friday, November 19, 1971 The HILL TOP Page 7 • I • ·the chains r·-1son ers spea that bind • , Where we arc. • Prison authorities , b,rutally treat S/Ock we arc 11111..:. . For the chains -· that hind Earl B. Gibson, Complainant, r Unusual Punishment and con­ are there is a (so-called Negro Citizen) in ' stantly harrassed in violation of. join·ing us together: the United States, seeks to have the Equal Protection and Due And my heart reaches criminal charges brought nut to y11u Process Clauses" of"the. Four­ for we inhale the against Louis S. Nelson Warden teen th Amendment of the of San Quentin State Prison, for same oppression United States. " Vio lation o f Federal Civil and exhale an Rights and Acting Other Than a identical cry of f1cedo111 . WHEREFORE. it is respect­ Warden" to wit: Truth must develop fully requested that Indi.ctment out of realization issue-arrest Defendant Louis S. that we .. On July 21. 1971 within of­ Nelson. as Law and 'Equal Jus- who roam the streets ficial had the Complainant in search of placed in the Prison Adjustment tice provides under the Suprem­ oursclvc~ Center (isolation hole) where acy Clause and Criminal Civil are mentally enslave prison officials 'informed him Rights Acts. United' States v. pr 1s11 n e rs that he was being refer to the Gue.st 383 U.S. ( 1967). of the mind's capacity District Atto rney' offi : _,Pf to unclerstand/acknowlcdge Marin County, o charg ~ of, I rac1s111 suspicion o f murder. Finally: I will testify if it in it's greatly camot1·1ged becomes necessary to that the for Jn : ' , above mentioned facts of Police and those of us physically­ On August 2 1, 1971, the Brutality .... etc. c11priso1H·d within prison official s, Lieute­ in so much that \\C nant A.S. Nelson and L:ieute­ I I declare under .penalty of can reach 11ut and nant Zimmer and others upon and chain s ca using open (7) hour$. ~hile brison officials perjury the foregoing~s true and touch our state 11f orders of Warden Louis S. wounds (cut s) and injuries to be continued to beat and assault correct. Dated. November 7. capti\ 11y. .. clsnn. ordered Complainant inflicted upon Complainant's him including shots were fired 1971 . H1)\vever. out of said cells... of ,._he Adjust- person. Further Complainant at point blank range around who C- hcatcn an

their blackjacks. guns. fists. feet nude for approximately seven being subjected to. Cruel and Earl 0 8 . Gibson and not a\\are 111 11 or I being cnpri~oncd and 1l11t ahk 111 t.:PUl1t1.·r.1ll 11' Sister Angela HU beg iris jazZi prOgram at Lor~on rs pat11.·111l~ .11111c1pa1111t!

' \ind some ol u~ by Robert "The Black" Taylor . t1l Bla{;k men in prison. Presently. however. Federal Howard Ja1.1 gr1lup. ~leaded b) do nut •'\'l'.ll real 11e "Stuc,Jents." he s1a1cd. "can City College. has perhaps the Bvrd.• al Lorton during1- the sum- ( h.1t A rrn_g.1-.1111 of 111U!>iC instruc­ immcdiat<;ly neg.in to br ng us most extensive· ed ucational m er. she i' waiting. tion and appreciation will soon us hook!> on virtuall~ an· sub­ program operating in the Lor­ Another very irllteresting or what she tk~ 1r c' he i'n itia1cd at the Lrrectional Complex · by the so we can give them t< . the offering of college credit cour­ finding mission was! a survey 111 H1iward Un iver!>ity Department brothers." ses. conducted to find 1 out the And someh11\\ you lel.'I • 1if Ja11 Studies. Professor Goines. a r cent The predominately white reading intcr£sts of the inmates that the !-ty..,tc111 " Under the direction of depar­ addition to the ll relea..,cment id ll ue~ . his a!>sistant LePnard Goines . fact-finding mission it was 10 be operating legal service I no t I r1.'l.'d o m. hut the' Ja11 st udjes department determined that the Lorton 1n­ bureaus at Lorton. I . Drama • Plays ( I 3). Criticisms hopes to hold ··co-operative mn1es could benefit from · \ The Howard program will be an act ot t11ke111::.m t11 education al.. classes in music I) an instructmental music next. Donald Byrd submitted ( 12). Classic (33), Black (77). Ja11 Mouern (24 ). Colleotions (I I) thetH}. histelf (81 ), Modern (23). I lam (60). , pree Christ iac ity ( I 7) pressed ·a (iire need, and want, perience. and _ vesligate ways in which · they chain~: not only fc1r music instruction, 7f art supplies and dram could provide services for the · 4. Po litical Scienc and I wonder why but also f~)r more academic and ' material incarcerated brothers Lorton. Modern ( 31 ~. Classical , dea1h vocation al instruct ion. Goines also revealed that the He made special' note of the ( 18), Marxist (53), Pan-African 111 ust be the on I y passpn rt Accorqing to Byrd, "The discovered that the Inmates need for legal aid and services: (74 ). World (18) · , to freedom. brothers expre~~ed a great con­ ·were somewhat ura n cc I n,·c-. ciga tor Part­ between tlte fascist courts of cident. ~ that we could not receive a fair Angela Davis and Ruchell time needed at lea!>t 25 hours . I 1 . Marin C(~\lnty, San ·Rafael, This being so we were unable : hearing before ·such a judge. Ma G ee were 1nstrumenta 1n ex- per week. Investigating appli­ California and the California to give any response to the 1 The purpos.e ol these illegal posing the corrupt sate penal cations in Washington. Need Department of Corrections to fraudulant accusations of this \ ''Gag Laws" are to Gag anyone complex and the legalize your own car plus must type ' I h . t railroad us. Hugo A. Pine}!. fascist prison administration; \ who attempts to expose t e slavery t h at It perpetuates. 25 wpm. Also must be 21. John L. Spain, Louis N . having accomplished the second corruption and r"aci~m that exist I conclude there is no justice Call Mr. Shook o r .Mr. Bell phase of their diabolical and in- ' not only in the fascist judicial a.I 362-9500. Talamentez., Fleeta Drumgo, in America for them r us; it is -=:;:;;;::::::;;:::::;;::; David Jo hnson and Willie Tate­ tended plot, (the first being I system, but througho u.t the cor- a hoax and a sham. six innocent men to the gas murder) they then proceeded to rupt police ruled States of Meanwhile serve tpe pe4f world of love, crypto-religious , attachment THAT the Nixon Administration last week came out against a proposed bill which peact: and veneral disease some of us have for them plus would have provided 530 million a year for a campaign to find ·cures for Sickle Cell because you can't face the the decadent civilization they necessary task of helping have created, political drugs like Ancmiac- a disease which prectornin'ately afflicts Blacks ' M a r x·i st - Len inism, bourgeois • • organize your people for their THAT recently a newspaper in the African country of Zambia polled its won1en armed interantional liberation democracy or capitalism which readers and asked them who did they consider as their ideal man. Fol'Jlrty-four per cent of struggle that must and will be do not speak entuely to our those responding chose former heaveyweight champion ( He must be the for our survival ... you will do needs, problems or· objectives as a race: cultural drugs like those ' greatest) · that. In plainer words you will do exactly what you want to. male /female ~omosexual tHAT over one-half of all the men sitting on the death rows of this nation's prisons So I do not intend here to inspired clothes you have got on, arc Black and that several states over 90 per cent of the men executed for rape have been ram a red, black ~nd green ·fist or the mass media propaganda Black (AmcriKKKan justice) ' · · · down your throa't. I do not machine I dealt with last week. THAT despite clain1s thiJt Black people are progressing in America in 1947 the average intend to "blow your mind" to All these too can be habit • co~'i,\'C\~rf on page 13 white man earned $2,500 1nore than the average Black man, however, the recent census hits with my ideologically show s that in l 970, the average white was ea'rning 53.603 more than the average Black worker On the college level, the 1nedian income for a Black college graduate was $8,567 ' ·What's the pr.oble'm for a white with the same education the median yearly income was$ l 2.437 (Yes we a re by LaDonna C. Prown had to be confirmed with an progressing, directly to povert y and extinction) "Elsie" he was to meet in Be­ : THAT t here arc l. l 1nillion 1nore Black ·wo1nen in Ame~ica than Black men ( I'tn a thune later. greedy man) Befo re going to Bethune with THAT Marion Barry refused to endorce the Black candidate, John Neverson, in the him, she introduced him to a WiJrd One school board race over his white opponent. Father Kemp. charging that the· friend who was also interested pL'Ople ·in Ward One were "too divided" (I thought it was his job to unify the1n) in the same arrangement. They all started toward Bethune, but "Ciccerole" as he called himself suggested that the friend wait outside of Dooglas Hal I in-Case The HILLTOP "Elsie" came by. To add to the legitimacy, Ciccero le rattled off I Editor ...... : ...... Ro bl' rt N. Taylor , The Black (non-stop) a description of M;ina.ging Editor ...... Regis V. Lake "Elsie" complete with licence Fl.!aturc Edit or ...... Larry D. Coleman plate number, color and make News Editors ...... •...... "...... Theola Miller; Kathleen Wills of car, etc. Sports Editor ...... , .. Lena Williams ,. Last week a notice was passed Once they started to Bethune, Business Manager ...... : ...... Betheye Powell he changed d irections by saying Ph oto~hy Edit o1 , · · · · · · · · · · · · ..." .. · . · ...... : ...... RicharJ Dnuglas around the do1mitoties warning she might come' up Georgia (' opy l•" ,.tor ...... Linda. Nl.!wfon women students about a so­ mod~ling Avenue. So they walked down Associa~i ...Editor ...... pita Paschall called school repre­ Geo rgia until t h~y reached the Layout;vuitor ...... , ...... :-Ronald Free1nan sentative. Going by the name of Hot Shoppes wher'e he ~ggested The HILLTOP. largest and bes1 known Black s1udcnt publication in the world. Is published John, John Ferrar or Adrienne, they take a bus: Sh~ refused. weekly by the students of lloward University, except for vacations and exa1nination periods. he would offer a sister a chance Subscriptions arc S4.00 per year and S2.00 per semester. Mail all ch'ecks, money orders, arid to participate in a modeling Then he suggested they look for a phone to call the woman and lct tt•rs to The HI LL TOP. Student Life Offict'. llowarcl Universiry. \Vashington. D.C. 20001. school program; giving a time see if she had left, but he headed "I and place for a meeting. Some­ • times he would ask that the for an area away from the crowd near the Hot Shoppes. pr;(spect . bTing money and 1 rll"ake-up. One sister who When it - became apparent he followed through on the invita­ would not use a public phone • ("somebody might hear what Simm9ns reports • tion was raped . Pho ne calls offering opportu­ I'm saying"), the coed headed Carmichael back to campus. , nities in modeling have in­ From then on his attitude Harha.ri Gani. We talked ~ 10 members of the creased in the dorms, but sirce ~ honored . changed. I would like to con1mend the staffs of their papers and they notices have ,been posted most Ciccerole asked her if she editor of lh4! HILLTOP .. The said that they have been influen- of the residents ha,ve repo1'ted • would be interested in model­ BJ;.ck .. and his sta.ff for the ex­ . ced greatly by the HI LLTOP It has been repo rted that any calls to the deans. ~ ing. She said no. Next he asked ·pert j\1b they have been doing and NCCU at Durham has brother Stokely Carmichael has Now there is a new twist to repeatedly why she had told a all year. adopted the Campus-Speakout been awarded an honorary doc­ what is undoubtedly the same friend where she was going and section. tor of Jaws degree by Shaw end. 'one of the s4sters in Beth­ was she afraid of him. When she Melvin Perry. Frederick • University of Raleigh, N.orth. une told of an encounter she The Red, Black and Green kept walking, he began pushing Smith and myself visited NCCU. Carolina. had with a "brother" in Do,uglas A&T Bannett, Shaw, U.N.C. Hat is off to "the Black" and hi s. Hall. He offered her a position her, saying that she "would not and· U.N.C.G . this past week­ staff. at a new store called " Purdue's" make it back to campus" and end and they all had heard of • .. in Georgetown on seventh and since she had put him through the HILLTOP ' Jeff Simmon'~· K Streets. The pay was to be • ' $3.25 an hour -but her hiri'ng . . . • .. .. •t .,, • - .- .. • • '- . • -.

Friday, November 19, 1971 The HILL TOP Page 9 • commentaries ·• • • Reader calls ·HILLTOP is a clique LASC challenged over budget Cummings responm • .. .to critics $ 11 5.00 for the secretary. Dear Editor: We want many A.A.s not just Dear Editor: · yo ur administrative clique's ac­ .. It is indeed very discouraging For wuite a while, · 1 have claimed poet-columnist of the It is the concensus of a group to any progressive student on In examining the budget fur­ noticed that many articles and , H ILtTOP. Remember, of concern students o f Howard ther , we see that over 22% of campus to realize that one commentaries ,which have been HILLTOP is the only student University that action sh ould be poet's works are being con­ the budget ($ 1 I ,404 .4 7) was written the "HILLTOP" have media oh campus and I am sure, taken against the Liberal Arts spent before it was even ap­ tinuo usly published in THE undo ubtedly lacked many if you ever know the value of a Student Council in relation to HILLTOP . Who is A.A.? Is she ,proved by the rest of the coun­ essential facts. These facts the only capable poet in a cam­ media to o ppressed peoples, its budget fo r this year. cil. In relation to this fact, we While viewing the bud"get, we . would have been most impor­ pus of over ten thousand you will give others the chance tant for students to acquire a to develop their 'little' poten­ took special interest in the fact students? Is she the only student ' true and complete understan­ that L.A.S.C. has a total budget suggest that the council in­ with a strong command of the tials. ding of what the situation is all of $50,315_.25. Shockingly troduce an amentiment which foreign language in the entire A member of your clique puts about. • would call for an approval of at campus? ls A.A. the queen-bee.. it this way, 'A.A. is the type of eno.ugh, we notice that Because I realize that there of yo ur staff or someone you sister who whenever she writes, $I 0,950.00 has been allocated lest 2/3 of the council before are many "attacker s" who any and all money is spent 1n curry-favor to meet your own it is cool.' for the pu'rpose of stipends and always strike before they in­ the near and far future. social needs? This is no doubt the general tuitions. This means that over vestigate, I predict that there I am not trying to build a mental structure of your clique. one-fifth ( I / 5) of the total may be one of these articles in vicious circle (brothers against Please stop or at least curb budget is being spent on the this issue of the " HILL TOP.'' sisters) but simply trying to the nepotism and curry­ fo ur executives. We would After reviewing the above The reason I have predicted this eradicate the malady of your favour itism that are so rampant like you to keep in mind that facts we have two questions; is because the Liberal Arts administr ation. Give other on campus. They. are obstacles the L.A.S.C. executives make up L.A.S.C.- What are you trying . Student Council submitted its poets the chance to express to progress and worst, mentally their own stipends which in­ to do to Howard Un iversity budget last week and it ap­ themselves' Some brother s from rape the many potential poets cl udes $155.00 per month for Liberal Arts Students? What are peared in the HILLTOP . A few the continent submitted better yo u have so 'niggerly' neglected. the president, only $ l 25 .00 for you going to db? wise individu .. ls had questions works than A.A.'s, but only one the vice-president, an alarming about the budget and they asked · Pap . of them was published. $140.00 for the treasurer and John Johnson neither myself or other executives of L.A.S.C. about it. \ The questions were good and Commenlary~ quite important. While an ­ Black men-women white swering these questions. I • realized that many students may , ' clear o f Miss Debbie. by Larry Coleman 'simple things in life. She makes what he wants, when he wants it have been asking the same ' quest ions, white the "attackers" no demands on me, and with and she has a symbol. It's a very The intent of this article 1s Bl ack people today are con­ her I feel like a man." neat ar rangement, and accor­ not to put the entire blame for never even considered me or fronted by an evil more in­ the other executives. Somewhat dismayed with ~ch ding to Tom, "everything is the defection of the Black man sidious than the A-bomb, more First, the question was asked an answer, I asked the brolher if working out fine." H aving on the Black woman. I know deadly than sterilizion, more considering too much money a Black woman could not dig known Julie for less than three well that there are all kint:ls of awesomely devastating than a being spent for st ipends. I ex­ the same things, and i:nake him months, they presently entertain brothers who could truly care police raid . o n Pan­ plained to them that during the feel the same way? He respon­ no thoughts of marriage. And less about anything Black, ther/ RNA/Musl im headquarters. ded, " I guess maybe sOQ1e of on this note, Tom emphatically especially Black wo man. But in summer the L .A.S.C. executives That evil is the · defection the worked at a rate of $2.00 an them could, but I haven't run states " I won't be entertaining this case, we are dealing with Black man from the Black hour and that the president into any like that yet. And such thoughts in the near future the exceptions. It is time that we woman and hi ~ turn to the white worked at a rate of $2.50 an believe me, I have tried. Most of or otherwise." So much for explore o urselves and honestly ho ur. l also explained to them , woman. • them are hung up on color , Tom. examine what is there. The defection comes at a very even if they won't admit it, and Sisters when queried as to These .are changing times for that the executives, who work 1 cr itica\ point in our struggle for th& remainder either want to how they viewed the entire the Black man. He is seeking now on an average of 30 hours liberation, and_its implications I a week are actually earning less boss you around, or have you Black man/ white woman answers and solutions to the command our attention. In this. spending an afternoon. in a question responded quite riddle of white oppression that than $ 1.5 0 an ho ur. article, the point is not to shed Second, there was a questio n museum, or strolling through predictably. Most stated that daily confront him. He is I ight o n an issue that has as to whether or not funds had the park? And baby, if you ain't they ' were pissed off or in moving upward and demanding already been given too much got no car , you ain't nobody." somewhat upset about the mere mo re of him.self and society. His been spent witho ut the Coun­ cil's approva I. The re were light, rather it is to inve~tig ~ John met his gir lfriend in high notion of -such a realtionship. nature is aggressive, necessarily the causes, analyz~ the f' ots, emergency s it uations when schoail. They plan to get One sister , we'll cal I her Deb­ aggressive, so sisters bear with money was spent without the and ho pefully sugges~ w y · at married as soon as he leaves bie, gave me an opinion o f him. Due to overt acts of white alleviating the p r oblem~ Council's approval. This was Howard. So much for John. Black men, and the type that she racism, the Black man· had to • Rather than solely pre~nt my whe n the Political Science Tom, another brother with a prefers. have his woman do for him own analysis of this mafady, I Society needed money to go tn white girl friend, comes from a Debbie does not Ii ke men what he could not have done sought the opinio ns and ob­ Mississippi . Any other times. wholly different bag. His thing who are too aggressive too for himself and lived . This too servations of other brothers and money was only spent for things is getting over ... physically and soon. By aggressive, she does. is changing. • sisters, some of which have or whi ch were needed to carry out :-C::-· financially. Tom met his girl at not necessarily mean in the had white "friends." One such And Black women, come off the job o f L.A.S.C. effectively a peace demonstration. Her fr ee physical sense alone. If a man's brother is John. of this lady trip. Some of you o r either for entertainment in love and free reefer and free total personality lends itself to Jo hn is a b.rother who would have bee~ so damn busy trying which case money was made mo~ey fell right in Iine with overtness or openess, she is tur­ win few beauty contests, and hi!i to be ladies, that you've forgot­ and replaced. Tom's principles. It was " love" ned off ... immediately. She ten how to be a women. If the bankro ll would rai~e no Tuition is paiJJ for all student at first sight. Tom, by no means prefers a man who comes on eyebrows. His mind, however, is man wants you to go kite nying, government offic.ials on the ignorant, relates that Julie views quietly and later builds himself. alert; his personality is warm or salamander hunting or any H.U.S.A. and L.A.S.C. level him as a symbol of her no-n­ In other words, for all you and o utgoing. Yet, Jo hn has a other unglomoro us, un-ladylik·e becauses of the amount of time racist attitudes on life. He has brothers who are unwilling to white girlfriend. Why? Well, ac­ type happening go .along with student gover nment officials no problems with that type of change or put on a front, at him. It will matter mo re than cord in~ to John, "she digs the spend in their daily respon­ arrangement, however. he gets least fo r a period of time, steer yo u think. sibilities and as an incentive to perform their duties in an effec­ Opinion: tive manner. en letter to Cheek In the final analysis. the budget and the man ner in which osition is assum d t th' . it is bro ken down il> a rr1:11y I thi nk we, as members o f the direction). Meanwhile in an un­ much apathy, ra1s1ng questio ns P e a 1s time,, . b h . . . as to our maturity and self it will no t o nly st'ffl1 issue, ecause t e maJor 1s~ uc 1:. university community, must publisized incident the entire but tend to breed he progress "What is L.A.S.C. do ing?". anti take serious notice of our School of Architecture student determination. This action can c aos. anar- h h . . chy and distruction. I e answer to t at question is body, at a meeting with dean not alone be attributed to the respective pos1t1ons, o ur But on the oth M that "We have sponsore

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• Page 10 • The HILL TOP Friday, November 19, 1971 Ujamaa srhool Urball Sociology class hosts Chisho/,ffl. edU<·ates Bla<'ks by Kathleen Wills by Evita Paschall A crowded 8:00 Friday mor­ in Room 105 Locke Hal I (The name on the ballot - along About her own candidacy. ning class is someth:ng of a Ne_w Building) exploded into with several other local Blacks she stated " Al ready I have Bla ck ('hildren are the future rarity on Howard's campus laµghter'. Al}d Congresswoman - would have on the political sc9ut s o ut al l O\l er the country lcadt.:rs of Black people. Ujamaa u" less there's an important Shirley Chisolm, first Black. structure of Mississippi. hunting delegate votes. And Lihcratio n School is educating exam going ·on - .or unless female member of that body in:· Cleveland, Carl Stokes hacJhis when they (white candidates) little black minds. so they will somebody nanH.. d Shirley history and representati ve fro m problems, too, she conceded - want to hargain with me - and be ahlc to upgr?dc anti heir their Chisolm is there . . •. ' Betlfo rd-Styvesant, New Yo rk , the biggest of which. was his they will - they'l l have to come race progrcfis. "People come up to me and laughed too - 1n spite of her­ inability to convey to Bl acks the to my suite. I'm not go in g The Ujamm1 Liberation say ' /\re y a ho lding hack her indignation. many Uncle Tom5' and Aunt Chisolm. her ""'ild trip" will 111 t 11 1r pa rc-nh. tL'ac her.:. Jilt! result of his candidacy this she continued, furious. Jemimas ... who, like so many make her a major bargaining th L' lll~I! 1vc-,... \ , 11 d A k ha r. ,1 November. the state o f .. But hecause I've arrived on whi-te expedient I iberals. you power at the Qemocratic I L'.IC.:hcr ,J I t 11 ,· \Chnol Mississippi will never be the • the scene no"" and have hegun find that at the time to stand up National Conventidn in 1972. I hL· -..chool 1-.. n<'t 111... c mosJ same. she contends. • to challenge. a 101 of them are ,. anti be counted for the record. " The real question is not nur.,·n '>L hooh. Accoruing to 'nuv.. getting shaken up and arc the co nferences. the meetings, whether I'm going to win the Al...h;1r t hL'rL' 1s .111 1n lo rmal " fhe sad thing abo ut it 1s. running around talking ahout she continued, "is that the Bl ack after having ind ulged 1n Pre~dency: it's putting together IL' l:t t 11 ) Jl 'It Ip \\'It h t It L' pa f L' 11 t ~ a t1 d 'that 1 illk 98-pounll-.. \ \ Ji.11 I \\,,., d111·t101 111 \'.1 Ii.ad l41'1.1.t11.i11 11d i' 'I h I 11 l lc-1\\.11.t I' I I I I ·d Td [ ,,, \1 f.-1 , I l .'-

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' Draft Counseling An1oco Su per - Pren11un1 g 1vt s you al l these benefits p l Ls· Len e r2 1SOn \Vhy rnor\. nPv\ cir buy Prc; switch tr A n1oco and o ther gc:isa l 1n es

.. ' Friday, November 19, 1971 The HILL TOP •• Page 11 r . . Ch ir ·initiates '-Back Ho01e Hour Asha feels . . • ; shot is heard, by Tom_ Terrell Hey Brother - tomorrow???????? Rankin Chapel, with the aid you with the processed hair of the Ho ward Gospel Choir I just heard, has added a new dimension to quiet as it's kept, '. ASHA ADIJA its mo nthly events. This is the that the revolution " Back Home Hour"'. . . the gone start, Back Home. Hour - any of Y'all tomorrow. remember them soul stirrin Yeah ... Well A Revoluti ona r~ ·~ Prayer revival '1)eetings that would run Man l hope you people on for days? Well it's the same, can make it without me Revolution. only it's not exactly back home; you sec rm planning on do not let U!\ run but it"ll do. gitting over. in fear from your to1norrow The service was led by Sisters purpo~c­ Gui Murray and Jackie Cadlett, And you Sisti!! -- for your purpn~c i~ U'> two :members of the Choir. As with your beautiful Oh Revolution. usual (for those of yo u who nadinola skin do not let us turn don't remember/ kno w) in bet­ and ge nuine 1nimtat1on our heads in retreat ween songs, members of the blonde wig, of an o ppressing cracker­ cho ir o r the congregation In the spirit: Howard students "testify" at last week's 'Back Home' ls you gonna be there for we are the oppressed. Revo lution, testified .how the Lord had gospel session. Tom the Shutte r Photo wh. en we Black masses. changed and en riched their are ready to do thing, do not let lives. Jo morrow??? us nide in shame fro m After the testifying was over, Tyler didn't waste ariy time. She front this time: · She asked for Uh .. lt's like this, our Blackness- Dean Crawford introduced the immediately asked everyone to those who helieve in the Lord I would but they're ' for Black are we. choir and they did two of their forget and d rop all their out­ to say so as an affirmative of having this out-of-sight My Revolutio n, songs. " I've Come a . Long ward pretensions and to return faith and many more did---but sale at Woodys do no t let us laugh Way," and the " Twenty-third to their simple past and sing a did they really--and if they did, o n suede coats, with the cracker­ Psalm." The Celestial Singers simple hymn ... " Jesus Keep Me did they really to morrow. for we are the. ones were cal led fo rward and they Near The Cross." She began to know why? Hey you there ... being laughed at. did a song (I think the title was sing and everybody, as if it was with the needle and all, Revo lutio n, " What We Need Is More Sunday, jo ined in. Dr. T yler The Jackson Singers--5 men WiJJ you join us - do not have us Love") that brought the people began to talk-sounding like a from D :C. were·the last to sing a part of you, denying " Uhuru"­ o ut o f their daze just as quickly and sing they did. They said : the in this fight fo r uhuru sho uld , as an usher's fan across your m1n 1ster. H er sermon was way of sin is death to al I men - for freedom, be o ur cry. face. Then they left the pulpit " Hung-up on Hang-ups" and by can you get to that maggot brain tomorrow?? Revo lutio n-Revo lut ion but were cal led back by the the rime she was .through - I ain't it funky, J.B.? ain't that Huh?? ... What you say?: yo u are libeeration. • • audience. They then did believe there was a number of askin for trouble, Marvin Gaye? Revolution, what Revolution???? for o ur need another number which I'm sorry people with a few less hang-ups. you mean a Revolution is about is to liberate o urselves. to say I didn't get the tit1e of At the end of her sermon Sister " Back Home H our" was an to begin, Please Revolution. and sat rlown exhausted. experience. If you missed it this tomorrow????.? come upo n us- Joe Jackson, president of the Tyler asked those who were in time--do n 't worry. There was No Man, fo r some o f- us choir calille up and reintrocjuced need of prayer to come for­ enough of a response to make it a Revolution ain't about to begin are afraid a sister you may remember if. ward. Few did. She then asked a co.ntinuing .thing. In case you IT'S ALREADY ST ARTED!! to come upon you. you went to Gospel f'ligh t those who at least h3-ve a friend have any doubts and wan t to Will somebody be there during H omecoming--Dr. who was in need (o co me for­ keep on shucking--remember when t he first I A.A. Arlene Harris Tyler. Sister ward. Much more came down 99-1 / 2 won't do. • Am I deceiving you, Theatre hosts play dedicated to .Black males By studying you this way. In sleep? Nyya Lark when he was a dancer in meaning_ful shift. Bobb.y that still floats thro ugh I saw your face today. To be young, Black and a Vaudeville and the countless T he play was well performed the caverns o f this writers's Its aura vibrating. child of the revo lution is ·a part times when he first met his late and all the parts evolved har­ mind. A line that says a great Creating the illusion, o f the harsh present and wife Doris. These actors and moniously through well repre­ deal if you think about it, " He's Of transcending ho pefully a better future, but their respective roles demon­ sentation of the characters, yet Black and He's in trouble, just Your physical skin . what if your o ld, Black and still strate the coldest trip o f life, are they really just charact ~r s. like yo u and me." A question of living in the past? A past of d if­ reality. There was one line referring to unity? Bu t now·your bl'auty is frozt•n. • ferent ideals, as past o f trying to Adell is the very image of the Years of music please the Whiteman,. of trying har tired filled with fear and wo rries for and weak eyes yo u see today's those she loves. She is thrity 'T~e Organization' yo uth fighting, dying fo r a years o ld and she wants to enjoy Hu <:1uh change, !no longer trying to ap­ what little time that is left, thus . ( Co111i111a•d .fi·o111 1>11gC' I) pease those who held' the Black she stresses the importance o f is '. Tibbs at his ·best race d own fo r so long. You trying to get a job to her father operate the c lub whi ch would Tibbs subco nsciously until the realize that they areJbeco ming and b r other. Her father by Henry Anderson have as its nucleus the I 5,000 stro ng Black men the hard way, ho wever,. .. "just couldn't go and end, then assiting him to the Howard graduates 1n New by fighting the enemy. You feel run down to meet the man 1ike realization of who two of the Yo rk. Sidney Portier is back on the big guys are. an o ld flame o f forgo tten youth she did" (referring to his wife). screen/scene in ''The Organ iza­ The Tribune quoted \Ving as saying that the club ha!> al o (that strove fo r ·manhood ) He still has pride left in his t ion. A flick that has proved in T ibbs at the beginning is un­ leas<;d two Rolls Royccs t11 flicker, but just fo r an instant wo rn soul, the father dwells in my estimation that best Virgil der the impression that he's on­ chauffeur Howurd itcs t11 and because " the man" has sup­ the past with a to uch o f fantasy. Tibb's picture up to date, even ly dealing with the murder of from the Club and the airports pressed every urge that would Qne really realized that he is overshadowing the highly ac­ one man until he receives a and train sta t ion~ . make you strong enough to caught between two wo rlds. claimed award winning " In the myster ious pho ne cal I at his , Due to the prc~cnt ~ ' all' lll strike back. Bobby, represents o ur Bl ack heat of the night" that initiated home asking him to become conflict and controversy t hl.' The play "Ceremo nies ... ", youth of the st reets, making it this ritualistic program of apart of a secret meeting. He at­ exact state of the New Yo rk relates no new story to its the best way they kno w how. snappy forte. tends. unknowing that what they H oward _ Club and111r audience . It is as clear today as Stealing, gambling trying to " The Organizatio n" is the have to say to him will cause Association is hard Ill dl.'tcr ­ o n the stage a fact o f the Black beat Whitey, perhaps life itself. international businessmen who him to make decisions he. is un ­ mine All that is clear and for Males inadequate feeling of Taking chances to escape, "This wo rk outside the bo unders o f sure and later sorry. He is con­ . ' manhoo d . The Black wovian place was built fo r us to die in , certain is that Howardites are the law ~ngaging in the distri­ fronted by them with the option doing something in New Yo rk . becominig the. breadwinner and if we're no t careful it will bution of the law engaging in of dismandling the o rganization because her mate was refused actually happen." The line o f the class latent do pe pushers with them o r leaving them to do the better jobs because of his alternatives, either yo u make it have in their possessio n fo ur it alo ne. Tibbs ,agrees after a Develop perfect speech easily and skin. The play takes yo u into o r you don't; Bobby never made quickly! Send m9ncy order fo r millio n do llars worth o f hero in night o f hesitatio n and contem­ EASY STEPS TO CORRECT the heart o f Harlem, to a family it in the play. sto red up in a furnisher plant in plation into destroying the SPEECH. $2.95 hardcover. Soft which consists of a wido wed Theo, the o lde r brother who which a group of young vigi lan­ organization with them bound $1.30.1.R. Bellegarde, 2720 father with a daughter and 2 realized that their only chance tes co-op hoping that within N. Hutchinson, Pine Bluff, Ark. providing they remain under hi s 71 601 . sons. The daughter, Adell, finds for a better life i~ by going in their crime .the police when in­ arm and do not make a move ~ that she is working herself into with a hustler named, Blue vestigating will stum.ble o ver the until he gives the sign al. They a grave, just as her mothe r did. Haven, who will help Theo sell truth. As fate would will it they. do unfortunately for them but ALTE R NAT I VE~ The younger brother, Bobby, his boot- leg liquo r. Theo feels do not. Instead they are to deal not for the audience TO A BORTl ()N shoplifts, the eld er brother, that, "the only crime you com­ with a murder that up to this From there the picture moves Theopolus, makes bootleg corn­ mit is the one you ge1 caught point is debatable. Yes its • in a jigsaw best described in the whiskey and the father plays in." This o utlook seems to hold another who done it? And why? BIRTHRIGHT contest o f the film itself. Its at checkers everyday with his o ld some truth for the family starts A question that as the flick con­ the Lincoln theatre. 526-3333 . friend and recalls those days to prosper, o nly there ts a tinues becomes immaterial to call: • •

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The HILL TOP. Friday, November 19, 1971 Our brethren run to catch the rising star Coming, coming up in many directions • Swiftly, swiftly pacing across the pale desert leaving mourningt ehind Persuing, persuing th spirit of our fallen leaders who's anguish still brings us hope Grabbing, grabbing aJ we chase those near us Reaching, reaching adross the realm of space snatching cosmic rope and the masks off our brothers&sisters breaking, breaking al demonic shackles Praying, praying to Allah and we destroy non life Flaming, flaming all ~nemy Killing.killing death ~eath Recreating ou~elves • .. · Multiplying. Oh yes,IAllah your star I spot Oh, 1ma mu your cresentpoem I am • Oh, Elijah we sew th' flag all has risen Oh, Sister Teer, Nati?n tir:ne my children know the scenes, fell the acts no script, live living dn the planet Oh, Toure, Oh, Aski" Praise be to you Pharoah write the hy~n, Trane and. Sun Ra are holding the star. Alice your smile is in every cloud , We fill the earth and f ollow, persue until each for~head bears .· the star and the moo shape . ·leader of Bfaclcness the sun bu.rns almigh y llPOn our backs as the journey continues thro'ugt, the nights His hands were lie was a coarse , rough and brutal revolutionar) 1971 Amma Serwaa for and his initial thought Iris Holliday they had fought/wo11 were always many a batth·. of liberati~ a Wh en ht' walked nation, the streets, his nation- BLACK LEA ER PHOTOS BY ANGLADE ,TOM the newoes trembled a Black nation. and • in f car E\· ~ryt hing about him wa~ the SHUTTE R.D . of their own firm () if,!norance. and his m~e prescence Tl1ert' was nevrr • demanded resp<·ct. hesitation And only his woman·· in dealing with ' the supplement of his life all who stood knew, in the way of hb

he gave submit all now ·- work for he publica ti on .,. IS on Black .... I no page to • • more .. tarry colenf'an. ' every monday.

l By Angela L. Wilsol}

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' .. •• • • Page 13 Friday, November 19, 1971 The HILL TOP To~re calls for unity • Problem Homecoming '71 against foreign forces - • . Ami.d nµny. ma n.~ apprehen­ tion of monies that are paid by by Emanuel Muganda (Continued from page 9) s1 ve eyes. pre par at ion·1 for t hj! all ~t u dents. It was with this in President Seko u Toure of calling for a dialogue with hassles. he wou)d put her some • 1971 -72 Bison Home coinio·g mind .. that · the• s um of Guinea has called for all racist South Africa. '$26.267.90 was allocated f(~ through SOIJ1e hassles. too. began. Unknown to a great African states to create o rgan i­ "These groups (of states)," he There was not a security car nuJTiber of Howardites this the(putting ~)n of Ho nleco1nin ·zation to counter reactionary said, "depend directly o n the 'During the span of s<)me ten o r po liceman to be fo und preparation began during the .fo rces on the -continent. will of colo nialist Eyro pe and (naturally), but ,by this time she summer. A time when even days of festivities .. there was I I n a recent intervie w the continuaticin of the struc­ o nly o ne event which required was close to the Medic al . some of the most vocal.critics of published in Algiers he to ld a tures of the Euro pean, eco n ~ my ~ny type ·of financia·I •con­ School. Also, the re were two H o m e~om ing . w~r~ .. n estled correspondent of " Revolution and c ulture----." '·The· Africa o f males she recognized and sto p­ securely in their summer ac- tribution from students. That Africa:· a weekly o rgan of submission has been •. of more • • l , t being the Isaac Hayes Show and • ped to talk to them (Ciccero le tlVll teS. • Algeria's Natio nal Liberation consequence than rev¢ tut ionary did not leave. howeyer). When During the course of the.surri - Pre-D awn show handled by Front that: Reactio nary Africa Africa," the Guinean leader .LASC. she got within :view of Bethune m er a ch a i r m an o.f t he has created its terrain. said. meanin·g that neo­ there were too many people to . Homecoming Committee .• was. The total allocation for revolutionary Africa must colonialist Africa has succeeded Homecoming was $26.167.90. attempt an attac k. but he left . selected. wi,th myself acting as a organize itself to create its in taking Africa · back to promising to make it up to her co-chairman of said Committee. Of that. $24 ,7 10.14 was ac­ own." colonialism than revolutionary later. My responsibility \Vas to handle tually spent for Homecoming . Asked whether he tho ught Africa to true in dependence. • Income from the Isaac Hayes T he security force has been the entire financial part of the. that the Organization for President Sekou Toure didn't. told of this incident and it is Homecoming of '71. show was SI0.995.00. African Unity (OAU) should be however. call for the breaking hopeful ·'Ciccerole" will not be '· This year's Student Asso­ dissolved. To ure said: ''In o ur up of the present OAU. In the seen a g a in . H owe v c r . h i_s ciation went into Homecoming ·Monies spent 2.t .710.1 4 eyes. the OAU has not replied face of t hcse react io'n ary Isaac Hayes I 0.995.00 description is o' with rnedium with the idea of giving back to tl) the immense. hopes which its sys1e111s. he said . we need an built. weighing between I 70- ~cl Rclurn .. - 13.815. 1-' • Howard st..udents at le~st a por- creation aroused. But for all organi zation nf African--anti­ 175 pounds. hetween 25-27. 1hat we should not dissolve it. imperialism states--witho ut light hrown co1nplexion with a ... We should strengthen it." resigning from the OAu.·· "' yellow tinge. long and tringy Red, Black, and Green Elaborating on what he President T oure also at1ac ked black goal ic and mustache. The • meant by " the Africa of· sub­ those African leaders who are rC011ti11uecl ]ro111 fJaK<' 9 ) most distinguishing feature was mission." he cited some former ready to Se ll their Cl)Untry to his · ovaJ shaped, bi11nd -shu 1 lori11i11g. a1)d deathly by rny l . as a pt•rson who ha:, seen French colonies that haye been foreign dominance for a fistful eyes: they were tlcscribed as be­ .111al y:.1!-. and :,hould be included the destructivt' results •or dope ao nsisten tl y trying to negatively of dollars. Referring to those ing .con1plctcl.Y :-.urr11untlcd b.) 111 amy lkfi n111 0·11 ol Jruµs. destroy a ml'mber {)f my fomily, influence the OAU. He d id not Guineans who were invol,,.ed in white. 1he pupils arc dark­ l '>t't' d1emtl«lll} dangerous a111 not saying forget about 111cnti1)!1 any co un try by name the Portuguese invasion of helping cure and rt·haoilitalt' our hn)\.vn . If anyone approache~ drug~ 1n I ht' Ilg.ht o l what they hut he made it apparent that he November last year. he said 11 you fitting that •descrip1i11n. go ,11t' pol1t1cal tot)b u-;ed 1n this people who have been tnch.cd ~ referred t1) those nations that was a 5.hame for Africa." the other way tonlt''cntl) popul.11 rh1.:toncal by James B. Smith t' 111,lnt I p.tt It 111 • \111t·1i...1 1.., doing. t' \,tctl) anti-drug. s} ndrolll'> d1ve11 ) our This reporter thought 1he he \\ h.11 -.ht• .., -.upposed to b' attention l1om tht' ma.1or 1-,sut'. 1 \\lluld get sick and g(1 O\ Cr to the dL''>trut· 11on o t lh1 ... ll w11i1 the Univers1l} Health Sen ice 10 -,l11n)-g1..:a-.)-f1n11.c1t'd- v. hore 1111.._ \\illlt' tl;1p ht'tJthe II IS the see i r the service was as p11 n r as c J 11 c J ,\ m e 1 1 \.. \.. .1 a n J t h e 1111 l ~ .dtt·111.1tl\t' '>he ha:-, to had been rumored. ·\ t thi~ -.011\\:hnw" dl\t'rl our .1llt'11t1011 t':-, t,1bhsh111en1 ol :-,t'lt'nt1f1c and clinic just as at any other 11ne. lt'\Olutionary Pan- \l 11can1s111 111 110111 till' 111.1101 question ' \\L any potential patient \\hethcr t'O nL·rek terllh wht'le\el \\e art' -,IJn~ild h.J\t' 1111 ou1 11l1nds \vh1ch monally wound ~ d or .1u~t in 1nr \l ., 1t'I t\ 1\.. \..1 (1IO\an111 ... o 111 the world. hi s or her dail): check-up 111ust 1\ lt·anwluk ~a\t' :1 Blach. Soul ht' a u 11 I u l I) "Lll t' d \\ J" .. I I ow ca n rcgi~ter with the rcccp1io111-.1. ltuti1 y up and tt·ad1 you1 I 1111 11 !! .ib1Hll 1ht' destruction ol I. being a 1n1al 111i11 -cP 11 - 1 people t Ill' 11 ulh about "dru!!s" ~ \111\'n1.. 1· " .ind 1111i,!11t l add 1:or111ist. decided 10 ignnrc thi\ " I lo \\ t,111 l h1111g abnul ;1 11111,· 1~ 1unn1n!,! out and 1t'111t·111h..:1 a~ \\\' ~a) 111 \ln-=a. agc-n ld traditior and 1ust mar-=h ,1l l1 LIL' lt' 11.'.Jli/all\lll nl l3i ,1o.:\.. rig h I i 11 an d :, i I d ll \\ 11 . (')! c ll LI r :.e . " I I o n t' is 11111 111 a II u ri } 1.' \'C11 .i 11 \.11 lln.1fl-,111 PJn-.\1111.'alllslll ~ind I kne" full "ell that p nc 11 1 11\t' t'µµ \\Ill '>l.llt \\,il\..111µ .. .!lid ~Oll 1 ' <.., t I l' 11 I I I t t s (11.:1.tl ,., Ill Ill Ill\ hcltl.'r hl'ill.'\t' 11 " Stuucnl raps with llealih St•rvice n'l'L'ptionist :,ecretarie:, nr 1he retepl 111 111-,J lik1llllt ' \\\lUld ~lop Ille J l\l\\C\er. 111\l<;l of the fi,e ..,ecretarrl.''> \\Cre \1 ' ()r hu'>) doing ne\l t11 noth111g 1ha1 Student calls f <)r f p<)litical, ec<)O()mic unity I \\a-. n111 C\t'll 1111t1Lt'd \\ hen I entered. 1h..:1t \\ ..:re• ll\ Da' id Po\ er c«mpan1e' \\h\I had ,11b111.1ril) ,If .111 integrated 11111dcrn pl1\ht•d thr11u~h L'Cll0Pl111C ~·11- thrL'e ..,tudent'> d111111g. \\.111111!.! \lrr1..a 111d.1\. '' 1he nc...hc-,1. .1pproprr.1ted l.111d. C\ph111ed 11 Cllll10111\ \\ith high IC\Ch opt'ra1111n patient!) 1111 <111) Pl' 111ed1t 1h.11 I.ind 1~1a..,.., 11' the \\ •• rid hut her I . \ higher pe1 t.1p11.1 lc\el ,\ ll d 1 t.., pl' II pl C \I r IC ,111 produCll\Jl\ i~ !1CCC!l!-.af\ ro ll happened b) \\ hL'll I lcll. tu1111 IK'opk .!fl' \\llC .11 the p ~OU lll~'>l h;l\I.' plclt'l) Ullf Hltl\.Cd) l'i lllllllllC.., \\'h) ) nil. and the 1111\) rok J\fr1ca11 "i1e \\'ithou1 a broad ero-,-. -,cc ht·c.iu-.e 111 larger h11111e markeh. laier al I three \terc 111 thc11 -..1111t· i ,, an~" 1 Bro•1tlcn ed ucational 11 p- \t'e\.. •• pl.1u-,1hk er to penple pla~ed 111 the inter­ t1on .11 natural " r~.,liuree'> and sc,ll'> ha\ 111g 11 1ll been PlkreJ th1.' quc-,11nn \\11uld require po rt un 1l \ and 1ncrt•a-.ino natio nal p1c1url' "·'~ that of d I\ er:-.ified pr11d uc 11 011 - ~ an~ hdp .11 all ( I 1h111\.. 1111e Il l much 1111irc -,pace than I am p111\i-,inn-. nl ... enJce'> 111 -,uch cP·n~ umer!-1 ot I ·uropcan ecl111111111c irl't l.'grat io.11 cannpect the rre:.ent si tuation in manufact ured g.1Hlll... and rc1.:rl'ati1111al faci.litic-.. · Africa " 11 !111u1 a doubt ha~ a l1Hal nf abl>Ul l·) Ill :!() pntL'll ,\fr ica . 11 11 c I :1 c1 remains T11day. althnugh ~11me ar\!a~ '\ . (ircat-=r equa lity of in ­ the CCl\110l11iC f\!!-.O Ul' Ce~ to tial patient~ e111ered and ahnu1 preponderant: the tremendous . of Africa arc p1ili1ically i11de- achieve 1hi~ type of cc.:011on1ie cun1c:- cnnsu111ption kvei<-.. and twn kfl. No" 1he Pffice 1-, pol1l1\!al d1vi..,i1111 . pendent. 1\fnca i~ '>till ver) development: Bu t ~flori" to growl h ~ate~ . he g i n 11 i 11 g 10 fi 11 up. I \'er) 1111 ~at around i1111k1'11g u11e11111t1ir • fer1..nee nt 1884-5 the European American 111etropoli1an area~ . impeded by the divisio~ ut hnok that. through cc.:ono1111c 1ahlc unt ii 1heir 11a111es wert' · 1111pcrialist na1ions divided the Over onc-'t hird ot the con- rc:c,ources · and markets. A~ a unity . planning of overall called. There \\cre '" plca:.a111 " African continent. Africa \\~as tinent's total output in the regional growth will improve result o f this division indus­ divµrsions h~1,\ever . 1- ,er) :,o then further ·divided into mt)dern ~ector i~ exported trialization program s are e pecially for large scale indus­ o ftcn :-o mc p11< ir ~o u I \\ 1' u Id smaller units on the eve of whereas three-fourths of the limited to small scale factoric!) try and power in now multi­ wander in 11) ask hir an appnint· independence. To the demise of manufactured good con~ um ed producing high cost consumer national basin areas. He then mcnt or attention In tell·nl! the African econo.n1ic development arc imported. v goods behind tariff barriers. states thro ugh unification you receptionist the per ~llll 11111!1.,. a~ most of these rnicor-areas find it The condition of Africa's Economic cooperation is can unify the e xtra-continental well have had -:,tatemenb pnn - impossible . to expand micro states can be described as essential if Africa is to create a export and import policies. he ted up for is 'uing ((1 anyo11e in economically. Almost every ho rrible. Of all the primary highly integrated economy. says in essence here that trade the office. The p(H1 r ' ictim state is based on a one product products consumed in the world • • Continental integration will with foreign nations wilt ~'be not one of the African states coul d not even whisper \\ .thout economy. bring about economic gains - done more on a co-ordinated provides one percent of the being heard by everyone there. Today Africa must commit one specialization in those lines level and that only essentials Pity the poor pe rson with any herself to the task of economic total consumed. An even better of productio n. In the micro­ needed for the African inte­ indicator of Afri ca·~ conomic "social" disease. · co-operation a nd utlimately states you have a fruitless a't­ grated economy be imported After writing all these handi­ political unity. Africa's riches impo tence is demon rated by tempt to broaden certain servi ce and that infant industries can be the fact that less than one-half caps I decided no t to be sick af­ must. be ri:directed. Under sectors where they cto not have pro tected mo re effective ly by · o f o ne percent of the world's t ~ r all and remain healthy so as colonial rule modern economic the budgets, manpower o r tariffs and that c~ rtain goods manufactured goods are impor­ to stay healthy. A nice new cen­ develo pment took place in sec­ reso urces tQ effectively , imple­ 11 nd services should no longer ted fr om Africa. We can easily ter with a nice o ld setup. tors limited almost ex.elusively ment this type of expansio n be limited to o ne given area but sec that Africa's positio n in the to production for export. Their (this is particularly true in that these services and goods wo rld rnarke1 is a very import trade and related collec­ capit al ~st client states whe re yo u can be mo re easily distributed Dr. Joseph Thomas Durham • precario us one. In independent tion and distribution of services have the production of needless according to need. Associate Dean of the College of did not extend to the masses of Africa today the per capita manufactured goods which We as African students must Edu cation, I lli nois State the people. domestic product is only one­ maintain a relatively high Gross commit o urselves . to ·the University, has been appointed . hundred dollars and this is also African people did not natio nal product and keep cer­ econo mic and po liticcrl unifica­ Dean of the Ho ward University including settler colonies in the achieve economic develo pment tain individuals in high political ti o n o f Afr ica. We must then School of Education, His south who account for a large thr~ ugh the e xploitation of their positio ns o f wealth). • petitio n, agitate, and mobilize appointment was anno unced by natural reso urces. The o nly pro portion of it. Reginald H . Green in "Unity the masses o f African people Dr. James E. Cheek, President of mi ning and manufacturing done To meet today's standards of o r Po verty" states that three im­ around this primary aspect of the University. • at th is ti me "!~S by Euro pean economic reality, the creation me

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'Page 14 The HILL TOP Friday, November 19, 1971

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By Lena M. ~i ll i ams Howard ends season with . . • • According to reports in the Howard will have to· become by Johnny Fairfax Q loss Post, St. Louis with a 12-0 NCAA c~ampions before the record was n umber one and two co liege board acknowledges other schools, both with I ~-1 them. It was my hope and desire records were two and three. that it would not take the so­ The Post did not make ref­ ca lied " recognized athletic erence to earlier publication ~ wits" that long to see the light. corrcerning Howard's- ranking, wherein a Thursday report The playoffs begin this week stated that St. Lo uis and with Howard meeting the win­ U.C.L.A. finished tied in an ner of the Maryland-W. earlier match, thereby making Virginia game. Navy is also in their reco rd 10-0-1 for the the play-off line-up to face the season at that time. Bison squad. A loss in the Howard, on the other hand, playoffs eliminates a team from had neither lost nor tied a further participation. match and therefore had won If my readers t r ust my the right to be number one in judgment, I say that our team the, nation. · · wi II show their superiority in I Now, it seems that St. Louis these upcoming sched uled play­ has not been defeated, nor tied a off games. Also if my readers match. trust me and not the local Make no mistake about it, we Also around three weeks ago, media, one could possibly con­ are number one ... numero uno. it was proclaimed that Howard clude that no white board will Last week the local media an· was ranked three in the nation be over ly willing to nounced that Ho ward Univer­ behind St. Louis and U.C.L.A .. acknowledge any Black schools' Howard's Bisons needed their ent ire defensive unit to stop N.C. C. runners Freeman Photo sity's soccer team was ranked It seems strange to me how two endeavors as number one. game's fi rst touchdown, after number one in the nation . . teams with a I 0-1 record can be T he Eagles of North Carolina the Eagles had recovered a , The news accordingly came ranked above a team with a I 0- So far only Grambling has Central crushed Howard this Bison fumble on the third play 0 ·record. How could the team from wire service reports and snuck by :-vith such luck. Usually past weekend 42-18 in the · of the game. . • was announced over a sports have possibly dropped in most of the number one ranked Bison season finale. Unable to sustain a ddve after newscast on WTOP radio. On ranking, when they have con­ teams have had Black superstars After holding powerful the kicko ff, Howard relin­ Thursday an article appeared in tinued with their winning en­ but are usually not predominan­ Morgan State to a mere seven quished the ball, and N.C.C. the sports sei.:tion of the Wash ­ deavors. tly Black. poin ts the week b~fore, quickly added another score. ington Post newspaper acknow­ It is my belief that the caliber Howard's defense broke down Sinon scored his second touch­ ledging the new nat il>n -wide of o ur team deserves better Blacks have always had to ex­ and gave up a total of 42 points down from five yards out put­ ranking for the team. ranking. It should be evident cel a bit extra in whatever was in the first half. ting the Eagles in front by a 14- Ho wever. in the Saturday that Ho ward's team should be done in order· to get a little T he team managed to salvage 0 score, by the end of the first issue of that paper, a retraction ranked number one in the south reco gnition. Our team .has a little respect, when Mike quarter. • was made and the Post as well as the natio n. already shown its excellence Copeland took over the quar­ Second quarter act ion· got un ­ apologized for a supposed error Based o n performance and and will coAtinue to do so. terbacking chores in the second derway, with a series of to uch­ on their part. It seems that overall record for the past two L ittle else could be expected half; producing two touchdown downs for the Eagles, with ·. Ho ward was not ranked number sea.sons, the Bison squad has from a number one team, and passes, and running for another . James Smith supplying a key run one nationally in soccer , but proven to merit nationwide we are number one. Tell 'em Saturday's defeat dropped from three yards o ut for • was number one in the South. recognition. Lena told you so. Howard to a 1-5 conference another Eagle T.D. Joining standing and 4-5 overall record Sinon and Smith was Eagle run­ Howard defeats Maryland_2-0 compared to a 7 -2 season n ingback William Gifford, who record for 1970. scored from the 14-yaTd I ine, for an undefeated season finale Erratic defense in the first increasing the lead 28-0. half accounted for all Eagle . ~Y Lena M. Williarns A !'.loppy Bison defensive unit o ut shot H oward I 8-1 7, scoring. Poor tackling coupled gave up two more touchdowns, probably assisting by a few free with mental mistakes he lped the from si x-yards and 24-yards o ut attempts from penalties. The Eagles attack. North Carolina, before the half. North Carolina second half was a defensive bat­ capitalizing off these mistakes, took a commanding 42-0 half- . tle where Howard proved able outplayed Ho ward. time lead into the locker room. to play under pressure and bad Eagle halfback Jefferson Mike Copeland took over the' • • refereeing. Sinon started the scoring off quarterbacking at the start of Twice during the game, play­ with a nine yard run for the - (Continued 011 page I 51 act ion stt,pped over penalties called by the referee. One i'n ­ volved Yal'lery-Arthur, who had Howard's basketball Bisons look his day with "the man in • • Black." Yallery tried to argue / prom1s1ng his point over a call the "ref' Press Release had made: the argumentation Howard Univ. • ended with both referees ap­ campus. the . Bison lost by a proaching Howard's bench to Coach Marshall T . Emery of the score of 84-80. ·coach Emery talk to Coach Phillips, aod Howard University basketball plans to reverse that decision Yallery being replaced by Desd- Bisons and winner of the 1970- this season and, as lie says. 7 1 Basketball Coaches of mond Alfred. • ''. ... start the new campaign on a Coach Phillips also sent in America award, as Outstanding winning note.'' Coach of the East, is primed to S:..ndy ·Daley, HUSA. president Lead by Captain Larry Eato, lead what he believes will be the in the fourth quarter, exempli­ last year's MVP winner and best team he has ever coached. fying his strong reserve line-up. leading (17.3) team scorer, the A cautious o ptimist, Coach A lvin H enderson uses head shot to R .D.P/Joro Go~lie Mike "Billy" did 1971 -72 cast will be built pass ball to teammate Stan Sm ith. not play in Saturday's game. Emery's conclusion is based on around Eato and three other the addition of five o utstanding When speaking with many llf d o n no~e 1 5) played at Emmitsburg, Md.: on promising.

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• • Friday, November 19, 1971 The HILL TOP • Page 15 Ali DoWns Mathis The foreigner on Howard's• : , by Lena Williams soccer team... In a 12-round decision last Many believe Wednesday's by Lena Williams night, Mahammad Ali defeated bout was only a stepping stone fo r Ali's scheduled return bout Did you know that there is a sider. He no w admits that the the team could possibly im- Buster Mathis at the Houston • with . foreigner on Howard's soccer barrier has broken, which prove. . team? enables him to sense a feeling of With a major in electro nic According to wire service Muhammad's managers will He's Andy Terrell from Glen homesickness on behalf of many engineering and a supreme in­ reports Ali dominated the tight soon schedule another tight Mills, Pen nsylcan ia, the lone of the Pan-Afr ican p layers. terest in soccer, Terrell is a lit­ throughout the 12 rounds, early next year for the ex­ American. No basic difference could be tle unsure about the future. " If I clowning through several champion. Andy was recruited by ex­ sited by Terrell between college can get a more profitable career rounds and allowing Mathis to Howard soccer coach Chambers, who soccer and h igh school soccer. by playing soccer, then that's lay on him in the corners and • (Continued from page 1 4) had read up o n the soccer In his hometown, Andy often what I'll do. If it comes thro ugh o n rhe ropes. goalie in news releases. played during the su)llmer engineering, I'll be an engineer. The 230-pound Ali, downed the second half and suddenly • Soccer is usually thought of as against and with college teams. However, my heart will always Buster twice in the 1 1th and Howard found new life. an African o r . West Indian However, he did say that the lie with soccer." · twice in the last round. With Copeland's leadership sport, Andy found soccer quite coaching here was in a more Of his two most wishes for the By the 11th round Mathis was and the power running of Frank the con trary. relaxed state. team and their UpCOFRing en ­ said to have looked fatigued. R·id ley, the Howard Squad "When I was eight years old " A guy at home told me that deavors. Andy wants to see • A description from the scored two third-period touch­ my family moved from Linco ln Phillips was the ·new more student support and mo re Washington Post's reporter 'downs. One coming from a 20- Baltimore to a small farming soccer coach and began· to run fro nt page press coverage in the Dave Brady went this · way, yard touchdo wn pass from town. At that time I was a fo o t­ down his background. 1. was in Hillto p. " Mathis came out for the 12th Copeland to split-end thomas ball nut. One day I saw these awe because the name just "When we went to Jackson­ but was a reluctant warrior , Payne, and the second a 21- kids playing this funny game. didn't click. When I got to ville University about si x of the wobbling about as if inviting Ali yard pass to flanker Denn is where they didn't to uch the ball Ho ward. I made the mistake of twenty Black · sisters at that to swarm over him and put him Mosley. Each of these drives with their hands, but with their asking Mr. Phillips fo r the soc­ school came o ut to the game to o ut of his misery." were kept alive as a result of feet. I decided to try it and I've cer coach. He was very cool and cheer fo r .us; that reall y gave·us Ali, on the other hand, Ridley's brilliant running. bee'n playing since that time." unembarrassingly corrected iny a lift." Ho pefully the same spirit seemed lo have h~d o ther Down 42-12, the fourth In Terrell's hometown soccer error. It was then that I realized will be reflected in tomorrow's thoughts in mind, as he slighted periQd · started with a Bruce is offered in elementary school who the 'Lincoln Phillips' was. first playoff game at Howard Mathis throughout the 12th still Williams interception with. an through senior high. Andy was a He's just like one of us, it's been against W . Virginia. who keeping him o n his feet. 85-yard return· for a touch­ • right-halfback in elementary a long time since I've been able defeated Maryland University An estimated 21,000 down. However, the touchdown school, shifted to right-fullback to say that about one of my on Wednesday. crowd ed into the Astrodome paly was 'nullified by a penalty in junior high and played goalie coaches." Terrell revealed. that Yusef. for the bout. against Howard. in high school. . According to Aside from Coach Phillips, an assistant to the coach, . Ali will receive $300,000 or Late in the period Copeland Terrell, however, his favo rite fo rward Keith Aqui has made predicted, warm weaN1er. good 40 percent of all revenues fo r and Ridley went to work once and best position is rightwing. the most favo rable impression crowd. and a 4-0 victory for his victory. more with Copeland scoring I from one-yard out. T he young goalie chose to Andy. He attributes this i'11- Howard. H oward over Swarthmo re pression to A qui 's fantastic So the lone foreigner on the College, Springfield College, moves and abilities. Of Captain team waits fo r tomorrow, put­ and West Chester College. Stan Smith, Terrell says " he has ting hrs faith in the prophecy of Stone soul squad "My decision was prompted a dainty foot, but can slam o ne an Ethiopian professbr and the by J ohn Jo hnson • by several things. I liked Swar­ In.... feet of his Pan-African team­ thmore over the other colleges Like most of his other team­ mates. an d had spent a lot of time on mates, he is looking towards the the campus. H owever , the future in hopes of a champion­ • school's academic level is very ship, but is taking every game Soccer high an d you really have to separately. In o rder to win. he book; also the tuition is aro und believes that every game should (Continued fron1 page t4) $4,000 do llars. I must admit be played as though it were t,he I though, that Howard's soccer championship game. p layoffs here at Howard record also had an infl uence on "Each member of the team is University. my decisio n ." an artist with his own pa rticular ''It 's always helpful to play a When Andy fi rst began prac­ style. I believe that they must game on your own field. We ticing with the team he had the learn to use each other more,'' only hope everyone is there to problem o f a language barrier Ter rell stated in response to a help cheer us o n to victo ry," and the feeling of being an out-· question. puJ .to him about how Desdmond Alfred said . -

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• • • Me mbers of Howard's Soul Squad hel p cheer Bisons t o victory. •

A ··new" o rganizatio n has fo r providing transportation to been formed this year at Howa r d ~s major events. For H o ward University. I am example, the Squad will sponsor referriing to the Soul Squad buses _to go to New York City which is under new leadership, for a Gospel Choir Concerf which has brought abo ut many which is being held there. n_ew changes. This year's chair­ Another change brought One word I man if Pepro "Butch" Alvarez. about this year was a $2.00 Aiding Butch in his tasks are membership fee. After paying David Finger, Ursula Boyd, this fee, the student will be best describes Paula Downey, Debbie Daniels issued a membership card which and Sherry Blackwell. will allow him a reduced fee for the taste No lo nger is the Soul Squad any Soul Squad sponsored . . the group of st udents who come event. So ul Squad members will to the different games, just to also get first preference for a of b:eer .. ~ raise hell, get high and split. seat on a Soul Squad sponsored • This year they are into a whole bus. Mo re importantly. only new thing, such as acting as co­ Soul Squad members will be ordinators for Blacks all over allowed to sit in the designated the city, especially in area Soul Squad area at Howard it's on colleges. sports event. T his year, the soul squad has For instance, before any been broken up into two the tip of· Black Student Union or any o rganizations, publicity and college in D .C. plans a sbcial ·fundraising. Publicity is respon­ . . event, they first w.ill contact the sible fo r informing the student your tongue. ~ul Squad to find o ut if there • body as to what games the Soul is anything going on that same Squad will be attending, ~--~~ fl H Ol -, · ~ · night. meetings, etc. Fund-raising is Ho1ward's Soul Squad will act se lf-explan atory. Finger. who is as a center of infcfrmation for · Budweiser. Director of Operations. is ~ .. 0 !::11 e ~. ~P other area colleges as to what responsible for chartering WHEN YOU SAY social events are occurring on buses. coordinating trip~. con­ ' . any specific date. The Soul tacting o ther colleges, etc. Squat! has been asked to act as p "Social Counselors" for The Soul Squad has now become an o rganization which udweiser® Washington's younger generation. Meaning that they has become relevant to the YOU'VE SAID IT ALL! • will invite groups such as the student b

The HILL TOP Friday, November 19, 1971 Page 16 •

Fo'Ayan I. No, because I can't see any accomplishments for Blacks coming out of it. I · Ron Whitmore L.A. S r. 2. Because of polarization between If Pres. Cheek views such a v1s 1t the sexes. Drugs at times, k1 II the s signif icant in any way, he sho uld go . d esire to go through "changes" for the opposite sex and people still 2. Since I d on't engage, I would't have desires for sex, ther.efore, thos k now . People need to keep their own w ho swing together start relating to houses clean. each other sexually.

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Lana Baykins F.A. Fr. l .No, since Pres. Cheek is not a leader f Black people, he should not get involved in the Israeli situation as a representative of Blacks. • '2 .I know very well t hat they are here! But I don't know whether they have increased or not, because I've only • been here a short time. '

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Theresa Taylor Jangles, L.A . Sr. 1. No, I don' t think he should consult with a government I . Yes, I thank he should check the situation out. which is backed by racists; dealing w ith this government 1s 2. No, I believe it's just a more overt subject today. enough. 2. Not particularly. If there is an increase it is only that homosexuals set:k, as we all do. some Jacet of educatior1 and soc1al1zation at this university. . .

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Harold N . Reddick. L.A. Sr. I . I feel he should not 90, but such a trap would be 1n la ne with rnany

Ro~ alin d Robertson. L.A. Sr of his previous moves. such as Hon· I. I do not feel that Cheek should go f 11 1s simply a or America Day, so he will proba· case o f using him as a pupµet 111 the s• tua t1on. On the bly 90. o ther hand, 1f 1t 1s a worthy cause and will prove :L -tomosexua11ty 1s probably not • bcnef1c1al for Blacks thei: 1t will be well a nd good. on the increase; 1t is 1ust becoming ~. Ho,mosexual11y does not seem to be mcreas.mg on more open. Why, I d on't know. c.11..,pu~. however I do feel that µeople .ire d1splay1ng it more openly.

~ll l·.:'T I 0 \ :' I. H 1· t·1· 11 ll} . Jl'l \l ,1!!a1,i111· 11· p111 ll'll that Pn·'· C h1•1· !..

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• • Ursulla Weeks, Grad School • I. I think Cheek should go, because whether it be beneficial or detremental to the Black cause, Cheek as a representative of Howard should go to see what ii happening and become 1nv.olved. • 2. I do not think that homosexuality 1s on an increase .. .. I think that it is now more obvious because people no longer try to hide the thin s that'the are . • Dionysius Demore, L.A. Soph. Leon L.A. Jr. I . No, I think he should stay here and I . I think that Pres. Cheek should go to Israel not for ' influence the government to limit its propaganoa purposes but for the purpose of merely support to the confli ct over there. colaborating wrth the leaders of Israel about the problems , they are having. ') 2. I haven' t seen any advances of homosexualtty on • · Yes, 1t has rncreased. Ma ybe it's "- campus, but seeing as how I don' t hve on campus, I' m not because they are ~llo wed to mix in ' aware of the problems that they may have witlj it. I the d orms with o thers and that in­ philosophize tha t it's their thing, let them do it as long as fluences them to b,e that way. they don' t bother me . • .. \· •