ATHLETIC BANQUET-St. Augustine’s College held its Athletic Banquet recently and the following persons worn honored In the Merlin Luther King Student Union; Second from Left: Dr. J. Mills Hofloway, Dr. James A. Boyer, president emeritus; Dr. P.R. Robinson, President; who was honored (or twenty-live years os president of the cologe; and Trustee Clarence E. Ughtner, presenter. On the extreme left is Or. Wley M. Davis. Or. James A. Beyer eras the guest speaker and he gave the history of athletics dating hack to 1B96. NAACP YOUTH FORUM-Paterson, N.J. Mayor WMaim J. Paicm Jr., right, moats with othor participants at a rocont torum sponsored hy the Paterson, N.J. NAACP Youth Cooncl to discuss Issues raised by the Pepsi-Cola donated Mm “Separate But Equal.” Joining him at the recent forum, which was heM in commemoration of the 38th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling against segregated pubic education, wen, from left, John Harris, Youth Advisor to the Paterson NAACP, Laval S. Wilson, Schools Supertntondant, and Jalyn E. Lydo, PrasMont of the Paterson NAACP Youth CoondL “Separata But Equal,” which stars Sidney Poltlor as Thurgood Marshal, Is a dramatization of the events surrounding the historic Supreme Court decision. btudent Suspended r or Promoting Racist Book WflST rAi/M BtAUH, f la. (AP)—A high school student was barred from class after a judge re fused to block his suspension for handing out a pamphlet promoting an anti-integration book. Nicholas Sobb was suspended from Palm Beach Lakes High School and kept out of class Friday after Qfrcuit Judge Edward Garri son refused to grant a temporary injunction to allow him to return. Attorney David Acton sued the sciuxn ooara xnursaay on benalt ot Sobb, who charged his First Amendment rights were violated ; by school officials offended by his ] literature. , He distributed fliers for the book j Disaster Zone—USA by Jack Mor ris. He writes that black parents 1 and activists accuse schools of ra- 1 cism when their children are disci- j plined, and those accusations force s teachers to accept substandard i academic performance and behav Lionel Hampton Suffers Hemorrhage In France PARIS, Prance (AP)—Jazz great Lionel Hampton suffered a light cerebral hemorrhage during a per formance last week and will be hospitalized for a few days, his manager said last week. Roland Bertin said the 79-year old vibraphonist and band leader, a celeffiyji sincsghe played with Louis jjHj^str'ong and Benn) Goodnw(^HRhe1930s, underwent a brain scan last Thursday at Coc hin Hospital and would have an other one Monday. If doctors ap proved, Hampton would then fly back to New York, Bertin said. The manager said Hampton, who played in Paris almost annu ally for many years, became ill on stage shortly after the start of his show last Wednesday evening at the Theatre Bobino. Hampton had difficulty moving his left hand, complained of feeling hot, and was taken immediately to the hospital, Bertin said. He has since recovered normal use of his hand and remained fully conscious but has been ordered by his doctors to rest at the hospital for the next few days. “It was a transitory attack, but the doctors want to take all pos sible precautions because of his age,” the manager said in a tele phone interview The remainder of Hampton’s concerts, scheduled through Satur day, were canceled. Bertin said Hampton had a loyal following in France and enjoyed his visits to Paris. “He feels at home here,” Bertin said-.., A native of LopisviUe, Ky., Hampton grew up in Chicago. His first big break came playing with Armstrong in 1930. HUe played with Goodman for four years starting in 1936. In 1940, he formed his own orches tra, which became a great school for jazz musicians including Quincy Jones, Dexter Gordon, Joe Williams and Dinah Washington. Now based in New York, Hamp ton has traveled extensively. Be sides Europe, his tours have brought him to Latin America, the Middle East, Japan, the Philip pines, Indonesia and Thailand. In between gigs, Hampton supervises his philanthropies, the Lionel Hampton Ear Research Foundation and the Lionel Hamp ton Endowment Fund, which gives college scholarships. The Lionel Hampton Commurlity Develop ment Corporation supplemented government funds to build low-in come and middle-income housing projects. White, Black Students Don’t Mingle On Campus ATLANTA, Ga. (AP)—THe At lanta University Center has about 40 white students. Most are there by necessity, not by choice. On the campus of the histori cally black complex, whites aren’t 1 seen mingling in the manicured courtyards or studying under 1 trees. 1 "We tend to go home,” said Dan 1 Hardin, 42, a graduate student at * Clark jAtlanta University's School * of Library Information Studies. 1 "You don’t have the time to mix and mingle like undergraduates.” 1 Most of the white students are 1 graduates at the library school, at * Morehouse School of Medicine or 1 at the Interdenominational Theoil- » ogical Seminary—in programs that are hard to find elsewhere in 1 Georgia. t Most of them are married, have * other careers and live in the. sub- t urbn. They take a businesslike ap proach, tending to go straight to * class and then straight home. t Although they sometimes keep their distance from black students, 1 most don’t seem concerned about 1 their minority status. * But after the April 29 verdict in r the Los Angeles police beating * case and the subsequent violence 1> that erupted on the AUC campus, some fears, were forced to the sur- t A l ace. One afternoon recently, a 26 rear-old library studies student isked a classmate to walk her to ler car. “I’m concerned for my lafety,” she said. Some white faculty members, Lttracted to AUC by its academic reedom and reputation for pro luicing quality graduates, said hey noticed more attention being bcuaed on their race after the vio ence. “Sometimes people look at me a ittle strangely,” said Donald W. Hair, director of the school of rchitecture at Morris Brown Col Bge. “But I really haven't had such of a problem.” Lt. Adrian Sanchez, a Naval tOTC instructor at Morehouse, aid it’s not the students he wor ies about, but the neighborhoods hat surround the schools. “I don’t stop for gas over here, nd I try not to get sandwiched be ween two cars,” he said. During the recent violence, Mor is Brown’s sole white student, i story m^jor Bill Holsten, was se erely beaten by an angry mob ear AUC. He was hospitalized for sveral days after being hit in the ead with brass knuckles. Holsten said he planned to con nue his education at AUC. it or. School board attorney Hazel plicae said the material needed to w restricted because it was offen ave and could incite students to iot. Sobb had been warned the week efore that he risked suspension if te brought the literature on cam ms again, Lucas said. The suspen ion was imposed after a recur ence. “We’ve got enough racial prob lems on campus as it is without something that could inc'te stu dents,” he said. Sobb didn’t disrupt class when he passed out the information be cause he waited until the bell rang, Acton said. The suite was intended to keep Sobb from missing final exams, but Acton said the school will al low the 17-year-old to make up any missed tests. Lucas contends schools have the right to restrict the time and man ner in which students express themselves, but Robyn Blumner, head of the American Civil Liber ties Union in Florida, says legal precedent sets a much higher stan dard for schools. “Whoever is punishing this boy simply didn’t like the content of the materia] that was distributed, and to punish on that basis clearly violates free speech rights,” she said Saturday. The U.S. Supreme Court re versed the suspensions of Des Moines, Iowa high school students who wore black armbands in a Vi etnam War protest, Blumner said. The court said that you have a right to free speech in the class room and the school as long as you do not materially disrupt the edu cational environment, and that can’t be a speculative disruption,’’ she said. "It has to be an imminent one, and that was not the case © 1991 HUD Look for this sign to get more house than you ever imagined possible. HUD Homes are sold at fair market value. And that means you can expect to get more for your money. HUD has homes in many desirable locations. Homes to fit just about any lifestyle or budget. When you see this sign displayed on a house, you can rest assured the house is priced to sell. For more information on HUD Homes, see your neighborhood real estate pro fessional. And, to geta free brochure filled with helpful advice on choosing, buying, and enjoying a home call 1-800-767-4HUD. HUD Homes. The Smart Move.