|
|
|
 |
|
Images and issues,
people and perspectives, from 35 years of THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Magazine |
|
TBC IN THE 1970s |
THE BLACK COLLEGIAN
Magazine was born in 1970 in the very humblest of circumstances. Cobbled
together in a run-down New Orleans “shotgun” shack, the slim, 40-page Issue 1
Vol. 1 was produced by a tiny band of Black brothers and sisters whose devotion
to the cause was hardly matched by their experience in magazine publishing. It
was the vision of founder Preston J. Edwards, Sr., then an accounting professor
at Southern University in Baton Rouge, to create the first substantive,
accessible magazine to meet the unique needs of the nation’s Black college
students in an era of unrest, uncertainty, and violence.
The needs were many. Few
media channels existed to connect and represent Black students after such
incidents as campus demonstrations that turned deadly at Jackson State, Prairie
View and Kent State. Fewer still were resources to help arm Black students with
the most fundamental insights and skills necessary to making a successful
transition from college to working life. With the passage of affirmative action
policies early in the decade, the magazine particularly sought to aid our
aspiring professionals and emerging Black leaders with concrete guidance to
advance their career goals.
At the same time, it was
the publishers’ conviction that appreciating Black cultural and intellectual
contributions was key to motivating young people to
exceed
those goals and
continually strive for excellence in whatever activity their passions drove them
towards. Monumental cultural achievements such as Alex Haley’s epic
Roots
inspired a national
reconsideration of Black people’s history in the 200-year-old country, as well
as renewed awareness of great African cultures. Similar milestones and “firsts”
were reached by African Americans in virtually every field of American life –
from politics and sports to entertainment and business.
In this sense, the first
decade of THE BLACK COLLEGIAN documents both a triumphant swell of Black
achievement emerging from the Movement of 50s and 60s, and also frustration at
some of its promises yet to be fulfilled.
|
1970
R&B/Soul legend Isaac
Hayes; Report on the Conference of African-American Studies; Nikki Giovanni “On
Race, Age and Sex”; Reading, writing and revolution in a year of college
protests; Revolutionary poetry by Don L. Lee; Business and the Black executive;
Profiles of activist Julian Bond, author Lerone Bennett and civil rights leader
Floyd McKissick; Texas Southern University and Arkansas AM&N; Black World
editor Hoyt Fuller |
 |
 |
1971
Interview: historian
Vincent Harding; “How to maintain your Blackness at a white institution”; Author
Alice Walker on the “duties of the Black revolutionary artist”; “Black Education
vs. Integration: Death by merger?”; the new Malcolm X Community College;
Tuskegee Institute; Music artists The Impressions |
1972
Ossie Davis on film
acting; A Black re-evaluation of MLK’s intellectual evolution; Photographer and
filmmaker Gordon Parks interviewed; the United Negro College Fund; Black Panther
leader Kathleen Cleaver; Aftermath of 1970’s deadly student protests at Jackson
State; literary works by poet Sonia Sanchez and Jubilee author Margaret Walker;
Morehouse College, Federal City College, Southern University, Xavier profiles;
Bill Cosby interview; tribute to gospel great Mahalia Jackson; Interviews: Civil
rights spokesman Julian Bond and playwright Imamu Amiri Baraka
|
 |
 |
1973
Tribute to baseball hero
Jackie Robinson; “Swahili Lesson (Number One)”; Musician Curtis Mayfield;
Historian John Hope Franklin; Southern University one year after student
shootings; liberation movement attorney Chokwe Lumumba; Dance troupe Les Ballets Africains;
Scholars Hanes Walton, Jr. & Ronald C. Clark on Black English; Jobs in nursing,
engineering |
1974
Interviews: Jesse
Jackson, Dick Gregory, Dr. Alvin Poussaint, James Meredith; Where will
tomorrow’s Black lawyers come from?; Musical profiles: Kool and The Gang and
Earth, Wind & Fire; The psychology of coping with racism; Julian Bond, George
Johnson, and Preston Wilcox on “The Role of Black Students”; Black Students at
Ole Miss; Social scientist Dr. Francis Welsing on racism and I.Q. scores; Is
pledging passé? |
 |
 |
1975
Interviews: Sports greats
Arthur Ashe and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar; Does graduating from a white school make a
difference?; author Iceberg Slim on the psychology of the pimp; Black MBAs;
“Politics: Participate or Perish” by Chuck Stone; Ali-Forman fight in
retrospect; Music artists Miles Davis, The Spinners, Cannonball Adderley;
Suicide and Black youth; Historian Dr. Benjamin Quarles; Bias in standardized
tests |
1976
Roots author Alex Haley; Black
faces in the Bicentennial; Actor Billy Dee Williams; Black presidential
politics; Musician Herbie Hancock; Why Black women control the future; Cultural
activists Tom Dent and Ray Carrington; Tennis: The next sport that Blacks will
dominate; Julian Bond for President; The educational value of Black college
bands; Kwaanza founder Maulana Ron Karenga; The University of Sankore at
Timbuctoo: Historical analysis of a great African university; Black Panthers’
Stokely Carmichael speaks: A Luta Continua; Job discrimination is alive and
working against us
|
 |
 |
1977
Actor James Earl Jones
profiled; The Calculator Craze!; Musical artists Natalie Cole, Parliament,
Funkadelic; Teddy Pendergrass, Deniece Williams; 50 questions recruiters ask
college students; Roots star LeVar Burton; The
continuing importance of Black colleges; beauty expert Naomi Sims; Careers for
women in the ‘70’s; The contributions of George Washington Carver; Careers in
bio-medical sciences, agriculture and food service
|
1978
NFL stars Gayle Sayers and
O.J. Simpson on life in and after the pros; The beginning years for Blacks at
Harvard; Actress Cicely Tyson interviewed; Can Black women make it in a white
man’s world?; Alexis Herman on the statistical portrait of the Black woman
worker; The historical significance of Black History Month; Blues legends B.B.
King and Gaye Adegbalola, R&B duo Ashford and Simpson, jazzmen Les McCann, Jimmy
Smith, Ron Carter; How we earn and how we spend; Black philanthropist Tommy
Lafon; The economic programs of Marcus Garvey; Eleanor Holmes Norton, a tough
new sister at EEOC; Science and engineering careers of the future
|
 |
 |
1979
Civil rights activist Dick
Gregory interviewed; “That’s Howard, not Harvard: Why I chose Howard Med”;
Singer Stephanie Mills beyond The Wiz ; The status of Black
women in the sciences; pioneering newswoman Charlayne Hunter-Gault on careers in
journalism; Veterinary Medicine at Tuskegee; Songstress Melba Moore; The Haiti
Experience, yesterday and today; Soul singer Lenny Williams from the heart;
Computers: A view of the future; Grammy-winner Dionne Warwick; Preparing for the
right career in the 80s
|
|
|