Battalion/Pags February 21, IS Blue Angels may help rescue Houston United Press International HOUSTON — Earnest Smith stands on the doorstep of the vacant building he is using for a command post and sadly sur veys the battlefield into which he daily sends his young “Blue Angels.” The battlefield is his neigh borhood, the Fifth Ward, one of Houston’s predominantly black ghettos. Smith, 44, a former cot ton picker from Opelousas, La., is trying to take the neighbor hood back from the vandals and the thugs. Smith’s outpost is near the corner of Lyons Avenue and Gregg Street, heart of the Fifth Ward. Buildings are decaying, trash litters the area and around the liquor store next door sad- looking, poorly dressed old men sit on the sidewalk. “Like it is, the neighborhood is deteriorating,” Smith said. “It’s dying fast. What I really want to do is restore life to the Fifth Ward.” Smith, who has spent some time as pastor of a small church, takes his orders from the highest level, and even his wife, Betty, takes a backseat to his “com mander.” “The Lord told me I want you to wear a uniform,” Smith said. “He said put a badge on and your uniform on. He said, ‘I’m going to send you some people. I don’t want no guns, no clubs, no nothing. I’m going to use you.’ “The Lord said, ‘I want you to go and rescue the old senior citizens out of the hands of the smalltime gangsters and hood lums. I want you to rescue chil dren from drugs.’” Smith has gathered 21 young black men to patrol the area. The Blue Angels are similar to the Guardian Angels founded by Curtis Sliwa in New York — but there are major differences. “Guardian Angels know ka rate,” Chauncy Diggins, 21, one of Smith’s Blue Angels said. “We only know what we know in our heads, what we picked up (on the street). This is the only thing I see that’s worthwhile on this avenue. Guardian Angels wear T- shirts and dashing red berets. Smith’s men wear second-hand security company uniforms if he can find them. The work is dangerous. The patrols walk on foot and are sup posed to carry no weapons. If trouble breaks, they are sup posed to call police. Police tradi tionally do not approve of vigi lante groups, but they tolerate Smith. “It is a legitimate group trying to do some good,” police spokeswoman Phymeon Jack- son said. “They are trying to im prove their neighborhood. “I think if anything hap pened they would be calling police to handle what crime they saw. They’re a community ser- law vice group and not forcement group.” Another difference between Smith’s group and the Guardian Angels is Smith has a broader purpose than the strictly secur ity oriented Guardian Angels. He wants to lead young peo ple toward wholesome living by offering food and parties on Fri days and Saturdays. But he has little money. He works (sometimes) as a carpen ter, and he said he puts much of what he makes into his program. He takes donations — his head quarters is in donated space — but money has been slow in coming. “I’m looking for some mil lionaire somewhere with a yacht out there in the ocean to come and donate us some money so we can fund these guys,” Smith said. “Not paid, just funded. They’re working lor free right now.” Smith buttonholes passers- by, selling his brand of righteous neighborhood boosterism. One target was Barbara Price. “I feel like it is a great thing to have someone interested in our young people today,” Price said. “Certainly, if they start out with them small, give them the train ing, this will eliminate the crime rate.” Smith has fans, although some admit a lot of people in the Fifth Ward do not take Smith seriously. Raymond Jackson, who works in Ralston Liquor Store next door,isi the fans. “I see a lot of improvei Jackson said. “Not too guys hang around on the any more. I think they Angels) got a lot to do wit they (loiterers) don’t move,i call the HPD (police) on tie Shirley Hatton, clerki self-serve gas station dow st reel, said the Angels haves ped hoodlums from robbiiij vending machines right ini of her eyes. “Ever since thoseBlueAi have been there, we'vetm to keep the soda watersinp and to keep them from roll the machines," Hatton said. THE MSC PRESENTS Twice weekly, the MSC will advertise its events on this page. Look for ours ads every Monday and Thursday, and plan your calendar around the many exciting things I going on at your student union. .M S C. Aggi^CINEma, ‘Need a lift? Join MSC Aggie Cinema!” GENERAL MEETING Monday, Feb. 21 510 Rudder 7:00 p.m. New Members Welcome! Leadership applications for the following MSC Chairman positions are available now at the Secretaries Island of the Student Programs Office in Room 216 MSC. MSC Aggie Cinema Chairman MSC Student Conference on National Affairs MSC Amateur Radio Chairman Chairman MSC Arts Chairman MSC Video Tape Chairman MSC Basement Chairman MSC All Night Fair Chairman MSC Black Awareness Chairman MSC Christmas Program Chairman MSC Committee for the Awareness of Mexi-MSC Career Development Chairman can American Culture Chairman MSC College Bowl Chairman MSC Cepheid Variable Chairman MSC Discovery Chairman MSC Camera Chairman MSC Endowed Lecture Series Chairman MSC Free University Chairman MSC Fall Leadership Chairman MSC Great Issues Chairman MSC Freshman Open House Chairman MSC Hospitality Chairman MSC Lost and Found Chairman MSC Opera and Performing Arts SocietyMSC Madrigal Dinners Chairman Chairman MSC Spring Leadership Chairman MSC Outdoor Recreation Chairman MSC Summer Dinner Theatre Chairman MSC Political Forum Chairman MSC Variety Show Chairman MSC Recreation Chairman MSC Welcome Back Picnic MSC Townhall Chairman MSC Travel Chairman Interviews for all of the above positions will be held on February 26- 27, 1983. Applications will be due on February 23 by 5:00 p.m. to the MSC Council Office. 4r MSC BLACK AWARENESS COMMITTEE SALUTES BLACK HISTORY MONTH MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21 “MALCOLM X” DISCUSSION 7:00 501 RUDDER MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28 “ISSUES FACING THE BLACK WORLD” 7:00 501 RUDDER SATURDAY, MARCH 5 BAG FORMAL — RAMADA INN A Proud Heritage COMING SOON FROM MSC HOSPITALITY B ■irday iduthwe Kball Bribe MSC Lounge in brm >tk addt adittle i PAGEANT PEEK TT (at the talent!) February 23 Noon MSC Lounge he ope: MR. AGGIE CONTEST February 21 Noon atelier IM Scfwfcrsfty* Pkjearit February 25 7 p.m. Rudder Auditorium Tickets on sale now at MSC Box Office I MSC FREE UNIVERSITY SPRING ’83 s SESSION 1 SIGN-UPS PV95/ 7\ ’205/71 ’205/7: P205/7: P215/7: P225/7! ’235/71 I I This Week: Wednesday 224 MSC Thursday 140-A MSC |'P225/ ! ’Rais |r Rudder Theater February 22 Tuesday S-'OO Free "Vr msc Gnat* Cenfcen IBs no! too la+e ... The MSC Craft Center still has spaces in some of its Spring Workshops, including: pTiT 2R-15 Stained Glass (suncatchers) Beginning Airbrush Bread Dough Easter Baskets Advanced Calligraphy and several others ... For more details call 845-1631, or come by the Knitting Glass Etching Watercolor China Painting MSC Craft Center in the basement of the MSC.