The leaflet says the letter at right was written by Reverend Gladstone Ntlabati, a black exile from South Africa who is presently a graduate student at Harvard University. The leaflet says we thank the Cornell Daily Sun for allowing us to reprint these articles. The leaflet says when asked in the Temple of Zeus meeting how he had voted on apartheid matters in his capacity as a director of Chase Manhattan, President Perkins said that the question has never come up; it is obvious that working within the system will not end apartheid- especially when that "system" is apartheid. The leaflet reprints a Letter to the Editor from Cornell University President James A. Perkins in the Cornell...
The leaflet says the letter at right was written by Reverend Gladstone Ntlabati, a black exile from South Africa who is presently a graduate student at Harvard University. The leaflet says we thank the Cornell Daily Sun for allowing us to reprint these articles. The leaflet says when asked in the Temple of Zeus meeting how he had voted on apartheid matters in his capacity as a director of Chase Manhattan, President Perkins said that the question has never come up; it is obvious that working within the system will not end apartheid- especially when that "system" is apartheid. The leaflet reprints a Letter to the Editor from Cornell University President James A. Perkins in the Cornell Daily Sun and a response. The leaflet discusses economics, the United Nations (UN), sanctions, an oil embargo, First National Bank, Chemical Bank, economic disengagement, Methodists, American corporations, cheap black labor, corporate influence, the Commission on Human Rights for the City of New York, discriminatory employment practices, the National Council of Churches, Vietnam, Yale University, the New Haven Black Alliance, Rev. William Sloane Coffin, Rhodesia, and a nonviolent economic war against racism. Note: This leaflet is on 11 x 17 inch paper.