5.13.2022

Lincoln University Emeritus Class of 1967 Celebrates their 55th Anniversary May 14, 2022

By Gloria DULAN-Wilson

 Wow!  It's finally almost here! May 14, 2022 marks the 55th Anniversary of my graduating from Lincoln University!!! 

55 Years!  And thank GOD there are still those among us who are here to celebrate it!!  We've maintained contact and friendships throughout that entire time - when most marriages don't even last that long - we've remained friends and still RABBLING ALONG!  We've honored each other, commiserated with each other; celebrated each other - and, above all, maintained love, loyalty, protection and support for the Alma Mater that brought us together, and without which we might never have attained what ever greatness we have managed to acheive: LINCOLN UNIVERSITY.

We've lost a few LIONS along the way.  But their spirits, energies, and fond memories remain with us.  And some of us have kind of retired and resigned ourselves to sedentary living.  But most of us are still alive, kicking, awake, aware, and definitely involved.  The Pandemic didn't touch us too badly.  Though the meanstream media tried to make us feel that we had one foot in the grave and another on a banana peel - we continued to call, email, text and Zoom each other anyway. 

I have to give much high praise and Kudos to my Soror/Classmate/Sister/Friend Carol Black for always maintaining the conduit to communication, and the channel through which this Reunion of the Mighty Emeritus Class of 1967 is coming together again for our 55th year!  She's the glue, the inspiration, and the motivation for us all - and has been ever thus for the entire span of the 55 years after receiving our degrees.  There is none to equal her, and none to surpass her love for us.  She has to know that we love her back.  Also much thanks to the ever present and supportive Robert "Rob" Johnson, whose unquestioned devotion to Lincoln has yet to be equaled or surpassed.  And the sage and calm insight of Baxter Smith, who were/are the three anchors that keep us involved in a Family Circle that is now even more secure and positive.




I came into Lincoln midstream in 1965, as a rising Junior - having transferred in from Hampton Institute (now University) - actually after having been kicked out of Hampton for being too militant.  LOL.  It was the at the height of the Civil Rights Era.  My classmates at Hampton and I had planned to join John Lewis in Selma, AL to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge, but Jerome Holland, then president of Hampton threatened to expel all students who participated.  So we locked him and his staff in the Administration building for 3 days, until we got student rights, and "amnesty" for our actions.  He waited until the end of the school year to kick me and 19 other classmates out anyway!  But GOD blessed me actually because He knew I needed to be at Lincoln where I would thrive, grow, and become part of a lifelong family of scholars, activists,  geniuses and Friends.  
 
Every so often I stop and say "Thank you, GOD for sending me to Lincoln University!" And He answers back:  "YOU'RE WELCOME!"
 
Unlike Hampton, Lincoln was so innovative, iconoclastic,  and student oriented, they took all the conventionalities and dumped them upside down! Black in the day at Lincoln, our grades went from 1 through 5, where 1 was Excellent  or "E" (equivalent to an A).   When we got E's - which stood for EXCELLENCE instead of an "A,"  you somehow felt better that you were "Number One!"  Also where a 5 or a nickel, also indicated that someone was not attractive, or too bright  - the guys would throw nickels at a young co-ed, or someone who fit that description.  It was fun Black then, but probably wouldn't go over too well in our current age of over sensitivity.  But we had a lot of fun with it and wouldn't change it for the world. 

Lincoln was known for RABBLE - a code was developed  long before we got there, that could apply to nicknames, events, or attitudes. Nearly everyone on campus had a Rabble name they answered to (whether they liked it or not) - so much so, we had a difficult time identifying the person by his or her true individual name.  If someone asked us about a particular classmate, we'd most likely not know who they were talking about, unless their Rabble name was mentioned as well!  There are Rabble Names I could mention now that would start my classmates relating stories and legends about Black in the Day at LU.  Rabble was so deep at Lincoln that one of our earlier classmates actually wrote a definitive book on LINCOLN RABBLE!

Below  is a quick test only for My Class of 67 LU classmates only!  Who are/were the following?
Ma Renwick
Sissies
The Boomer
Vis a Vis
LA
Mackie
Shabby Foster
Kissie
Pickles
Bwana
Cool Breeze
Schloopie
Oodie McGruder
OD
Doc Roberts
Spider
Fighting Material
Old Lady

Feel Free to add others below
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When I entered Lincoln U, it was a small, private Black University - with 600 male students who were living in one gigantic man cave - no sidewalks, no street lamps, no amenities - just raw, masculine genius, hiding on the Baltimore Pike, just 3 miles north of the Pennsylvania/Maryland State line, and a stone's throw from Rising Sun, MD - head of the KKK.
 
 In 1965, because of financial difficulties,  Lincoln decided  to open their doors to female students on campus - there were several who were commuting, but not residents.  1965 was also the year I was expelled from Hampton.  In the fall of 1965, when there were absolutely no colleges providing late admission  - especially since my name had been circulated to most of the Black colleges of the day - Lincoln University not only admitted me, but covered my tuition as well - thanks to the blessed intervention on my behalf of one its favorite sons:  Jay Johnson (popularly known as Ja A. Jahannes)!  One of Lincoln's eternal icons.  Making this a very short story - I was the maid of honor to Jay's first wife, Ann - who had been my best friend at Hampton.  When he learned of my expulsion, he interceded in my behalf at Lincoln U, to the then registrar, Dr. Kuehner!  And the rest is a wonderful history.  I became a lifelong member of the Lincoln University Family: 600 wonderful Brothers - and now 16 Co-Ed Sisters  - from all over the United States, the Caribbean, and AFRICA - on a small, but wonderful, close knit campus full of multicultural wonders, off the beaten track.   We originally were housed in the Alumni House, because they hadn't fully designated dorm space on the campus.  There was a lot of effort to get the guys to show some respect and deference for us females, who had deigned to enter into their man cave!  It was hilarious watching faculty and staff trying to get them to act as "gentlemen" - including wearing a "tie" during Sunday breakfast and dinner.  We used to lend our suffering fellow classmates our scarves, because many of them would fall out of bed into the cafeteria for breakfast still in their pajamas. 
 
But here we were, away from prying eyes, negative mindsets, and racist activities, we spent our time researching and learning about our Black history; cultivated cross cultural collaborations with our Brothers from South Africa, Angola, Mozambique, the Congo, Zimbabwe, Namibia - all of whom were freedom fighters, refugees escaping caucasoid domination also known as colonial rule.  They had come to Lincoln to educate themselves and return home to help their brothers and sisters from oppression.  In solidarity with them,  we had animated discussions,  devising  imaginative means by which we could dispose of them and turn the Continent into the motherland of the future. (We were onto Wakanda Forever long before it became the iconic beacon that galvanized our imaginations in 2018).  Many of our classmates have indeed retuned to Africa and taken their places in leadership, while there are those who have remained here in the US and made their mark here as well! 

I am proud to say that many of those rough cut brothers who were my classmates at the time, are still close personal friends today!! 55 YEARS LATER!!  Remembering the great times when we would be "fighting material" - and would sneak across the back fence to Sissies to grab a cheesesteak, a hoagie, and something to perk us up, to go back and Ace the test! The Philly Runs, where we would pile into any car heading down the pike to party and come back and do it again.  The horrific smell of mushrooms growing in the mushroom farms that surrounded us.  The tons of books our instructors would load us up with, as though theirs was the only class - Shabby Foster, Doc Hamilton were particularly guilty of that (LOL).  

(L-R) Anthony Monteiro,  Dwight Murph (LU 69), Dr. Charles V. "Doc" Hamilton, Gloria DULAN-Wilson - Photo by Carol Black At Columbia University, NYC on the 50th Anniversary of the publication of Black Power.


But more importantly 55 YEARS AGO I SAT IN A POLITICAL SCIENCE CLASS WHERE THE GREAT DR. CHARLES V. HAMILTON WAS PROFESSOR AND MENTOR to a number of would be Revolutionaries!   Dr. Charles V. Hamilton - then the legal counsel for SNCC  (the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee)- and chair of the Political Science Department,  was a walking, living breathing Icon!  Without a computer, cell phone, or any of the modern technology, he stood forth and taught about political expediency, the Supreme Court, Congress' responsibilities, our rights and responsibilites; and tactics for obtaining our freedom (first starting with the mind).  As legal counsel for SNCC, he would frequently have to fly down to Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, or some such racist backwash state, to litigate in behalf of our Brothers from SNCC who were standing up for our rights - get them out of incarceration so that they could continue to do the good work.  56 years ago, Dr. Charles V. Hamilton and Stokely Carmichael (aka Kwame Ture`,  collaborated, researched, wrote and published the book BLACK POWER: The Politics of Liberation in America!  on the campus of Lincoln University, PA!  The first definitive analysis of the most powerful movement for Black empowerment ever written - and it happened on our campus!  I claim bragging rights.

I also claim bragging rights for having attended the world's first HBCU; where Thurgood Marshall got his start while he partied and pulled pranks with his fellow classmates.  Ironically, I met Thurgood Marshall while I was an usher at Hampton's 1965 commencement, and had an opportunity to (very shyly) talk with him.  Little did I know that I would soon be attending his Alma Mater.  At the time I had no idea that Lincoln even existed!! Coincidence?  I think not!  GOD was definitely up to something when he caused me to have 15 minutes to talk with the greatest Supreme Court Justice, activist, and humanitarian ever.  Lincoln's influence upon the world through this great man is undeniable!!!
 
I claim bragging rights for not only having attended the world's first HBCU, but the only HBCU to have given Africa, our Motherland, two presidents:  Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana, class of 1939, and Nigerian President Nnamdi Azikewe ( or "Zik") who graduated in 1930, and, in 1935 advised a young Kwame  Nkrumah to attend Lincoln because he said he wanted to learn how to liberate his people.  And guess what - He did just that!!  On March 6, 1957 he fulfilled that dream.  Nkrumah was a constant contributor to Lincoln, sending us many beautiful African artifacts - Ashante Gold Weights, Ashante stools, carvings, masques, and other items. I was fortunate to have worked as the assistant to curator, Dr. David Gunn - and had the privilege to catalogue, and put  these treasures on display in our very own African Museum.  Black then, Lincoln was the only Black college to have one!

I claim bragging rights for having attended the same Alma Mater as Langston Hughes - wow!  Having grown up reading all his stories and poems from childhood - how fantastic was it to not only attend his Alma Mater, but to have met him while he served as poet in residence for six weeks!!  I was awestruck!   We've since named our library in his honor.  Not only that, Hughes brought with him that most fabulously Fine Black Man - Ron Milner - playwright/producer of "What The Wine Sellers Will Buy," "Checkmates,"  and "Don't Get God Started," taught some of our literature classes while serving as writer in residence.  And you can best believe nearly every one of us 16 co-eds were in those classes just hoping he'd pass an eye in our direction.  

To have teachers such as Dr. Farell, and "Shabby" Foster,  who were instructors in the classroom, and mentors outside of the class; who loved and cared enough for us that they took time to make sure we were displaying our highest and best talents.  What a wonderful experience!!  They stood by us, chastised us, complimented us - but above all, protected us - even to the point of standing between us and the KKK that had threatened to come onto the campus to destroy it.  Our professors stood, armed to the teeth to make sure they did not enter LU's gates, even though they erected a burning cross miles down the road.  Do you wonder I consider this my Family??

At Lincoln U we met Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., who told us to KEEP THE FAITH BABY, after having been expelled from Congress for being too powerful and Black;  Stokely Carmichael, H. Rapp Brown, Ruby Dee, Sidney Poitier, Cecil Elombe Brath, Gus Dinizulu, The Grandassa Models (First Black Models to model African clothing and wear natural hairstyles), Tom Mboya, Langston Hughes, Ron Milner, Muhammad Ali,  - and so many other wonderful, powerful blessed examples of the highest and best we can be and are as Black people- and who are indelibly imprinted in my memory and on my heart!

It was at Lincoln University, in 1966, that I started wearing my hair Natural - or Afro - thanks to the needling and nagging of my brother/friends Sam Anderson, Paul Moore, and Anthony Monteiro - who said, it was an act of defiance and Black solidarity to show my natural beauty instead of frying my hair.   An throwing off the degenerate alliance to a white beauty standards that had been imposed on Black women for decades.  As a result, my best friend Maxine Stewart and I were the first to wear our hair natural Black then.  Actually Maxine was first and I was second -  but only after having seen how fabulous the Grandassa Models looked!  I've been wearing my hair natural and Happy Nappy ever since.  Of course my Mom, Ruby Love, was horrified and scandalized - in Oklahoma during that time, it would have been better to have been caught naked as a jaybird, than to come out with nappy hair! As a result, she decided to not have a family portrait because I wouldn't "straighten" my hair.  

That's me in 1967 Posing for my Senior Picture with my Natural



Black then, in the late 60s,  Dr. Charles V. Hamilton taught what we called "Hamiltonian Politics" - not to be confused with Alexander Hamilton, or the play "Hamilton!"   It was the post 1963 Kennedy Assassination, and post the repuglycon's attempt to defeat President Lyndon B. Johnson.  After he  "betrayed them" by passing the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act, putting together the Pell Grant, the College Work Study Program, Model Cities College Placement Programs - all designed to level the playing field for Black people. Dr. Charles V. Hamilton's Rabble Name was  "Vis A Vis" (vees ah vee), because he used the phrase so frequently, would hold forth in such an enigmatic manner, we all felt as if we were entering a vortex of knowledge.  After each class we would walk across the campus spouting Hamiltonian philosophy amongst ourselves.  To this day there are still those  of us who quote him chapter and verse; and treasure those days when he would stand in front of the class, pipe in hand, and drop knowledge all over the place.  Among those pearls were "Lyndon Baines Johnson accomplished more in his first 100 days, than President Kennedy has first year."  Other students would cut classes, and jam into his classroom - after his having come back from facing down raving racist in the south - to hear the "Hamilton Report,"or at least that's what we called it.  Telling us every detail of what was happening "down there" in the South.  He was frequently visited by Stokely Carmichael, H. Rapp Brown, Ralph Featherstone, and other leaders of the Black Power Movement - on a clandestine basis (or so we thought until someone blew up a vehicle headed to Lincoln with Ralph Featherstone in it, thinking that H. Rapp Brown was the passenger.  Those were exciting days at Lincoln. And I claim bragging rights to the 55 years of loving memory. But the most wonderful thing of all is that our living legend, Dr. Charles V. Hamilton is still with us; and still full of fire at the age of 92 years; and is as handsome as ever!!  We will be saluting him during our 55th Anniversary ceremony. 

I claim Bragging Rights for Stokely Carmichael's annunciation of BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL, and BLACK POWER,  for the first time on Lincoln's campus, in 1966 - at the invitation of Dr. Hamilton.  Before a standing room only audience at Mary Dodd Brown Chapel (named in honor of Abraham Lincoln's widow - and the site for so many historic events) we listened intently as he debunked and rebuked all the negative lies told about and to Black people for centuries by former slave monsters; as well as those who continued to try to hold us down.  The thrill of Stokely Carmichael standing before us, with Doc Hamilton sitting proudly on the sideline, as he told us that  Black is Beautiful, that we were Beautiful because we were Black we are Black! and that there was no such thing as an "illegitimate child - we all come out the same way!"  The entire auditorium stood and applauded and cheered.  He exhorted us to stop calling ourselves, and call ourselves Black from that day forward.  It totally changed and transformed us in so many ways.  We knew were in a privileged space - and Lincoln was truly hallowed ground - we were the continuity and prodigy of so  many of our Ancestral classmates who had distinguished themselves long before we arrived!  We felt we were carrying forth a sacred tradition of being the First. 

I had the privilege of being peer counselor to African student refugees from non-independent African countries - such as South Africa, where apartheid was running rampant, and Nelson Mandela had been recently incarcerated, giving rise to the ANC, and liberation movements among Black students.  We had a Pan-African Student Union - comprised of African, African American and Caribbean students.  I can't tell you how many times we solved the problems of Africa, got rid of colonial monsters, and taught our brothers and sisters how to develop Africa for Africans, while sitting in the student union building drinking hot coffee, or beer, or wine.  At least a third of the student population at Lincoln at that time was from Africa - thanks in part to the good offices of the  late Tom Mboya, Kenya's Minister of Justice, who sent many African students from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Ethiopia, Sudan, and other surrounding areas to Lincoln, and other HBCUs.  So we had no lack of African culturalism (thank God!!!) - we danced to traditional African music (Hi Life), learned songs, instruments, etc.  We had one of the few Varsity Soccer Leagues, that defeated most of the surrounding private caucasoid teams.  I never missed a game, whether on campus or at another college - that is Black colleges.  Segregation still prevented us going to such campuses as Farleigh Dickinson to show our support for our guys, who, by the way placed second in the Nationals!  Additionally, we still partied, plotted & planned for Africa's liberation, and in doing so,  bonded forever.  While many of our African cla have fulfilled their promise, and returned home to make a difference; others have sadly made their transition to the realm of African Ancestors; and  we have many who are still here in the US,  making a contribution through their talents, wisdom and knowledge.

Black then, Lincoln operated on an open enrollment, trimester basis - so students could drop out for whatever reason, and as long as they were in good academic and financial standing, they could pretty much start where they are, or start where they left off.   This was pretty helpful for those students who had been drafted or had participated in some part of the VietNam invasion (not really a war folks, even though the media tried to claim that it was).  Many a student dropped out to avoid the draft; and dropped back in after they were able to claim conscientious objector status.  Some came back shell shocked, but determined to continue and complete their education - only to find that, while they were fighting in Vietnam, Black people in America were being victimized.  Such was classmate John Huggins, who after realizing this, dropped out and went to participate in direct action against racism, joining and activist group in California. 

Black then, classmates like Gil Scott Heron and Randy Cain were exercising their creative chops - and we, the all knowing smart alecks that we were - would laugh at them and tell them to get their degrees.  Randy Cain, who was a member of the Delfonics, was tall, quiet, handsome, shy, and had a pretty decent voice.  But Gil!!?? We couldn't figure out what kind of voice he actually had.  At the time it seemed to be all over the map - and he was all wiry, thin skin and bones - hence his Rabble Name, "Spider" stuck with him to the day he died - So happy they didn't listen to us, and followed their own dreams, and have become the legends we know, love and look up to, to this day!

Black then, because there were only 16 CO-EDs on the campus, when we had a major event or party,  guys would bring their dates in for the weekend from other nearby colleges - they were the Cheyney Debs, Delaware Debs, etc.  Needless to say, though, we, The First Sixteen,  never lacked dance partners, suitors - and would party all night!!   Also needless to say that had my dad found out that Lincoln U was an all male school - I would have been dragged out of there!! But the most wonderful thing is that I got to have 600 brothers for life.
 
Not only that, I had sisters for life, who were likewise accomplishing great things.  Especially Carol Black, who, along with Maxine Stewart and Sandra McGruder, got together to bring a Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority onto the campus; and went back and forth to Delaware State to pledge Delta, and charter it on the campus!!  This while carrying their full complement of classes, and maintaining a high GPA!  And they did it!  Zeta Omega Chapter was established!  They made it happen!! While I can't claim bragging rights - I was carrying 21 credits a semester - I was in awe, and supportive at the dedication with which they pursued this marvelous goal.  (Thank God for Grad Chapter - I pledged Delta nearly 20 years later.)

Though only a few will be with us in person for the occasion of our 55th Anniversary - others will be with us virtually via Zoom!  We're all truly looking forward to seeing each other in the flesh, face to face (with or without masks) - just to feel that energy and love only we can bring to each other. 

This homage may have gone a little off the deep end - but then, at 77, I have every right to memorialize some of the more wonderful times of my life.  And to honor those who have made it so special along the way.   I am also adding that our fellow classmates of 1966 - Sam Anderson - and those who graduated in 1968 and 1969, Beale Morgan, Patrick Henry, Eddie Davies, Tom McGill,  the late Naib Iscandari, Hidipo Hamutenya, are as much a part of the Lincoln Rabble Spirit and family for me, as my classmate of 1967.  I'm Blessed to know them all!

PS: I forgot to mention that my youngest daughter, Adiya Wilson, is a Lincoln Alumna, and I have a very handsome grandson, Jaden WR Harrell, who is a rising Junior.  Trying to keep it in the family. 

So CONGRATULATIONS TO MY FELLOW CLASSMATES OF 1967 - THOSE WHO HERE AND THOSE WHO ARE IN HEAVEN!!  HAPPY 55th ANNIVERSARY TO US ALL!!
 
HAIL! HAIL! LINCOLN!!!
 
NOW THAT YOU KNOW
WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?

 
Gloria DULAN-Wilson -LU EMERITA CLASS 1967





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