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BSA Describes Campus As `Hostile Environment'

40 Black Students Walk Out Of Peninsula Symposium

More than 40 black students walked out of a symposium on race sponsored by the conservative magazine Peninsula last night after one speaker called sexual liberation the primary cause of the breakdown of some Black families and used the word "Negro" 15 times.

The students, who declined to comment on their walkout, left Sever Hall 113 just after Fidelity magazine Editor E. Michael Jones said, "Slavery was bad, reconstruction was worse and the migration North was the worst."

Jones, father of Peninsula contributor Adam M. Jones '92, was the second speaker of the evening. His speech used a government report on race, written by Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan (D-N.Y.) in 1965 and endorsed by former President Lyndon Johnson, to take a critical look at the civil rights movement and sexual liberation.

The walkout took place six days after Peninsulamembers posted a flyer advertising the symposiumin Cabot and Mather Houses. The flyer, whichcontained the words "spade" and "Negro" and showeda Black woman performing a striptease for a whiteaudience, was condemned by the Black StudentsAssociation (BSA) and also by College officials,who issued a statement Tuesday calling the flyer"offensive, hurtful and insensitive."

And in a door-drop to students late Tuesdaynight entitled "On the harvard Plantation," theBSA charged four campus groups, including TheCrimson and Peninsula, with perpetratinginjustices upon "people of Color."

"I think [the walkout] was a constructive wayfor people to express their disapproval," saidDean of Students Archie C. Epps III, who waspresent for the speech and took a seat on thespeaker's platform with Jones after the walkout.

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But Peninsula members involved inorganizing the protest said they were disappointedby the walkout.

"People have every right to walk out," saidRoger J. Landry '92, a founding editor of themagazine.

"But I would like to believe that Harvardstudents would have more class than to make ascene to disrupt a set of ideas with which theydisagree."

Jones, who is white, used extensive quotationsto argue that white liberals co-opted the civilrights movements to advance the cause of sexualliberation at the expense of Blacks. He wasinterrupted more than a dozen times during his 45minute speech with hisses and shouts by members ofthe audience of 120:

. Jones was hissed when he referred to HowardUniversity as a "traditionally Negro university inWashington D.C."

. He was corrected loudly when he mispronouncedthe name of Black sociologist W.E. Dubois "Dubwa"instead of "Duboys."

. Several students yelled at Jones after hesaid Martin Luther King Jr. was "divided" on theissue of sex, arguing that King was at the sametime a religious man and a "sexual athlete".

. Jones was interrupted repeatedly by Rev.Eugene Rivers '83 during a question and answersession. At one point, as Jones answered aquestion by saying "There were other problemsduring the 1960s--there was the Vietnam War ..."Rivers, who had sparred with the speaker earlierin the session, interjected, "sex".

Among the evening's other spontaneous displayswas a standing ovation by many students as HarvardFoundation Director S. Allen Counter entered theroom.

Counter, who has come under criticism for aletter he wrote to The Crimson last week, wassupported yesterday by a letter written by severalFoundation members.

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