Skip to main content

The SPHINX | Spring 1968 | Volume 54 | Number 1 196805401

Page 1


THE

t Sphinx

Volume 54 Number 1 February, 1968

Pages 13 and 14 have a section cut out of them and pages 15 and 16 are missing

The best copy available was scanned

The Sphinx

The young man and woman pictured at right are among the thousands of students who graduate each year from colleges and universities affilated with the United Negro College Fund

They are the

advance guard of a new generation

of Negro youth who possess the knowledge and skills required to enter the mainstream of our economy.

As intelligent and educated Negro Americans, they hope to be able to live productive and creative lives to contribute to our society in ways their parents never dreamed possible

We believe they will succeed

But the future of these young graduates must be balanced against the plight of millions of boys and girls living in the substratum of every city in this country

If we as Americans are to give substance to the phrase, "equality of opportunity," every capable youngster must be given an equal chance to realize his full educational potential And this attainable goal must be shared by vastly larger numbers of gifted Negro youth — as soon as possible

The challenge is urgent It must be met now The alternative is to deny more than 20 million people the rights to share fully in the benefits of our society to sustain a pattern of rejection, despair and hopelessness for a great many college-age youth

As a noted historian recently observed, "The rate of economic and social change in the United States is so rapid that a handicapped group falls even further behind if it progresses more slowly than the rest of the population."

This is precisely what is happening to Negro Americans

The 33 institutions affiliated with the United Negro College Fund cannot possibly educate all of the Negro and other deprived youngsters who could benefit from a college education

But they are educating one out of every six Negro students attending the nation's 2,238 colleges and universities And they are the only group of institutions in the country determined to seek out, motivate and educate substantially larger numbers of deprived youth now denied the right to a full education.

Their mission, in brief, is to identify potentially capable students and to extend quality education, particularly to those high school graduates who are restricted by poverty or handicapped by inferior public schooling

Every thoughtful American can play an important role in this, the most important educational endeavor of our generation.

By supporting the Fund, you will be acting — directly and purposefully — to help thousands of promising students continue their education.

Support THE UNITED NEGRO COLLEGE FUND

55 East 52nd Street / New York, N.Y. 10022

By contributing to the United Negro College Fund, you will be helping equalize educational opportunities — without which there is no equality in employment, housing or any other meaningful aspect of American life Education is the "great equalizer of

The Sphinx

Editor-in-Chief George M Daniels

Editorial Assistant Ernest B Boynton Jr

Contributing Editors

Malvin R Goode, Martin L Harvey, L W Jeffries, Eddie L Madison, Frank L Stanley, Sr., Art Sears, Jr., L H Stanton, Charles Wesley, Randolph White, 0 Wilson Winters, Laurence T. Young.

Editorial Advisory Committee

Frank Ellis, Malvin R Goode, Marshall Harris, John H Johnson, Moss H Kendrix, J Herbert King, Belford V Lawson, Samuel A Madden, J E Martin, Lionel H Newsom, Gus T Ridgel, Floyd Shepherd, L H Stanton, Felix Warren, Laurence T Young

Staff Photographer Henry Crawford

The Sphinx is the official magazine of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., 4432 South Parkway, Chicago, III., with editorial offices at 282 Convent Ave., New York, N Y Published four times a year: February, May, October and December Address all editorial mail to P.O Box 285, Lincolnton Station, New York, N Y 10037 Change of Address: Send both addresses to Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, 4432 South Parkway, Chicago, III Manuscripts or art submitted to The Sphinx should be accompanied by addressed envelopes and return postage Editor assumes no responsibi'ity for return of unsolicited manuscripts of art

Subscription: $2.00 per year

Opinions expressed in columns and articles do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., and use of any person's name in fiction, semi-fiction articles or humorous features is to be regarded as a coincidence and not as the responsibility of The Sphinx It is never done knowingly Copyright 1965 by The Sphinx, Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc Reproduction or use, without written permission, of the editorial or pictorial content in any manner is prohibited

The Sphinx has been published continuously since 1914 Organizing Editor: Bro Raymond W Cannon Organizing General President: Bro Henry Lake Dickason

Second class postage paid at New York, N Y Postmaster: Send form 3579 and all correspondence to P.O Box 285, Lincolnton Station, New York, N Y 10037

Volume 54 Number 1 February, 1968

ALPHA PHI ALPHA FRATERNITY, INC

P.O Box 285

Lincolnton Station

New York, N Y 10037

Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc Directory for 1966-1967

Jewel Henry A Callis

2306 E Street N.E., Washington, D.C

Officers

General President — Bro Lionel H Newsom 3826 W Manor Lane S.W., Atlanta, Geirgia 30311

General Secretary — Bro Laurence T Young 4432 South Parkway, Chicago, III

General Treasurer Bro Leven C Weiss 4676 West Outer Drive, Detroit, Michigan

General Counsel — Bro Morris M Hatchett

Editor, The Sphinx — Bro George M Daniels 470 Lenox Ave., New York, N Y

Vice Presidents

Eastern — Bro Frank J Ellis 1929 W Lanvale St., Baltimore, Md

Midwestern — Bro Gus T Ridgel Kentucky State College, Frankfort Ky

Southwestern — Bro Earnest L Wallace 2018 Van Cleve, Dallas, Texas

Southern — Bro Luke H Chatman P.O Box 1311, Greenville, S.C 29602

Western — Bro C P Johnson 17823 88th, N.E., Bothell, Washington 98011

Eastern — Bro Conrad Cathcart

Assistant Vice Presidents

Midwestern — Bro Edwin Patton 1084 Parkside, Cleveland, Ohio

Southwestern — Bro James E Glover

Western — Bro Clifford S Webb 2183 W 27th St., Los Angeles, California 90018

Southern — Bro Harold L Taylor Morehouse College, Atlanta Ga 30314

Historian — Bro Charles H Wesley 1824 Taylor Street, N.W., Washington, D.C

Dir Ed Activities —Bro Thomas D Pawley, III Lincoln University, Jefferson City, Mo

Chr Alpha Phi Alpha Building Foundation, Inc.— Bro William M Alexander 4272 Washington St., St Louis, Mo

REGIONAL DIRECTORS

Eastern Region

Massachusetts — Bro James Howard 105 Greenwood St., Boston, Mass Rhode Island — Bro Ralph Allen 179 Doyle Ave., Providence R I Connecticut Bro W Decker Clark 66 Dry Hill Road Norwalk, Conn New York, Northern New Jersey — Bro Albert Holland 31 Hickory Hill Rd., Tappan, N Y Pennsylvania Delaware, Southern N J — Bro Frank Devine 6202 Washington Ave., Phila., Pa Maryland-Washington — Bro Thomas Hunt 911 Spa Rd., Annapolis, Md Virginia — Bro Talmadge Tabb 324 Greenbriar Ave., Hampton, Va Midwestern Region

Indiana — Bro Montague Oliver Il l E 19th, Gary Indiana Northeast Ohio — Bro Charles Nunn 10926 Pasadena Ave., Cleveland, Ohio Central Ohio — Bro Oliver Sumlin 2724 Hoover Ave., Dayton Ohio Northwest Ohio — Bro Robert Stubblefield 1340 W Woodruff, Toledo Ohio

Southern Illinois — Bro Harold Thomas 1731 Gaty Ave., East St Louis, Illinois

West Missouri and Kansas — Bro Edwin Byrd 2533 W Paseo Dr. Kansas City, Mo

Wisconsin — Bro Hoyt Harper 5344 N 64th Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Southeast Ohio — Bro Paul Turner 2335 Gardendale Dr., Columbus 19, Ohio

Western Michigan — Bro William Boards, Jr 680 W Van Buren St., Battle Creek Mich

Northern Illinois — Bro J Herbert King 4728 Drexel Blvd., Chicago, Illinois

East Missouri — Bro Clifton Bailey 3338A Aubert Ave., St Louis 15 Mo

Iowa — Bro Ernest Russell 3927 Amherst St. Des Moines Iowa

Southwest Ohio — Bro Holloway Sells 699 N Crescent Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio

Kentucky—Bro Herbert Olivera Kentucky State College, Frankfort Kentucky

West Central Missouri — Bro Jimmy Buford 3548 Park Avenue Kansas City, Mo

Central Missouri — Bro Thomas D Pawley, Jr 1010 Lafayette, Jefferson City, Mo

Regional Secretary — Bro Cramon Myers 404 West 44th Street, Indianapolis, Indiana

Southwestern Region

Southwest District —Bro Floyd Plymouth 1940 Leona, Las Vegas, Nevada

Oklahoma — Bro Vernon L Foshee 725 Terrace Blvd., Muskogee, Oklahoma

Louisiana — Bro Elliot J Keyes

7462 Benjamin St., New Orleans, Louisiana

Arkansas — Bro T E Patterson 1624 W 21st St., Little Rock, Arkansas

Texas Bro Reby Cary 1804 Bunche Dr., Ft Worth, Texas

Southern District — Bro Payton Cook 5139 Palin St., San Diego, Calif

Southern Region

Alabama — Bro Kirkwood Balton

1303 Main St., Birmingham, Ala

Georgia — Bro Henry Collier 1527 Mills B Lane Ave., Savannah, Ga

Florida — Bro Herbert Starke 724 N.W 27th St., Fort Lauderdale, Fla

Mississippi — Bro T J Ranee 407 Washington St. Brookhaven Miss

North Carolina — Bro G H Vaughn 1708 Shady Ave. Winston-Salem, N C

South Carolina — Bro Luke Chatman P.O Box 1311 Greeneville, S C

Tennessee — Bro George W James 1527 E 3rd St., Chattanooga, Tenn

Western Region

Northwest District—Bro Clifford E Donley

Washington — Bro Odell Lewis

347 - 29th, Seattle, Washington

330 - 22nd Avenue, East, Seattle, Washington

Arizona — Bro William Corbin 2401 W Cherry Lynn Road, Phoenix Arizona

California—Bro Carlton Dias 949 Broderick St., San Francisco, California

Central District — Bro Clifford W Basfield 2245 E 11th, Stockton, California

Wellteachyouto speakaforeignlanguage inthirteenweeks. Free!

Youname it,we'vegotit Thebiggestselectionintown Urdu andTagalogandSwahiliand Hindi andQuechuaandSpanish andFrench and Portuguese.Tolistafew. Allfree for the learning.And when wesaylearningwedon't meanordinary speakand listenand readlearning.Nosir.Whenwe teach you alanguage weteach you tocook init,teach init, play basketball init,build sanitation facilities and farm cooperativesinit Weteach you to climb mountains and span rivers in it, to have patience and understanding in it, to dosomething important in it, tolook at yourself and the world in it

We teach you to make friends and get alongwith peopleinit.Andwe evensupplythe friends and people Yessir With every foreign language you get, absolutely free, an invitation to spend two years inamatching foreign country

So hurry! Hurry! Don't delay It's the chanceofalifetime Nocatches Nogimmicks Nothing to pay. You see,it'sallpart of a promotion for a product we're interested in pushing Peace

Write:The PeaceCorps,Washington, D.C 20525. {Z \ PUBLISHED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE IN COOPERATION wj j WITH THE ADVERTISING COUNCIL

TOP OF THE MONTH

For years the Fraternity has been trying to persuade undergraduate Brothers of the advantages of speaking out, of letting their gripes, real and unreal, be known to the older Brothers, and those who have the power and authority to do something about them. Too often, as past records indicate, undergrads have a tendency to suffer their frustrations in silence while the Fraternity continues to go along its weary way, still burdened by many of its worn-out and cumbersome traditions that no longer fit this day and age In Who's Irresponsible! Bro Jim Hall, Phi Chapter, has a lot to gripe about ashe answers criticism of graduate Brothers (Billy Jones and William Alexander) whose articles appeared in the December issue of The Sphinx.

The author of African Identity and the American Negro, Dr Willard R Johnson, is an expert in African affairs and a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology His article was made possible by the American Negro Leadership Conference on Africa

May — A Special Issue

The May issue of The Sphinx will be a three-in-one issue Its contents will include rather unusual fraternal bill-of-fare, a major article on Africa by Bro. St. Clair Drake of Roosevelt University, a look at some of the unsavory practices of guidance counsellors at Negro colleges and universities, and several presentations dealing with the economy of Negro businesses in the U S.

Deadline: Since this will be an enlarged issue, all news, photographs, columns and convention highlights must be in the office of The Sphinx by March 25

ALPHA PHIALPHA FRATERNITY, INC —the first Negro college fraternity — was founded December 4, 1906, at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York

Beginning with its seven founders more than 30,000 men have been initiated into Alpha Phi Alpha Interracial since 1945, there are now 131 undergraduate chapters on college campuses and 199 graduate chapters in 38 states, the District of Columbia, West Indies, Europe and Africa

Its members have served and continue to serve with distinction in widely diverse areas and furnish responsible leadership in hundreds of communities In the emerging economic advance, in their business enterprises, in the professions, in government and in civic life it is Alphadom that comprises the heart of the Negro market

A close knit organization, bound together with common loyalty in the struggle for human dignity; with common causes for cultural enrichment; and with historic accomplishments in educational advance —Alpha Phi Alpha stands dedicated to the principles on which this nation was founded, Alphamen, everywhere, constructively help in achieving America's promise

"Since Alpha Phi Alpha was founded at Cornell University in 1906, it has espoused many good causes and achieved many victories of benefit to the country, but its most important service has been in the development of the scholars and creative leaders who will assist our country in meeting the challenges of the 1960's."

A message of importance to all people at The Rebellious Age.

There comes a time in your life when it seems absolutely right to rebel against old ideas. Against all the things that seem to be stacked up against your generation.

Unfortunately, religious faith is one of the things that may get discarded right about now.

But should it be?

Your Faith echoes the very feelings you probably have right now. About

injustice. Inhumanity. Poverty. Cruelty. Prejudice. Hate.

That's why your Faith is the very thing you should be working with.

It can strengthen you. It can make things happen. In yourself, and in all the world around. But only if you let it. And only if you put it to work.

President John F. Kennedy said: "God's work must truly be our own." What do you say?

PHOTO BY HAROLD HALMA

WHAT HAPPENED TO HUMANITY?

I've been thinking apprehensively about a girl I met in Southeast Asia, nearly two years ago

I remember her well: a sloe-eyed, golden skinned Asian, about 19 years old Her pretty face and attractive figure virtually floated into the sitting room when she brought me my regular gin and tonic.

Somehow she learned that that was my favorite So each evening, when I returned to my temporary home in Saigon, she automatically entered with the drink

Her black hair gathered at the nape of the neck in a rubber band, cascaded down her back to the hip line, so lustrous it was difficult to discern the division between hair and the black satin, two-piece pajamas many Vietnamese women love to wear

Almost soundlessly the young girl would pad into the room, place the cocktail on a table near me, and, just as silently, pad out of the room again

When our eyes met, there was always a warm look of friendliness and welcome reflected in her face It was infectious.

And yet, we were never able to exchange a single word of conversation She spoke Vietnamese I spoke English

Our smiling and bowing routine lasted nearly a week during the summer of 1966, when I accompanied Bro Whitney M Young, Jr., on a visit to meet Negro troops in Vietnam.

I never learned her name Nor the name of her mother or father The three of them directed operation of a roomy villa, complete with spacious grounds surrounded by barbedwire topped cement walls, and a double gate which was locked at dusk

The villa was situated very close to the heart of Saigon

Cleanliness there was incredibly complete, considering the servants were rarely seen

The servant family lived in a series of rooms clustered by themselves in the rear yard

Each evening, when I returned "home," my soiled clothing had been laundered, pressed and returned to my room

The several times I ate dinner there, the young girl appeared, scrubbed and radiant but calmly collected, to serve the food Her quiet efficiency was unnerving because 1wished so badly to thank her for the fine service I received. It was a sorry second choice to leave a trip when I departed and to ask my host to please give the family my thanks

Shivers of fear for the family traveled my spine as the recent South Vietnam-wide warring in cities began

What happened to them? Are they all right? Is their home still standing? Are they alive or dead?

And I remembered the middle aged gatekeeper at a neighboring villa He and his young companion became fast acquaintances of mine because of my habit, when there's time, of walking the streets of foreign lands I visit, to see and to experience local life firsthand.

Afterwards, I would make it a point to walk by where they spent their waking moments opening and closing the gates for visiting dignataries, and pause at least long enough so that at least our eyes communicated a welcome to each other

For we, also, were unable to communicate through language And perhaps it's because (I have since thought) those who have long suffered, or those who have been on the bottom, share without discussion, the same kinds of hurts and fears Universally

I remember and wonder about the children — the bright, black-eyed, fearless knot of children who met us one day as we alighted from a helicopter in the Mekong Delta region, to the south of Saigon

These children did know words of English — two sentences' worth, at least: "Hello, Joe" and "okay." They fought to hold my hands as they chattered like magpies. (Years earlier, I recalled, as the Vietnamese children clamored about me, the same thing had happened in Africa

A crowd of kindergarten children, there, had rushed me and kissed me on the hands while others tried, for whatever their reasons, merely to touch me.)

Where, where were these little Vietnamese children, I wondered, when recently the thunder of war clapped and the sky reverberated with rat-a-tat-tats?

I wonder if the little boy who played a game of hiding by diving underwater, in a muddy Vietnam river, as I tried to take his picture, remembers. I wonder if he even has a memory, now I wonder if the taste of sugar cane like he was chewing when last I saw him, is still as sweet

I wonder also about the dozens and dozens of girls who people the bars of Saigon, many offering a way for our GI's to forget, for a little while, the constancy of battle and killing.

For these girls, and these children and the families are fighting for existence, too Only they're not hurting or harming anyone in their efforts

I wonder is it really better they face the horrors and devastation of war I wonder if they deserve it I wonder when it all will end. I wonder what has happened to the milk of human kindness Iwonder Iwonder Iwonder

It's becoming more difficult to sleep peacefully For the faces of those human, little people of Vietnam hover there in the darkness of my room — waiting with their bright black eyes and warm smiles . . .

In my mind's eye, I fear that even now, many of those charming smiles and bodies are being detonated into millions of fragments And even those fragments seem to hang here in my darkness grim, gripping and disturbing

Communique

Men Who Merit A Headline

Some super breed of stalwart heroes, somehow immune to the ills of ordinary men and women? Legendary figures of extreme strength and endurance, whose physical needs are unlike those of mortal men? Romantic creatures of fiction? Who are these men of Zeta Zeta Lambda Chapter who merit a headline as they serve overseas?

That Alphas are ordinary people is their glory and their burden They sweat in the heat of a blazing tropical sun; their bones ache in the piercing chill and dampness of rainy winter nights They know the hunger, the thirst, the loneliness, the fatigue, the anxiety that are daily adversaries trying to weaken them Still they are dauntless Why? Because to each one of them, service is the key to the meaning of an Alpha in service overseas — menwho merit a headline.

There is Bro Yenwith Whitney, an engineer, and his wife, Muriel They accepted an offer to serve in Africa under the auspices of the Presbyterian Church in the French Camerouns where they taught at the Cameroun Christian College Remaining in Africa for seven years during which time independence from France and England created the Federated Republic of Camerouns, Brother Whitney hassince returned to New York andnow works as associate secretary of education of the Presbyterian Missions organization representing schools in Africa and the Far East.

An Alpha man overseas is Bro George Sealey who, along with his family, spent five years in Nigeria for the Peace Corps Afterwards he taught in the New York City Public School System He has since returned to Africa

In 1956 Bro Theodore Childs, a physio-therapist, on a Polio Foundation fellowship made a study of conditions in Paris, Rome, Greece, Israel, and Africa, where much of his time was spent in Kenya. Returning to New York, he worked at The City College and as trainer with the Baltimore Colts, then later with the New York Jets following coach, Weeb Eubank Brother Childs is now at Long Island University as head of the Department of the Physically Handicapped

Meet Bro L Charles Gray, pastor of the St Albans Presbyterian Church, who in 1967 went to Guyana to serve as interim pastor of the Presbyterian Church there A writer, Brother Gray has written of his expreiences in Guyana Bro Louis Hughes and family, originally scheduled to go to Nigeria with a Harvard University sponsored group, is now serving with his family in India while on leave from the NewYork City Community College

Bro. Clifford Hay hasbeen appointed Deputy Equal Opportunity Officer for the Defense Department under the Air Force and for the Eastern Region Bro Harold Dottin entered Omega Chapter

Westem ImOOe Picture this: TheWestern Region of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity is composed of Oregon, California, Arizona, Nevada, Colarado, Wyoming, Idaho,

OUT

Montana, Utah, andWashington; represented by 24 active Chapters (17 graduate and 7 undergraduate); enlarged over thelast year with activation of four Chapters: Gamma Xi at UCLA, Alpha Epsilon at University of California at Berkeley, Epsilon Zeta Lambda in Portland, Ore.; and Alpha Xi at University of Washington, which through a floating charter includes other Seattle area colleges and two schools in Oregon Establishment of an Alpha Chapter at the University of Arizona in Tucson is underway SanFrancisco's Gamma Chi Lambda is the largest Chapter in the Western Region, with Beta Psi Lambda in Los Angeles the second largest active-member Chapter

D. W. Edmonds

Dpflth ClflimS ^ ro ' Daniel ^ Edmonds, first man initiated into Alpha Phi Alpha by the founders, and a charter member of Mu Lambda Chapter of Washington, D C, died recently after a long illness Cashier at Howard University for 31 years, Brother Edmonds taught at Howard University Academy, a secondary school formerly run by the University, from 1913 until he became University treasurer in 1919 He retired in 1950 A 33rd degree Mason, he was also a founder and former director of Howard's Federal Credit Union.

'Golden Eighteen' At AlphaRho

A bumper crop of nineteen new brothers to Alpha Rho Chapter at Morehouse College, Atlanta, Ga., has been reported Wearing the Black and gold are: Edwin Barrett, Charlotte, N C ; Oscar Bracks, Jr., LaMarque, Texas; Walter Davenport, Raleigh, N. C ; Nathaniel Davis, Jacksonville, Fla.; Emerson Godwin, Buffalo, N Y.; William Hicks, Worthington, Ohio; Linnell Jones, Tampa, Fla.; William Keaton II,Bearden, Ark.; Martin Killingham, New York, N. Y.; Sherman Lundy, Columbus, Ohio; John Mitchell, Berkeley, Calif.; Clifton O'Neill, Newport News, Va.; Kelly Price II, Orange, Texas; Thomas Randle, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Henry Roberts, Fort Smith, Ark.; Michael Roberts, Perry, Ga.; Johnnie Simmons, Alexandria, La. and; Dewell Smith, Menifee, Ark.

Other Things

Odds Ends & ^ a ^ ^ ' ^ ^ *sl ^ e PUDUCation date for the 1968 edition of the directory of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. Published every three years, it will list the names of all active brothers as of April 15, the final deadline for publication. Ballots will be prepared and distributed to all active Brothers (1968 Grand Tax) from the General Office on April 1 The ballots are to be returned to a locked U.S Post Office Boxin Detroit, Mich., by or before August 1 Nominees for General President are: Elmer C Collins, Frank J Ellis, LeRoy Patrick, Ernest N Morial Chairman of the Election Commission isBro Clifton E Bailey of 338a Aubert Avenue, St Louis, Missouri 63115

The 1968 Regional Conventions are: Eastern Regional Convention at Wilmington, Del., on April 5, 6, 7; Southern Regional Convention at Greenville, S C , on April 11, 12, 13; Midwestern Regional Convention at Louisville, Ky., on April 25, 26,27; Southwestern Regional Convention at Lake Charles,La., on April 11, 12, 13; andWestern Regional Convention at Sacramento, Calif., on May 17 and 18

The 62nd Anniversary Convention - General Convention —will be at the Statler-Hilton Hotel in Detroit, Mich., on August 4, 5, 6, 7,8

AFRICANidentity andtheAMERICANnegro

Africa is becoming increasingly important and relevant to the masses of black Americans The ignorance among exslaves and their children of African achievement, the blindness of African survivals in their culture which marked the first generation of free-born blacks, and the outright embarrassment over and prejudice against any association with Africa so evident among Negroes during the last quarter century has begun to give way to a positive identification with Africa If not

Africans, by youthful militants, and through them, the black masses It is still more a mood than a movement, but one which begins to take organizational form

The rise and initial success of African nationalism inspired and quickened this mood; the more recent troubles in Africa have weakened but not destroyed it With the deterioration of conditions for black people in the U.S., relative in some areas and absolute in others, militancy among blacks grows apace, and this sustains the

mood The goals of this militancy are not yet clearly formulated but traditional ideals continue to figure among them.

The methods are somewhat new: appeals to the masses of blacks to discard the fatalism, deference and fear which have marked their relations with white America, and to place their hope in their own strength and organization A positive orientation to the heritage, physical and cultural, of black people is deemed by these militants to be crucial to such an enter-

prise; no such orientation can ignore the source and major repository of that heritage—Africa This is an attempt to mobilize for self-assertion a people heretofore denied much in the way of autonomous mass organization or a heroic and prideful self-image.

Most attempts in history to mobilize masses of a deprived and persecuted people have required, or at least have produced, an ethic or credo which clearly identifies the enemy or obstacles to overcome, and which rationalizes new found beliefs in the power of such people to change history, and charts the way to do it In short, such efforts have required an ideology The mood of black assertiveness and pride, and the identification with Africa which nourishes it, prefigures, albeit inchoately, a nascent ideology of militant black nationalism in America.

Unlike many former expressions of black nationalism, few separatists figure in this one The Nation of Islam is peripheral if at all connected to this movement Nor are there many exponents of a back to Africa theme, in any but a symbolic and psychological sense The movement is led by Americans seeking to develop a community of blacks in America, but not "of" America They presume to test the avowed pluralism of the American credo but are not really very much concerned about general American problems. They are preoccupied with purifying their system of values, establishing their program and organizing their followers

Some of the recent efforts along these lines derive from the civil rights movement. Former leaders of SNCC have attempted to establish throughout the South, for example, centers for the study of the Afro-American heritage, making explicit use of African history Though there is less and less evidence of program among the new leaders of SNCC the rhetoric and issues increasingly involves Africa

The organizations making the most explicit use of African symbolism and identification have sprung up in areas in which major riots have occured Perhaps the best known is that of Watts, recently publicized in a national magazine, calling itself "US" The youth wing is called "The

Simbas" (Kiswahlili term for lion) and is organized into self-defense units These youngsters are tanght Swahili because, according to their leader, "African languages embody the culture and give expression to the African ideal of the primacy of the community over the individual "Self defense is seen by this group as a fundamental requisite to black advancement in America It is only part of a broader program for US, however, one which seeks to also develop self-responsibility and selfreliance

Courses in African and Afro-American history, particularly "heroic" history, and literature, are central activities for US East Coast Groups of a similar nature also put most of their effort into such instructional and discussion programs In Washington, D.C. there isthe New School of Afro-American Thought which currently runs a basic seminar on Our Problem for all staff who will in turn offer courses to the community on subjects ranging from African Languages (Yoruba, Swahili and those of European origin) African history, music, dance and arts to courses in remedial math and computor programming

In this respect these organizations do not differ fundamentally from the hundreds of "freedam schools" which have been organized in Negro communities (and white ones too) in the last couple of years, designed to educate Negroes, very young ones especially, to the work of the civil rights movement and to the richness of their heritage as black people These groups go beyond the "freedom school" formula, however, in seeking to form people who think "Afro-American." They seek to combine "Soul," "Negritude," and "the African Personality" into a viable world-view and a cultural foundation for assertive blacks

Such an effort proceeds at the New School, but is even more intrinsic to New York based groups like AWARE, or its subsidiary The People's Parliament, or the Yoruba Temple These groups are led by American blacks who have adopted African names, who wear African-style dress and who observe various African ceremonies and rites

Perhaps their rationale for doing so is

the same as that offered by the leader of US in Watts, which celebrated Nwanza (taken from Zulu and Xosa practices) during the regular Christian holy season: "An image must stand on something . . . that is why we say that tradition is the source " "We must root culture in tradition and reason We don't take traditions from Africa necessarily in their pure form they must be modified by reason to fit our own situation." "What we need for organization and development is identity, purpose and direction Africa provides us with the basis for our identity (acquiring) pockets of power provides us with our purpose."

The intention of most of these groups is to go beyond the establishment of an idelogical instrument to achieve the transition of the Negro from a dependent, alienated and "psychotic" state to one of psychological autonomy, confidence and well-being The intention is to find or consolidate cultural forms of permanent value, or practically so, ones which are distinctively "black."

Few already claim success in this regard The leaders are young: few of them have any direct personal experience in living in black communities abroad, but a number have. A few have taken courses on African Affairs at the university level African students are important contacts for many of them, but these students seem nowhere to be very deeply involved in their work

The Africa which these spokesmen embrace remains an abstract and mainly historical one. But unlike most groups, and many individuals at this conference, or previous Negro organizations involved with Africa, these new groups find the study of Africa to be very functional to their own immediate activities, and to the black masses with whom they work If they have a "correct" vision of the future, these masses will come to approach the problem of influencing the formation of United States policy towards Africa in a different style, with different preoccupations than we may express in this conference.

It is worth pondering the question: which group and approach will advance black people farthest?

An Ohio University Undergrad Brother Confesses his disappointment of Graduate Brothers who "don't have time" for those who need their assistance.

Being an undergraduate Brother who is very much interested in Alpha Phi Alpha, as well as his own chapter, I found two articles in the October issue of The Sphinx that were of great concern to me and to many of my chapter Brothers

The two articles that I am speaking of are those that discussed the undergraduate program in Alpha Phi Alpha. The two reports by two of Alpha's more distinguished brothers were very stimulating to me as an undergrad; however, both articles only represented the graduate side of the picture.

In the report by Brother William Alexander {The Traits of Alpha's Young Mavericks), it was stated that the article was "to stimulate an inter-change of ideas involving persons in every walk of life of the Fraternity." Since this was the desired reaction to the article, I would put forth a few ideas from the undergraduate side of the coin. First of all let me say that I am sure my opinions are not held by all undergrad Brothers or their respective chapters My views are entirely personal, but they do reflect many of the same ideas held by some of my chapter Brothers.

I was pledged and initiated at Phi Chapter on the campus of Ohio University in Athens, Ohio Six days after I was activated the campus charter of Phi Chapter was revoked by the University and, as a result, Phi became an inactive chapter with the General Organization The men of Phi Chapter, who received abuse in the form of degrading lettersfrom anonymous senders, had two alternatives they could take after the revocation of their charter was announced

The first being throwing up our hands in disgust and disappointment and admitting that the university had gotten the best of one of the oldest, and the only, Negro fraternity on Campus

The second alternative, the one which I am happy to say was taken by the men of Phi Chapter, was to "keep the faith" and work harder than ever to regain campus recognition and to clear our name with the General Organization

Before I go any further let me interject a comment that I feel is relevant to this article. There was a statement in a Sphinx article concerning an undergraduate chapter that was expelled from the campus of one of the oldest institutions in the midwest for "violation of just about every code that could possibly have been violated." If this statement was referring to Phi let it be known that we did not violate, or even come close to it If the author of that article (Undergrads 'Live it Up) was referring to another chapter besides Phi, my apologies go to him for misinterpreting his claims But, as Brother Billy Jones so adequately stated in his article, "that for whomever the shoe fits, let him wear it."

We at Phi Chapter tried the shoe on and found that it fits although there were some imperfections from being worn the wrong way.

Of course there were several graduate Brothers that could have served in the advisory capacity but never functioned in this manner Calls were made and letters were written to various graduate Brothers all over the state to try to get help and

advice for our problems but many times we found that our pleas for help were unheeded.

\I7 J '

When there is no one to whom you can go for advice you have to do the best you can, and do what you think isright Sometimes what you thought was right ends up being the worse possible route you could have taken. But then it is too late and the mistakes are made Then you find people criticizing your actions and telling you what you should have done

It is not only the undergraduates that sometimes have their guards down. Again, I'd like to put on those shoes with the imperfections. I was, along with three other Brothers from Phi, one of those Neophytes "stranded without pins, pass cards, shingles, and histories." However, it is not because my chapter did not send the money into the General Organization, but because one of our graduate advisors had the materials and didn't take the time to send them to us—even after many letters were written to him concerning the matter

I would like very much to feel that graduate Brothers everywhere are more than willing to help with the undergraduate program and would not be "forced to come to grips" with the undergrads' problems.

Let me conclude by saying that the Mid-Western Region should be thankful for its new vice president, Brother Gus T Ridgel He has shown the men of Phi that he is really interested in us and our chapter We would also like to salute all other graduate Brothers who have helped us. To those who haven't, we would like to say there is no better time than right now to take an interested part in any undergraduate chapter that needs some advice from your experienced minds

Times have changed and the campuses of today are very different from those that were attended by many of the graduate Brothers Ideas have changed and the ways of doing things are different Grad Brothers should meet this new generation of Alphas; help them to face the new problems that challenge them on the "new" campus

INTO OMEGA CHAPTER

The late Bro Dr William Ewart Anderson of Epsilon Chi Lambda Chapter in Elizabeth City, N C, was an outstanding Alpha for nearly half a century He served from 1963 as Dean of Elizabeth City State College, taught high school and held positions of principal and supervisor in Oklahoma, served in administrative capacities at Alabama State College in Montgomery coached in Oklahoma and Anderson Field at Langston University, Okla., is named in his honor He helped found Atlanta's Eta Lambda Chapter in 1920

Bro. Dr. R. P. Daniel

Bro Dr Robert Prentiss Daniel, president of Virginia State College since 1950 and one of the keynote speakers at the 60th Anniversary Convention of Alpha Phi Alpha in 1966, died on January 5, Dr Daniel, an educator since 1925, served over the years in many phases of public life and received many awards and honorary memberships A native Virginian, Bro Daniel was educated at Virginia Union University at Richmond, Teachers College, Columbia University; and Union Theological Seminary of New York He was granted honorary degrees of LL D by Virginia Union University and Morris Brown College in Atlanta, Ga. At the time of his death he was a member of Nu Lambda Chapter

COMMISSION BOUND

Bro Thomas R Hunt has been appointed a member of the Maryland Commission on Interracial Problem and Relations for a term of six years Appointed by Governor Spiro T Agnew of Maryland, Bro Hunt is program analyst in the Support Services Division, Annapolis Division, Naval Ship Research and Development Center A native of Braddock, Pa., near Pittsburgh, Bro Hunt is the chairman of the Commission's Employment Committee and also serves on the Housing Committee and the Legislative Committee Bro Hunt and his wife, Mary, a teacher at the Arundel High School, and young daughter, Dawn, live in Annapolis

Page 15 is missing

Page 16 is missing

Alpha*in*Action

Bro Dr Anselm Joseph Finch of Jackson, Miss., has retired from active duties as an educator Considered one of the best known teachers in Mississippi, he taught in many schools during his 42 years of service and friends consider him to be an untiring school bulder, making possible the first Negro high school in Wilkinson county A poet, writer orator, and an educator, Brother Finch holds life membership with the National Education Association. He is also a member of the American Association of School Administrators, and Phi Delta Kappa Fraternity for research and professional leadership. Brother Finch was one of four Negroes who helped persuade the Mississippi legislature to accept Jackson College as a state institution.

Delta Sigma Lambda of Pine Bluff, Ark., gala affair for 1967 ~ the Autumn Ball — was a super success. The 61st Anniversary of the founding of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity was observed by the Arkansas Council in the auditorium of the J.C. Corbin Education Building of A.M. and N. College in Pine Bluff. Principal speaker was Bro. Frank L. Stanley, Jr., of the Urban League staff.

Founders' Day Observance of Gamma Chi Lambda Chapter was held at San Francisco's Pilgrim Community Church.

Epsilon Chi Lambda Chapter of Elizabeth City, N.C., has buried an old myth: theTdea that vitality, concern, fresh approaches and strong leadership are prerogatives of the undergraduate In a time when members of fraternal groups are questioning their role, the 11-member Epsilon Chi Lambda is an example of what a fraternity must be in the American society. Who are some of the people of this Chapter? They are:

Bro Demint F Walker, a charter member of the 14 year old Chapter, is now an Alpha Life Member Long-time principal of an Edenton elementaryhigh school named for him, his school's elementary department recently was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools

Bro Thomas L Caldwell was 1967 CIAA "Coach of the Year." A charter member and past president of the Chapter, he is head coach of the Elizabeth City State College outstanding "Vikings" football team.

Bro Leonard R Ballou, a charter member of the newly established Museum of the Albemarle, has produced a historical study of the development of education for Negroes in Pasquotank County, N.C., as well as an organ composition for the 75th anniversary of a local college He has also written a handbook concerning American Negro musicians from 1695 to 1900

While Bro Charles L Foster is completing his first term as assistant director of North Carolina State Education Department, Bro. Ernest A Finney, a new member of the Chapter, completed an educational study

which has been recognized by the South Carolina Board of Education as a distinct contribution to that state's instructional program

Seven Beta Pi Chapter students at Lane College in Jackson, Tenn., elected to Who's Who Among Students in American Colleges and Universities are: Bros Simon P Chandler, Jr., of Chattanooga, Tenn.; David L Griffin of Kansas City, Mo. ; Melvin Hamlett of Detroit, Mich. ; Clarence Weaks of Winston-Salem, N.C.; Kapel Kirkendoll of Jackson, Tenn.; Corey Odom of Jackson, and George Walter Williams III of Chattanooga. Recently, Beta Pi accepted fifteen Neophytes, making an over-all Chapter membership of 44.

The January issue of "Image of Alpha" reports that "Theto Rho Lambda's Vice President has been very active in his role as coordinator of the NAACP in the State of Maryland. The recent statement by Judge William Bowie of the Prince George County Circuit Court that 'all Negroes carry knives and fight with knives' and his apparently bigoted attitude in his conduct of Judicial procedure has been blasted and questioned by the NAACP and other civil rights oriented organizations Brother Black has led a series of pickets, has spoken on television and met with Governor Agnew in attempts to effect the removal of Judge Bowie from the bench. Brother Black asks citizens to send telegrams and letters to their legislative representation and to the Governor of Maryland in support of the NAACP stand against Bowie."

Bro Ronda Allan Gilliam, Theta Rho Lambda's Founder, first President, Alpha Life Member, attended the January Inaugural Ceremonies in Liberia of President William V.S Tubman While in Africa, Brother Gilliam will visit Senegal, Dakar, Adidjan, Accar, and other African nations. On his return he plans to visit Rome, Geneva, Paris, and London Brother Gilliam is a historian and retired archivist from the National Archives who has made a hobby as well as a profession in the study and documentation of historical information, especially in the areas of African and American Negro History.

Down in Dothan, Ala., the Theta Gamma Lambda Chapter is now attempting to win back Alpha dropouts. To do so it recently held a luncheonmeeting at a local Holiday Inn We just want inactive Alphas to consider the benefits of being an active Alpha and in light of re-study and re-examination of their original interest in the Fraternity will rejoin, explains the Chapter president. So far, this effort to reclaim local inactive Alphas has been successful, Bro. Earl C. Jones reports.

Gamma Iota Lambda of Brooklyn and Long Island, N.Y., sponsored a theatre party not too long ago which netted a little more than $100 for the Chapter's scholarship fund.

Theta Rho Lambda is finalizing plans for the 1968 Black and Gold Banquet for 600 persons. Last year's affair was recorded and along with a tape recorder was presented to Founder Bro Dr Henry A Callis Chapter's Valentine Cabaret to benefit the Alpha Outreach Program was held at the Queen of Peace Family Activities Center in Arlington, Va And in April, Theta Rho Lambda will hold a Spring concert, with provision being made for underprivileged children to attend free of charge

Drop out of school now and that's what they'll call you all your working life

Nobody looks down on a man with a good education People respect him They treat him right because they know he's got what it takes. You know it. Everybody knows it. A good education always shows And so does a small education Which will you have?

Remember: respect is only one of the things a good education gets you. It can also get you a good job. A good salary. And a real chance to enjoy more of the good things in life

Soif you're in school now... stay there! Learn all you can for as long as you can It can really make a difference If you're out of school, don't give up. You can still get plenty of valuable training outside the classroom And it's well worth the effort

d things in life. in many cities to help you.

For details, see the Youth Counselor at your State Employment Service Or visit a Youth Opportunity Center, which has been set up in many cities to help you.

P.O. Box 285

Lincolnton Station New York, N. Y. 10037

Return Requested

"THERE'S ONE THING ABOUT BEING A DROPOUT; THERE'S ONLY ONE WAY TO GO, AND THAT'S UP ... "