11 i
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INSPECTION TIME (Albany.
G;t.)—As his squadron stands
at rapt attention. Navy Com
mander Hooves R. (Rip) Tay
St. Aug/s Math
Majors Receive
Assignments
Saint Augustine's College
students who are mathematics
majors have received assign
ments as follows: Miss Mary
Alice Crandell, a senior of Ro
bersonville, has been given Fe
deral Government Employ
ment with Social Security. She
will begin with a thirteen-week
training period in Alabama,
and subsequently will be plac
ed according to a location con
venient to her.
Jerome C. Johnson, a sen
ior of Raleigh, has been ac
cepted in Carnegie-Melon Uni
versity Graduate School of In
dustrial Administration at
Shcenley Park, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. He will begin stu
dy towards the Master of Sci
ence Degree in Industrial Ad
ministration.
James E Williams, a junior
of Brooklyn, New York, has
been accepted in the 1970
Summer Student Training Pro
gram at Agron National Labo
ratory to do student research
in Applied Mathematics. While
there he will attend a lecture
series in chemistry and Theo
retical Physics and a seminar in
addition to his persoanl re
search.
Miss Mattie Pearl Thompson
of West Riviera Beach, Florida,
is completing a full junior year
of study at the University of
California at Berkeley. Miss
Thompson is the recipient of
the Crown Zellerbach Scholar
ship. She will return to Saint
Augustine's College in Septem
ber as a senior.
Peter Montgomery Adams,
a senior of Raleigh, is currently
doing substitute teaching in the
Raleigh school system. He has
completed his student teaching
in Rochester, New York this
semester. He is a prospective
graduate in May.
George Gunn, a sophomore
of S. Boston, Virginia, partici
pated in the Exchange program
with the group that went to
Colby College, Waterville,
Maine.
Mrs. R. C. Weatherford is
chairman of the mathematics
department at Saint Augus
tine's College.
Local Births
The following births were
reported' to the Durham Coun
ty Health Department during
the week of April 20 through
25.
Charles and Mary Baldwin,
boy; William and Alice As
bury, girl; Ernest and Ruth
Mangum, girl: Edwin and Bet
ty Kelly, girl; Zeno and Shir
ley Lee, girl; Jimmy and Jo
Ann Cain, twin girls; George
and Shirley Frye, boy; James
and Marilyn Bynum, boy.
lor inspects RVAJI-6 with the
outgoing commanding officei
The reconnoissancc squadron
NEGRO COMMANDER TAKES OVER
U. S. NAVAL AIR SQUADRON IN GA.
ALBANY. Ga. They were Cdr. Taylor praised the men
all facing him—22o Navy men
and two of his six supersonic
aircraft, when Navy Command
er Reeves R. (RIP) Taylor said,
"I relieve you sir," and
snapped off a salute becoming
the commanding officer of Re
connaissance Attack Squadron
Six (RVAH-6) in ceremonies
at the Naval Air Station here
last month.
Cdr. Taylor is the second
Negro in naval history to com
mand a Navy air squadron.
As commanding officer. Cdr.
Taylor takes over all Admini
strative and operational re
sponsibility for" t'Ke"'six-01'arii'
squadron scheduled for de
ployment to the Westers Pa
cific in the late fall on board
one of the Navy's attack air
craft carriers.
Columbia Univ. Signs Pact
With Blackwood Firm
NEW YORK - Columbia
University has signed a $2Ol,
850 contract with Har.em
builder Lewis Black to con
struct a tennis clubhouse at the
University's Baker Field. It is
the largest building contract
Columbia has made with a
black businessman.
Black is president of the
Blackwood Construction Com
pany of 360 West 125 th Street.
Work has already begun on the
2,025 -square- foot building,
which will be covered by an
air dome to allow year-round
play. The total cost of the pro
ject will be $335,000 goal of a
Livingstone Col
Gives "Oscar"
Af Banquet
SALISBURY - The big
winners in drama awards made
recently at Livingstone College
were Miss Margie Walker,
sophomore of Burgaw, as Best
senior of North Wilkesboro, as
Best Actor.
The awards were made at
the Sixth Annual Drama Ban
quet held by the Julia B.
Duncan Players.
Tabbed as Best Supporting
Actress was Miss Annie M
Mosley, senior of Wilmington,
while the Best Supporting Ac
tor Award went to James Wat
son, senior of Raleigh.
Miss Shirley Elmore, senior
of Yanceyville, was named
"Miss Julia B. Duncan Player,"
marking the first time the
drama guild has given this re
cognition to one of its players.
She was adorned in a queen's
raiment by Nathaniel Dicks,
president of the Players, and
paraded before the audience
as she was serenaded by Ray
Audrey, fresh-nan of Charlotte,
who was named Most Out
standing Newcomer.
will he deloyed to the Western
Pacific in tlrj late Fall.
(U.S. JJavy Photo)
of his squadron during the of
ficial changc-of-command cere
monies. ''Since before the birth
of the United States, the
American seaman has exempli
fied the hardy "can-do" spirit
of America," he said in his
address before the squadron.
"These young men here are
of the Twentieth Cestury: they
come from a wide range of
economic backgrounds," he
continued. "We can with com
puterized accuracy calculate
what is our money investmest
in these men, but that these
tityi
future frequently escapes us.
"I view this responsibility
with great humility," Cdr. Tay
lor iaid. "I view the privilege
of serving with them with great
pride."
current fund-raising campaign
by the Columbia Tennis Club,
which is sponsoring the new
clubhouse and courts. Dona
tions are being sought from
members and friends of tennis.
Dr. Herbert Hendin, presi
dent of the Tennis Club and
assistant clinical professor of
psychiatry, at Columbia, said:
"We are particularly pleased
that the project is going for
ward because we are involved
in a number of ways in pro
moting tennis in Harlem. We
are developing programs to
teach the sport to black
youngsters, many of whom are
cut off from the kind of active
sports they could continue as
adults."
(Political Advertisement)
[ \ - m l
V v? M IjL m J
Re-Elect-
DEWEY S.
SCARBORQ
for
County
Commissioner
Vote Saturday,
May 2nd
DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY
Cleaver s 'Soul on Ice' Has Been
Read Much Since Its Publication
By Milton Jordan
Elridge's Cleaver's "Soul on
Ice" has been reviewed many
times since its publication in
1968. But each of the reviews
I have read were written not
about the book, but about
Cleaver's Black Panther Party
as if "Soul On Ice" is the bible
ofthe organization. One of the
most often quoted statements
from the book is: "We shall
have out freedom. We shall
Have itor the earth will be level
ed by our attempts to gain it."
This statement alone, out of
the context of Cleaver's total
experiences gives a corrupt
view of the man and his book.
"Soul on Ice" is the log
book of a young man's vayage
into himself. It begins, as do
most books by ex-prison in
mates, with an in-depth ap
praisal of prison. Cleaver re
veals this society within a so
ciety as a putrid existence, one
which stripes its victims of the
basic drives of accomplish
ment. As he co"t'nnes his dis
sertations on th? effects of in
carceration, Cleaver also shows
that prison peels away the ego
tistical facade of goodness and
lays bare the basic premise of
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all men-vanity. He writes: "My
vanity is as vast as the scope of
a dream. My heart is that of a
tyrrant....in the past we have
had prophets of Doom, in my
vanity I wish to be the voice of
Doom itself."
In this candid admission,
Cleaver reveals the tone for his
future rambling investigations
into himself and his place in
life. His wish to be a voice of
doom is amplified and explain
ed in three of the last four
chapters of the book: "The al
legory of the Black Eunuchs,"
"The Primeval Mitosis" and
"Convalesence".
Apparently, recoiling from
what he is beginning to see in
himself, Cleaver turns the cold
blade of scrutiny on the world
around him. And here his vani
ty tricks him into pointing the
finger of accusation, of doom
if you will, at others. This is a
mistake most enraged peoole
make, not realizing that
as they point ore finger at
others, three fingers automat,
cally point back at the" in si
lent, often unnoticed, indict
ment.
Cleaver falls headlong into
this trap of vanity and spends |
210 pages of articulate verbosi- |
ty, common to self-educated
men, in carefully dissecting a
twiggy branch on the hugh tree
of nroblems in this country. I
Losin® himself in investigating
the twig, Cleaver leaves un
touched the trunk, the basic
root cause of these problems,
and in the end, leaves his soul
on ice.
lassie indecision and frust
ration is revealed when Cleaver
finally writes: "And we had
thought that our hard climb
out of that cruel valley led to
some cool, green and peaceful
sunlit peace-but it's all jungle
here, a wild and savage wilder
ness that's overrun with ruins"
And that eternal hope which
has sustained oppressed, inde
cisive Black people to these
many centuries burns in Clea
ver's breast too. He concludes:
"But put on your crown by
Queen, and we will build a new
city on these ruins."
"Soul on Ice" is just that, a
frozen picture of a man who
has asked: Who am I? why am
I here?, but who has discovered
no answers, and ir. ist rela .se
into the sleepless sumber of
slavery to self and a destiny
him with no con
car. for what he would rather
be.
SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1970 THE CAROLINA TIMES—
(Potiffcjl AdvcrYittmtnf)
EDWIN B.
CIEMENTS f
r jm
Commissioner A
Democratic Primary
(Pa d Political Advtrt
"Planning is the Key" /
vote t |
MARVIN DAVIS '«
SHERIFF SfL
. . . for Better Law
Enforcement!
SBH H
★ 12 years wi»>i ,k » C:uoty Deoct'iem
★ T u i lj:-f 4 '•- C' c* Cr 'roc' Inve,?^o ! '- r
★ 2'2 \rfrs ••» Cu"-3r»» P J-C"
★ 3' 2 vcar-i v» th Nij%ol |.-»e:..;cr>ct
★ Complete Tro.>n Nar;sf'Cs C ntr .1
★ Trained Experienced. Cuo'if.cd and Dedicated
YOUR VOTE APPRECIATED!
3A