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The iH lltop: 1980-90 The iH lltop Digital Archive

8-30-1985 The iH lltop 8-30-1985 Hilltop Staff

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Inside: • • ? St.or, a review, pg. 13 • • Bi.on ho,,.,, ga""'• unknown, pg. 16 - ~ • Re/igi

Volume 63, Number 1 The Nation's Largest Black Student Newspaper • Howard University, Washington, D.C. 20059 August 30, 1985

• Actin· • • ua nae Nam d ­ ar 0 e Purvette Bryant of identification, said Mildred . Hilltop Staff Reporter Mendenhall, a desk receptionist 'who was. on d11ty during the Hill~:~:::=~~!... A man posing as a window alleged rob~ry. The workers' nor- Officials at WHUR, oward Un­ washer entered the Tubman iversity's radio sta 'i-on, fired Quadrangle August 22 and mal procedure is to state what general manager Robe N. Taylor reportedly robbed the snack bar thejr purPose is and report to in late June, said \}'HUR Ad· hostess of over $500 in cash household management after ministrative Assists t Wyemia according to university officials. ' gaining consent from the recep­ Grimes . tionist, according to Mendenhall. Taylor, who worked for th~ sta­ Virginia Jackson, 64, of N.E. tion for six years, was eplaced by Washington, was approached by While on duty ''one man came in now acting general manager Jim the assailant about 2:1-5 p.m. who with cleaning mi;t.terials and said Watkins. asked if he could leave a red buck­ he was· cleaning windows,'' she Grimes declined. to say exactly et with cleaning supplies inside said. ••At the beginning of the year her office located on the first floor, they have more than one contrac­ why Taylor was fired, put, in a re­ • cent article in the fsshington said Jackson, who is employed by tor with different things to do," she Afro-American newspaper, Taylor Forreflt Wade, Hilltop Staff Photographer Service America Corporation. continuea~ , President Cheek.listens as Rodman Rockefeller discusses joint \lenture. -· She consented and locked the said he did not know \Vhy he was No security guard was on duty fired. • door· after putting the supplies away. Jackson said he returned • during that- time, said Men­ Sources in the articl said one of denhall. the reasons for Taylo 's termina­ five to ten minutes later to get the Rockefeller Reveals Bold• tion may have been drop in the bucket as she was about to re­ "When on duty there should be . station's ratings. I • - enter the office; and offered to· 'one in the lobby,'' she said. ''Some­ Studies showed tha ratings de- wash her windows. times they're stationed between creased from 1 7 .1 ma.~ket' share in. "I said, ''You can wash the win­ "here and Bethune and make Plan for H.U.'s Future dows next week. I'm getting ready routine checks." the summer of 1984 tp a 5.4 mar­ • to leave," said Jackson. ''Just as I ket share in the spriryg of 1985. Traci Scott day. Place''. Lloyd Lacy, chief security offi­ Owen Nichols, Deap of Student Hilltop Staff Reporter Rodman C. Rockefeller, a head The development, if approved by was opening the door, that's when he grabbed me around the neck cer, said one person was assigned • Affairs, and Taylor were not avail­ Howard University has merged for the group called the Portal the D.C. Redevelopment Land to both donns but did not know and shoved me in." able for comment a~ Presstime. with three other partners in a Partnership, told deans from var- Agency (RLA) on Sept. 5, will whether the ·individual was in the According to sourc s; however, $368-million bid• to develop 10 , iousschoolsandcollegesinameet- house offices, restaurants, retail After asking where the money was, he told ·her to get on the floor building during that time. Accord­ Taylor is planning to sue the uni­ acres of waterfront property in ing at the Howard Inn about the tacilitie!'I, a 300-room luxury hotel, ing to Officer Wendell Samuels, of versity. Southwest Washington, President proposal, which calls for plans to and space for public recreation, and the11 used a belt from a dress hanging on the wall to tie her up, the Public Information Office, James E. Cheek announced Tues- develop a complex called ''Channel cont'd OD page 4 she said. Metropolitan Police Department, no information concerning the in­ • ' Jackson said threatening re­ marks caused her to wait awhile vestigation could be diljClosed. before untying her hands and go­ ''I feel like Howard's security is • ent - ing to the residence counselor's nothing," said Jackson. "In a large Eton Coed Raped office where security was called. area where there's a lot of money ''I was lucky nobody had a gun to they should have someone my face," said Jackson who has around." 1 • Prob le s worked as a hostess in the Quad for 14 years. ''Evidently he's been The week before the alleged around here and somebody's been robbery a bag containing $350 was Continue watching me. He planned what he taken from Jackson's office. While was going to do and came back she was servi~ing the machines I when the area was empty," she ad­ she neglected th lock the door, she Hill!:;~!;8R,~rter ded. said. ''But this was down and out The man was described as un­ viQlence and ~obber ," she said. Registration for the f~ semester armed, 5'9, about 160 pounds, ''Last week was a case of negli­ has proven once again ! ~ be a test medium !>rown, slightly built, be­ gence." · of endurance and p$tience, for tween 35 and 38 years old wearing both the students 8hd the ad- ''I have never had anything hap-. a"blood re_d shirt and dark pants,'' pen to me in the 18 years that I •• ministrators. I The long lines) cpupled with according· to J.ackson. worked for the company,'' she said. Contractors for cleaning, paint­ having to arrange financial mat­ "All he was concerneQ about was ing or r~pair services u~ually ters at the last minbie, seem to the money and he scared it out of best describe this ye~r's registra- aren't required to~ show any form me." tion process. I . One area of conceb was the computer shut-d~wn that temporarily incohvenienced registration ~s. . Alfred School of Communications Dean Resigns Post Roscoe, Bu!..s~! .. f in the ded. I Administration Buildif11!, explains Purvette Bryant just going to a faculty position. I ''I don't think it's enough to communication problems, things that ''this is due to Ia computer HiUtop Staff Reporter have applied for sabbatical start­ train a person jµst to take a posi­ that affect our lives both in the A proposal to officially make the duplication of fi°iancial aid ing January 1. After that I will tion in the ihdustry,'' he said. "You· U.S. and the Third World, he ad- I cont'd OD pap 2° payments. In order tq give money , Dr. Lionel C. Barrow resigned possibly return .to Howard. I do might train a person to become a out, credit must be on the June ~O as dean of the School of have a position to come back to." researcher ... to look at the im­ student's account. ~~cannot risk Communications, and graduate giving financial aidj money to Nominations for a review com­ pact of media on the way people professor Dr. Orlando Taylor was mittee which .will assist in select­ see the world, the way they think those who are not eligible.'' appointed acting dean July 1 by Roscoe alsq said s~y percent of ing a new dean have been sub­ about life. I think we should have a the people in line~ are there President Cheek, who accepted mitted to the president, according mix of those things." because they didn't do something Barrow's resignation the same to Dr. Taylor. day. Academic instruction, research, that they could have pone earlier. The acting dean described his He said they must iealize there ••you serve at the pleasure of the continuing education and com­ must be some new position as simply a vacancy munity service work together to waitmg. President," said Barrow who had that had to be filled immediately. ''People always ~tuntil the been dean sin~e July 1, 198~ . "I . sharpen the mission or philosophy last minute to do ev · , '' he reached the pOint where 1 telt it Dr. Taylor became a faculty mem­ of the school, according to Taylor. ber in 1973. The positions he held • said. "People who k care of was time for me to step down." i include a professor as well as Before Barrow resigned, the their business on ~ got their Sources within the university certificates (of regi~~n) in the ch,airman of the Department of Center of Communications Re­ maiJ. Even though thp 26th of July believe Barrow was forced to res­ search was developed May 1 to ign because the school had no di­ Communications Arts and Sci­ was the last day to ecdG! money, ences from 1975 to 1980. ''stim\llate and support research we extended the de'e e up to rection. Barrow would not com­ and research publications among August 8. The t continuing ment when asked if his resigna­ The new goal and direction of students are usually the ones who tion was a direct order from Presi- the school will sharpen its present faculty and students1iri the School goal to train people to enter the 10 are delinquent in payµients.'' dent Cheek. - of Communications, ' said Oscar I communications industry, said A.cconiing to Bren~ Baskerville, Three courses within the De­ Gandy, acting i:lirector for the re­ Orlando Taylor Lionel C. Barrow supervisor of aud• accounts, partment of Journalism are now Taylor, although he believes this search center. The center plans to ''If more continuing students taught by Barrow who said, ''I'm is not sufficient for Howard. also contribute the knowledge of HWtop Stall' Photosrapher, John Cuh Marker Ya tee, Hilltop Staff PhototraPber would take advanUlll" of the pre­ regiotration and pa~ through the I mail, the lines would.be obsolete. , Our biggest head~he, though, are atudents w~o are not HUSA, Sponsors 'Azania llpdate~ regiotered as ooon as thef would like to be, due to jh::ncial mat­ three co-sponsoring ter&, who believe we (ad­ Benjamin J amea tionary Socialist Party

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Pip 2 The Jiilltop, Friday, August 30, 1985 ' • anese • I • Andrew Skerritt lures from the control of the huge noiiaggression and n-oninterfer­ predictably mixed. Molit Carib­ illustrious career. his paBBing de· foreign currency earnings and a Hilltop Sta.tr Re~rter bean leaders, though opposed to finitely marks the end· of an era; mounting foreign debt is adding I . Cana~ian and · American mul_ti-1 ence in other nations' affairs. The people of Guyaqa and the national corporations which had bel Strict adherence to this policy led his socialist policies, lauded him the changing of the guard in further stTain on the economy­ Caribbeaif: recently mourned the en prostituting his nation's vast Guyana to condemn Argentina's for his role in Third World leader­ Caribbean and nonaligned world Guyana owes $400 million to Tri­ death ofnne oftheirmoot~aniboyani natural resources for years. invasion of the Malvinas (Falk­ ship and for working to obtain a leadership. Burnham was the last tJ.idad a'nd Tobago., To compound :: and respected leaders. ~orhes Bur­ · Despite his country's relatively land Islands), and Russia's incur- ' more equitable distributiop of surviving pioneer who fought all the internal pressures the nham. executive president and small size and limited economic sion iniq Afghanistan. An ardent wealth ·between North and South. British colonialism in the Carib­ ..country is facing, its neighbors leader of the People's National strength, Pres. Burnham rose to believer in Caribbean integration, His critics viewed his demise as an bean. He- leaves behind, however, Venezuela and Surinam are mak­ Cong1eaa, died Aug. 6th of heart become one of the most widely re­ Burnham saw his dream of a un­ opportunity for Guyana to return an unenviable legacy which may ing claims to much of its territory. failure while undergoing throat spected leaders among developing ified Caribbean almoet crumble to 'true democracy and economic yet mean more years of austerity The reins of leadership have be­ surgery. Third World nations. He was ·con­ when regional leaders became viability.' The reaction of for most of his countrymen. Years en passed on to Desmond Hoyte Burnham, 62, led Guyana for sistently one of the most out­ sharply divided over the 1983 U.S. Guyanese students on Howard's of abuse left many Guyanese who was Prime Minister unCier the past 21 years. During this time spoken and virulent critics of invasion of Grenada; Burnham campus was relative.ly muted, but alienated from the political es· Burnham. The task now falls to all he took the country frrim its colon­ South Africa's oppressive system was one of the few Caribbean lead­ most expressed the hope that Bur-· tablishment. His policies of self­ segments of the Guyanese society ial status to independeiice, and of apartheid and was unwavering ers to condemn the action taken by nham's passing would usher in a reliance, though progressive, have to combine their numerous re.­ transformed it into a socialist re­ in his refusal to allow athletes who the Reagan administration. period of positive growth and meant chronic shortages of con­ sources in order to revitalize their public. He is credited. w_ith had sporting links with South Reaction to Mr. Burnham'• political stability. sumer product.a and runaway in­ economy and maintain the in­ nationalizing Guyana's major Africa to enter GuYana. A true death, coming at a crucial period Whatever other tribUte that can flation. Depressed aluminum dependen~ path which Burnham industries-bau'xite ·mining and statesman, Forbes Burnham in the evolution of the region, was . be paid· to President Burnham's prices have resulted in reduced so courageously had forged . sugarcane refining- thus remov­ based his foreign policy objectives ing these major export-based Ven: resolutely on the twii:i principles of 1 ' r Lines 'Anger All cont'd from paae I - organization. Starting clas.9es late ''On the whole, students were derstand if they may wait for that registration is no easy means that one can fall behind. still better prepared this year than about 45 minutes. It takes only process. "Because I did not pre­ More people should be available in some previous rears I t I five minutes to check a student's register, having to wait in line is to help alleviate some of these Baskerville said, "especially the printout and about five to seven reallv my fault. However, the only problems.'' incoming students. minutes to deal with a cashier,'' thing I am most unhappy aboµt is ''There is no new system to "We try lo hire more people lo she said. tbat I mlssed two days of classes speed up the registration give information and direct the • Said senior electrical while registering for classes. One process.'' said Roscoe . ''The floor traffic inside registration engineering major Curtis 1ine I was in took two hours in the computerized system we use now areas. To make things even more Bronzell, ''Getting your business hall, and then I waited three hours is the same as the one we have convenient, we try to let students straight means having lo go · once inside the room,'' she said. been using. All of our work is on know by mail what they will need through a big song and dance. I - Anthony Hopkins, a junior line, which means that a payment to bring for registration," she • think that" if I had the money lo ;majoring in marketing says that recorded today goes on account added. pay all at once I would not be here ''iegistration has never been today, but if a payment does not "Futhermore, I disagree that a now. Waiting on lines to get easy. They (Howard) have been get received until late, it is student needs to be waiting on certificates validated has been a • losing my forms, and they have no processed late.'' line for many hours. I can un- problem for all my years here.''

• SC Dean Res· cont'd from page. 1 , to develop a mix between the two. our center a part of the school will be ''In addition to having the job • presented to the school's faculty fair component, we're going to • cont'd from page 1 during their next meeting Sep- have more aCademic and research • ''Factors Affecting Pregnancy cialists to discuss prenatal care tember 10. ff it is approved by the .topics on that program so that Outcomes in Black Populations," a and pregnancy outcomes in black ' members, the proposal will be pre- when a student comes to Howard re.search conference on infant and women. sented to university officials for Unfversity he doeso'tjust come to Applications available in the L.A.S.C. Sessions incfUde ''Demographic approval, said Gandy. pri~arily get a job," said Taylor. maternal health problems, will be Faculty within the school ex- ''Tliey'll also be exposed to some of 1 held Sept. 9 from 8:30 a.m. tO 4:30 Factors and Pregnancy Outcorhe~·· office in oom 1.08 Blackburn Unv. and ''Environmental and Occupa­ pressed concerns that the philoso- t.he top scholars and practitioners p.m. in the Blackbum Center on phy could be in jeopardy as the throughout the country in the var­ the main campus. tional .Hazards Associated with Center. Pregnancy Outcomes.'' new administration appears to ious fields of communication." DEADLINE: Applications must be returned to the · Sponsored by the School of Hu­ The conference is free and open emphasi7.e scholarly research and He said tb'e mission ot the school , man Ecology and the College of to the public. To attend the plen­ deemphasize professionalism. has not bee~ changed but that L.A.S.C. office[by Tuesday, September 3, 1985 by 5:00 Medicine, the conference wi·ll ary session luncheon, however is a Dr. Taylor's comments on the . • p.m. . attract local and national nutri· registration fee of $12. For more school's annual Communications attempts are ~1ng made to create tionists, membe·rs of the medicine information, contact the School o Conference whiCh will be held in a g~eater 1?1.x between. p~o­ Februai-y, such change, .. : (e§S!.O~al: tf/l:IJ!l,lng, . a~dermc , in-, . ~ nquiries -.636-7009/7010 profession and public health spe· Human Ecology at 636-6766. sqgests 8 I although he, said their attempt is ·qtruction and ~~sea?F~·

, . o· Travel

• •• Service • Will arrange all your travel needs • • • Air • Sea Train • •' - • • Sept. 6 African Affirmation D9y Freedom Rally; Main Personal . Campus 12 :00 noon Student • • 11 . ''What Happened to the Black Revolution Un­ dergraduate Library 7-9 pm Group 19 ''Children of Black Leaders: Speak Out West Ballroom BK bar 6:30-10:00 pm Chartered Bus Trips 21 ''Mecca. Fair'' Main Campus 29 ''Is Christianity a White Man's Religion?'' Un­ Ski Pac.kages - dergarduate Library 7-9 pm

Vacation. or Visit In the Caribbean, • There will be a volunteer meeting In the Hiiitop South Pacific Holy Land or Africa Lounge, Wednesday, S~ptember 4th 1:00 pm let Mayo Travel make the arrangements - • located in the lobby Howard lnn-387-441 I Contact: Pat, V,alerie, lee • All 1c:•Jor cn:dlt c•l'dl •cc1pt1d !t , • , - - •

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. BUSA Plans New Year Keene • • American class (this semester) Christianity A White Man's Relig­ . Alieon Bethel said Calhoun. He explained that ·. ion?'' Dispelling th! Myth; Pan HWtop 8iol! Reporter HUSA influenced se,veral stu· Africanism; Black "Men: Where Named The new Howard Uni~ersity dents to join an Afro-American Have AJI the Good Ones Gone?, · . Student Aooociation (HUS ) is be­ Studies course by soliciting at the Children of Black Leaders; Ho- ~"'!"- Jinniug the 1985 school y at by Tubman Quadrangle and other ward University: Why Are We •beaaing education, comrqunica­ places throughout the university, Here?; Our Bodies Ourselves; and Dean tion and unification, acco ing to and through rap sessions. What Happened To the Black HUSA President Emory C houn. This year's HUSA staff, said Revolution? ''We will be covering a lot of John C. Brazington · "HUSA will try to noi o ly in­ Calhoun, is a full staff that is Hilltop Staff Reporter otill political education (int · e stu­ ''growing everyday with volun­ things that face Black people to­ dents) but moral educat on as teers." day," said Scott senior in the Col- . University officials said laat • -11," BBid Calhoun, ajunio in the ''Most of the staffers are volun­ lege of Liberal Arts. "We hope to week that William E. Keene was Collep of Liberal Arts. teers," said Calhoun. give the student body a wide vari­ named Dean of Residence Life for "By them (students) seei g our Along with these volunteers, ety of programs that will interest the University. light, then they will foll w our Calhoun and HUSA vice­ them.'' Calhoun agreed adding Keene, who held the position of light," he said. president Bryant T. Moore will be that, ''We are an administration of acting dean for the past 18 According to Calhoun, aided by Calhoun's wife Francello substance.'' months, will assume the new posi· will work at putting on everal Calhoun. According to Moore, ''Our main tion August 1, said Carl Anderaon, programs this year for uniyersity Francello, also a junior in the thrust is ail attempt to build a fam­ 1vice-president for student affairs. students. One tentative prygram, College of Liberal Arts, said that ily relationship on Howard's cam­ Prior to being appointed tempo­ aaid Calhoun, is a M~ IAffair she will support her husband in pus." He sai~ that the association rary acting dean for housing, that will "include·the 17 lieges ''every endeavor." He's my hus­ wiJI be sponsoring a Big Brother Keene was executive ~stant t11 and display the talents tha exists band and I have to support him in Big Sister program this year and Anderson in the office of student in each school." anything ... And I definitely the Student Concerns an'd Gri­ affairs. Calhoun said this yea 's ad­ will," she said. - vances Unit will play an impor­ I Both administrators declined to ministration will continue the cru­ "Our programs will be centered tant role in this years activities. · comment on Keene's salary. sade of last year's Cati cart­ around moral issues , ethical "One of the main problems on "I have no comment on this aal­ Jenkins administration in trying · issues and a lot of controversial campus is that a lot of us are more HUSA President Emory Calhoun and Vice-President Bryan Moore ary'' Anderson said. "He is being issues," said Paul Scott, HUSA 'I' centered than 'thou' centered," to make AfnrAmerican St dies a • adequately compensated for the mandatory course. Human Relations Director. said Moore, a senior in the School job he does." My administration ha been According to Scott, HUSA will of Communications. ''We don't should." He attributes this self­ result of a cold heart.'' Anderson said, he had to con­ successful in filling eve Afro- put on programs such as: ''Is serve one another in love like we centeredness to ''insensitivity as a "There are a lot of people talking vince Keene to take the position. about brotherhood and sisterhood ''Initially he (Keene) was not in· and not living it,'' Moore said. terested. However, after I con­ ''Emory and I are revolutionaries vinced him to take it... he did." for Jesus Christ... The things While Keene was acting dean, Com that Jesus fought against were a~l university officials organized a ,unity Day Calls For Unity elements of injustice and persecu- . .. search committee to find a per­ ' . ' t ton ... manent replacement for former Krystal Bndge • Moore said that HUSA would Dean, Edna Calhoun, who retired Hilltop Stan Repo ) r • like to have students ''come in February 1984 after serving 19 together in love." years in the position. The 8th annual Cqmmunity Believing that Jesus is the ''only University officials said a dean Day held at Malcolm X Park Aug. true revolutionary that ever ex­ would be named by January 1985. 24, included varioui types of isted'' because He "came to saye However, no permanent replace­ entertainment and spe·akers the sins of the world," Moore ment was named and university stressing Black unit and eco­ stressed that, ''the only power officials said a dean would be nomic deve]opment in the Black that's going to be able to straight­ named by March. But by the end of community. . en out our campus is the power of spring semester no permanent A disciple ofMiniste Louis Far­ GOO through Jesus Christ.'' rakhan, Abdul Alim MUhammad, cont'd on paae 10 was the keynote spea~er. He ad­ dreaaed about 400 specjatora, tell­ • ing them, ''There is on1,y pne way for Blacka to unite, ana that is to produce the'foundationlthat every­ / one feels comfortable si.anding on. That base has to be the universal truth." [. Muhammad later 8a1d that Ho­ w a rd University' ~ Student Association (HUSAJ took one giant step in helpi.ngr.ttie Black community unite ·by ponsoring Community Day. The theme ofthe day is UM OJA, 1 which means unity, ~id Ona Au­ stin, coordinator of the event, and is one of the seven ~1rinciples of N guzo Saba, or Blackness. The six-hour festival featured a fashion show of Afridan designs, martial art exhibitihns, bands, and speakers of the Black move­ ment who attempted 1to bring the • community closer to !understand­ • ing the importance of Black his­ • tory, Black people,j and them­ .. ••-.;I~ ' < ~ . . ~.,.,f

selves. C· ! 'I 1·1 HUSA Vice-President Bryant ' . Marker Yates, Hilltop Staff Photographer . Moore said, "Blacko ~eed to devel­ I op collectivity and work together Howard student•• Pam Ware apd Michele Hudson watch community day activities with two interested youths. aa a people." j . ' < "We need to w-ipe out political • ignorance,'' said Bob ~rown of the African Revolution~ Party. ''To educate and orgal).i our people is • the key," he said. B wn, who has been with the partYi since 1968, suggested that the community and ' YEARBOOK PICTURES FOR ALL DEGREE CANDI­ }IUSA ask his organization, . for ad- ' ' vice in bringing Affo-Ainericans .. ... "' DATES WILL BE TA~EN SEPT. 3-14 (EXCEPT SUNDAY) · together. - " .. 10:00 am TO 6:00 pm. SIGN-UP IN room G06 BLACK­ Joining the cel~bration and '"' I BURN gathering of the Black community waa Black poet Haki Madhubuti, who recited two ~ms which de­ livered a message df Black unity and overcoming/ White sup­ Astor Pizza re.macy. CARRY OUT & TABLE SERVICE Engineering student Lisa Dunn 1829 COLUMBIA ROAD; N.W . performed a dramatic reading on WASHINGTON. D.C. 20009 unifying the Black )race. She said '745.7495 ' the problem of Black-American separation or distai\ce is all in the ' mind. ''In the subdonscious mind you are denying u~~ty . Hwe know GYRO SANDWICH - I ' who we are we ~n; make the con­ $2.75 nection. The mind !controls every­ GYRO PLATTER - $3.75/ thing we do. Thei first move is to SOUVLAKI SANDWICH - H.75 feel unity, recognize it, and then we can move onw,rd," she said. SOUVLAKI PLATTER - $3.75 Manotti Jenkins, from the Pan­ •' African Revolutibnary Socialist Celli in advance and food will be ready "t Party, placed einPhasis on South Africa and the U.S. "America's in a catch-22 poeitioh. It has strong ' impetialist intefests in South All S,tudents Africa and it rec.'lgnizes that the • conditions have ijeen created for -$1.50 off any revolutionary atn.iggle. It is trying to persuade the South African gov­ large piua ernment to embark upon a pro­ -$1.00 off any gram of small reform so thai America can Pfes~rve its ex­ small piua ploitative interests,'' he explained. The Kan Kourrn West African r -$.50 off any sub Dance Troupe ended the day's Forrest Wade, Hilltop Staff Photographer activities. They,/ along with the • African Heritage Dancers who A Community Day·volunteer paint. the face of Howard student Mallolm Carter while Joy Hunter look1 on. performed earlie~, danced on •tilts in colorful African costumes and Expiration DaU October 31, 1985 hea.im-.. I '

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I ' ) I $368 M Joint Venture ' . velopment Center of the School of of a program, it could have easily cont'd from pate l Business. been ten," he said. according to Rockefeller. ''We said in our agreeme~t that · President Cheek said that if • ''Our participation as an institu- we would begin the program of the tion is rather ltnique for a project internships within six months of approved by the RLA board the · faculty of the four schools and col­ of this kind," J'r esident Cheek "'!id., the actual granting of the property • leges involved in making the p~ ­ - ' ''I know of no other (situation) ·in by the RLA board. We do not want ·r which any university has been in· to wait on the internship program gram will be familiat with their vited to participate in this type of until some magical date of con- · inte~ formats. ''Their judgement would be critical,'' he said. } endeavor," he added. struction ... because obviously all 1 The joint venture, also headed of the efforts are learning experi­ In an interview after the brief­ by James W. Rouse, includes two ences," said Rockefeller. ing, Rockefeller said he local real estate developers, Farr· Since the internship program is approached the university about Jewett and Associates, Inc. ahd only scheduled to last for five · two months ago because "'it is by First City Associates, Inc. years, Howard law professor far the best known university in PN BEHALF-OF THE Two other groups Portal De- Jerome Shuman, questioned the ' Washington and it appeared to me velopment Association, headed by fact that the program could be that it had all the academic and Herbert L. Miller, Portal Associa- comple~ before construction of leadership characteristics that UNDERGl

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• • IE ..• ' • Pr fe1sor of Military·'Science •Douglass Hall• Rm20 A• Howard University• Washington, D.c: 20059 • 636-6784

• • The Hilltop, Friday, August 30, -1985 Page 5

, ationa ews • So. A rican ·sanctions Draw Opposing views

1'imothy H"'Fon them in power.'' sforming South Africa, but rather White peo)1le who can occupy people in that country mu.st be Senate will pass the bill and that Butler said that if the United will have a negative impact on the jobs, and if the economy statts brought into the governmental President Reagan will sign it. l!ill~P statr aei.ner States were to pull out of doing African population.'' He called expanding as it has been doing, structures, they must be brought Butler ,thinks the bjll will oass. When the United ~~tes Sena!:" ~ business with South Africa, then the argument faJJacious . relatively rapidly, then you've got into the institutions that unaergo not by a presidential signature but reconvenes to consider eronormc some of the other CO\Dltries of the Cummings noted that with South to fill those jobs with other people, the South African situation," by -a ro~sion81 <>Verride or a ' sanctions against Soutl;l Africa, it world would be willing to fill that Africa's ties to the western and that lS what's forced the Cummings said. ~residential veto. Butler said that will be debating the •am• issues eoonomic void. ''There haVe been eci>nomic system "you can in fact White economy to allow Blacks to He added that the problem with 'if they (the administration) ,sign that Dr. Stuart M. Bu!Jer and Dr. sanc\ions against South Africa off have the leverage that will force come in, ' ' Butler said. something like that happening that bill, they have their blood on Robert J. Cummings . at odds and on for many years. There was South Africa to traosfurm itself' Cummings, on the other hand, would be that ''if you in fact allow the documents. They will have via the use of economic sanctions basically accepted that they are over. an arms embargo against South does believe that past U.S .. action for a Deffiocratic process to occur, ~ and Butler have very Africa·: now it exports arms to 'Clmiining. then addressed ·the · can be interpreted as financial there is no way under the sun that . going to go alollll( with some idea opmions about what the • strong · other countries. There are plenty belief that the economic void support of the apartheid system. the South· Africans can get away United State's role in Stjuth Africa of other C9UDtries, such as Japan, created by a possible· investment ''We are the benefactors and the of sanctions. That totally un­ should be. Both work lor groups and Ew-opean countries that are pullout by the United States would with not having a Nelson Man­ dermines any effort they taii then beneficiaries of the apartheid make to go into an alternative that specialize in research, willin,:t and e~r to move iqto the be filled by other nations. system ... we · support racial dela, for example, in a leading policy." He added that although Cummings as the difedor of South African. trade if the U.S. "Whether they like it OI' not, disharmony in that colintry, we ' role I only use Nelson Mandela he sees a South African sanctions Howard U!_liversity's. 1 ~ African pulls out. '. · west.em~ and its 90 called support racism in that country,'' because he epitomizes what that ·· Stuilies and Researeh department Cummings disagrees with such · overdevelo natonS are tied he said. Addressing the economic community lqoks1 like ~ believes, bill passing, there are two ver- and Butl6r ..as director~Domestic assertions .._ ' · F.cx>nomic sanctions economi y into the United status of Blacks in South Africa, and is considering -in terms of its sions of the bill, the Senate · Policy Studies for the Herita.oe in th'\ case of South Africa would States as well, and our N.A.T.0. Cummings said, " if you look at own future.'' version 8nd the House version. Foundation, a Wa.shi , n ha...t be the most positive development other military find . ' and arrangements the figures, you'll that the Despite the fact that he· believes Butler says that if it caJDe to a . research foundation. Wjhl!e both that could occur a~ this time,'' be give us political clout so that we number of Africans who are persons such as Moral Majority quest.ion of overriding the are experts in the ~ I of South said. When one looks at the can say to those colintries that if working in these firms and in­ - African affairs, the t:''larities history of United States foreign you do in.fact violate this principle dustries is excrutiatingly small in leader Jerry Falwell and others president's veto, the tougher end there. · policy, usually without hesitation of morality, if you do in fact terms of the total ·African are trying to drum up enough House bill would prObably be ''I feel that economic ctions move on that country with violate this litical decision that population ... most ofthem are still support to justify . a veto of the approved in an override by a would hav:e a very nega~ve effect economic sanctions,'' Cummings we are ~ against South paid less than their White South African Sanctions bill, smaller margin . thsn the Senate and would not act¥~v~ I, the ob­ said. Ht{ cited, among others, Africa, if ,you do in fact violate our counterparts. At the same time, to Cummings predicts that the bill. jectives that people ·tJ\ink they Latin Anleric.a as an example of decision to bring forth economic argue that they are going to be would," said Butler. \ . this theory. Cummings says that sanctions against that state, then affected negatively is a concern • ''The theorv of econo%' c san­ the question of whether or not to you will pay'' Ct1mmings said, now that has never existed • < • ctions is that by putting pressure, impose economic sanctions addina the United States must before. the threat in. other ~rds, of' against South Africa ''beoomes at take ihe leadership role on this ''We've never been concerned Stanley H. Kaplan I damaging the South African some point one of no real roncem point 90 other western powers wilt before alxiut hOw little pay they -· c' econo_my will some how orce the · because that has not bee"n an issue not feel so "fearful of doing it." were receiving for all the work ·The SMART MOVE! • white government in 1 toria to under: certain kinds of situations When asked if our investing in they were doing. We've not been PREPARATION FOR: see reasort or to feel _ ~at if it where the United States is con­ South Africa is nothing more than concerned before about the fact makes political ch~ . those cem. ed . " a financing of the apartheid that they were unable to be GMAT. LSAT. GRE political changes will / be less In the case of South Africa, system, Butler disagreed adding, treated equally as humans to their MCAT. DAT harmful than the econrimic .Cummings said the U)lited States ''the one thing that is un­ white countetparts. Now all of a 1 sanctions themselves,'' ~e said. have been searching, for " stalling dermining apartheid and putting sudden· we become interested in Call Days, Evenings & Weekends 244-1456 Butler described this view as _tactics'' to assure the maintaining tensions in it is the growth of the whether or not they are going to being ''naive'', adding .at ''it's· of . "a minority rejPme that is economy ... it is in fact economic be- negatively affected by a hard to see any sanctio~ that you . heavily prosecutory m-terms of its growth and international in­ sanctions program,' ' Cu,mmings -ti. could put against South Africa . ·prosecution towards the majoricy vestment in South Africa that is said. that in the opinion o~ ·· a white population there .... we have thus sewing the seeds of destruction of ''The point that I think is im­ N minority government 'i"'uld be used economic sanctions and said apartheid in my view.' ' portant here," said Cummings more damaging than d~ing away that they wil have no impact ''When you have an expanding ''is that most of the people are not ' with the very system trat. keeps positively in terms of tran- economy, there. are only so many going to benefit if they're dead, and large nwnbers of people are being killed. People are dying. We are not talking about whether or not you' re able to sit at the EDUCATE TO , counter and eat a sandwich. • ews ate People are . dying because they - . b.elieve." _ The Reagan administration homeless and not the D.C. gov­ strategies for every te&cher to Butler said the major problems LIBERATE! announced last wee~' that the ernment, -adding that District have ''high expectations for ev­ in South Africa are ' 'the present United States Will c nduct the police will not aid federal au­ ery student, not just White recession the country is in' ' and first test of an ant ~sate lli te thorities in a physical removal ones.'' also the presence of ' 'extreme . A Cam us Wide weapon against an fob]ect in of persons from the shelter, lo­ elements within the White community'' that are seeking to space. The exercise, fo be con­ cated at 425 2nd St. N .W . · CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE Spaghetti Barry's comments came after place limits on the degree of ·E ort ducted by the Air Foree, will.be ilnd meat bells, 39 ounce cans, . changes and reforms in South "a test of the missile! against a a meeting with Community for will be recalled in 3 7 states Africa. Cummin119 bell ves that the Creative Non-Violence because of possible presence of • satellite already· in f.rbit'' and central problem in South Africa at The studen!s of lewis E'-tary, BNsearch for the Alex· According to Sandra Alley of • LOGO • NEO STYLE • CHRISTIAN DiOR tion over his handling of uni­ the National Park Service. the versity funds. Clau e A. Ford, andria schools said his of­ • MANY OTHERS fice will be looking at the test Beach Boys' not being invited the univ_ersity's Vic - Presiden~ back for their usual perform­ cic Administrative Se ·ces, was itself and the way students on a MAJOR CREDIT whole are being taught to see "if ance on the Mall represents ''a CARDS ACCEPTED named acting presi~nt until a decision primarily to return to perm811;ent replace ent for Dr. the test may have certain cultu­ ral biases in it." more traditional family type Green can be found. . programs." Alley pointed out Henderson said th search for Akin added that another ma­ jor concerD; will be ''to make cer­ that the injuries and the a permanent repla ement for cleanup following the concert • • Dr. Green is being cof'ducted by tain we are actually testing (on the standardized achievement caused too many problems. She the board oftrustee,.ofU.D.C. added that the program for Henderson noted that a 50 day tests) what we are teaching in ' the clasarooms." Of the teach­ 1986 would attempt tO get away limit has been given for Mr. from bringing BO · many people • CONTACT LENSES Ford to serve as acting presi· ing tha.t is taking place in the • EYE EXAMINATIONS ' classrooms, Akin added, into one area. dent, and added th.It .he hoped · The National Park Service • WORK DONE ON PREMISES ''a permanent replacement ''These children are smart. If • ADJUSTMENTS REPAIRS they aren't learning, we can't also decided to place restric· AND CONSULTATIONS could be found within that 50- tions on the number and the day petjod." look at the kids. Maybe the type • ONE 'DA.Y SERVICE ON MOST RX'S . of teaching isn't right. for these size of aigna located in Lafayet­ o STUDENT AND SEN(OR CITUEN DISCOUNTS te Park, across the street from children." • MEDICAID. MEDICARE AND In an Aug. 23rd news con­ the White House. The new res­ MAJOR INSURANCE ACCEPTED ference held at t~e District Dorothy Mulligan of the Ale· xandria School Boards Public trictions limit persons protest­ , building, D.C. Ma~or Marion ing in the Park to two signs, not Relations office said specific , Barry reaffirmed hir comment exceeding 4x4 feet. Alley said to W•Mingt.on's homeless com­ stepe to be taken on this matter '• 462·0055 include a continuance of the the restrictions will put limits 1802 11TH.ST NW WASH DC munity. Barry said ~e federal on "most structures i~ the park •' present tutoring programs government hai [.~he sole except for Bpeaken platforms." · reeponaibility of sh ltering the already in place and devising • •

• Page 6 The Hilltop, fridlly, August 30, 1985 .. • ...... ------~ ------~. . ' -1·. ------. . . • •

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• ••• • . • we:\\lll\\\ 11111\1\\1111.IP lB." vou'' £dUGH tC>OR SINCEREST · • 1 APPREtlt\$lQM jfiQR\YQUl'''IAlll'i fUTURE AND CONTINUED PATRONAGE. I , @Jm(,i:iB:\t '•:::··:o\::l·:-: ..,, ::l p ::,19·"""''.L E ·TO SERVE YOU BETT. ER AND . • WE LOOK l· ' ·::~~ ~~~\Y9 ~!!~!lt?(l~~ll:l ~\:~.·::::::w¥ ~•=::: ~ :.. ::::~: . . ; • • ' ' THE OPPORTUNIJ¥ 1f©RENEWOtIR ACQUAINTANCE AND DEVELOP A . I • • LASTING RELATlONSHll ( ·•·•·•·. ' • ' ' . ·...... •...... - .•: > · .\ . . -- ,.···· . • • · · · LET US <:;ARE FOR YO~R HAlR, NATURAL L v ·; WITtjOUT THE USE OF ~ . • • . ' - S:HEMIC,A.LS t1 ... 0THER HARMFUL AGENTS TO YQOR HAIR AND SCA.LP OR · OUtFIT YOU WlffiH CLASSIC ACCESSORIES FROM OUR BOUTIQUE . . · , : UNTIL WE ~~P,T, REMEMB~R, THINK ~~IDS!; AND WHEN YOU .. • · THl_NK .OF BRAIDS, THl~K OF ornrowt & · . 0 @) ;. LEADERS IN • THE BRAIDING AND NAT<.JRAL HAIRCARE INDUSTRY. . . • • • . . :-:-::-· . . . · : :::~:\~:\~~~~~~~~\ ~~~ ::::::: · • • ' .· .·.· .. • ' • • . t ' • " "' . • • • • . . ornrow1'& I . • • ll:IS/l/.\'l,']'fJ.\'. /J.I '. • •

' . . . • P.S. ,WE SUPPORT FREEDOM FOR THE PEOPLE OF SOUTH AFRICA • •

. I \ NATURAL HAIRCARE • PROFESSIONAL HAIRBRAIDING • ACCESS,ORY BOCIJ'IQUE • I • • • • • • • • • • 5401 FOURTEENTH STREET N.W. WAS.HINGTON D.C. 20011. ' (202) 723-1,82'7 • • • • • • - • . ' . -'. • ..• • • • ' , • ' I I •

\ • The Hilltop, Friday, August 30, t 985 Page 1 • ' I

• , • . ' ' nternationa-. ew-s •

urc , ' . " . • • • • • r1can Robert Adu-Asare politi~ians staged a mock. f1:!_neral ''I've never said this before, but ties," responding to the sound of Hilltop Staff Reporter for victims of apa~heid . assassina­ ~ · will ask.the American govern· hatred emanating from South Religious communities here, tions. A memorial service with 50 ment. to stop ·all businesses from A.frica for a long time. with the exception of the so-called cardboard coffins was celebrated doing anything in South Africa," While the Rabbi said the Kad­ • Moral Majority, are ~ised to chal· , in front of the U.S. State Dept's the Bishop emphasized seriously~ dish, a special Jewish prayer for lenge the Reagan Administration after a brief pause. In a separate the dead, he noted that ''everyone diplomatic enirS.nce after a mile interview, following the memorial knows apartheid is evi'.l." or· if it does not do_adything soon· long protest mar.ch from the WB.§,h­ towards the demis~ _of the sup-' service which he.officiated, Bishop course, this was before Rev. Fal­ ington M~ll down Constitution remacist White apartheid system; Walker pointed out that the well visited South Africa and Avenue on a hot and humid day. religious community is stronger made a decision to support the in South Africa, accqrding to the,. -~ .. - . Dean of the NationS.1 Cathedral,' ''We will not do anything illegal. than any or,ao.ization in the coun· apartheid system. 4 the Rt. Rev. John T, M'alker. We wi 11 mount campaigns and pro­ try. Rev. Drinan said, 'We want the • The force of the Free South Afri­ tests through letter writing and ''If there is no chan·ge in the Black people in South Africa to ca Movement received its biggest marching," ·said Bis.hop W~lker foreseeable future the American know that they have friends· atid momentum Aug. 12, when about when asked what the religio,us government must take steps to protesters here in America. Never, 2,000 protesters led y religious comrriunities may do should. the seVer all connections with South never, neVer"again will we be si­ leaders, Civil Righ s activists, conditions in Soutt\ Africa de­ Africa," Rev. Walker suggested. ' lent." media celebrities an prominent teriorate. He explained that what he knows The protest marcb from the about South Africa ''is not from Washington Mall wailled by Jesse ' reading newspapers." '' I've been Jackson, Harcy Belafonte, Coretta to South Africa. I've been to the Scott King, the wife of late Civil townships and the ghettos. It's a Rlghts cam'paigner, Dr. Mar.tin dreadful system," lamented · Luther King, Jr. as,well as actors I Bishop Walker. Tony Randall and Paul Newman. When asked what the ,signal These prominent personalities, will be for the religious cnm­ accompanied by New York Mayor munities response, Bishop Walk­ Ed Koch, Washingtoi1 Mayor er said, ''Tutu is my friend. We Marion Barry, Randall Robinson, · takethe cue from him. We ask him cochairman of Free So:uth Africa, • what we should do next." Bisb-op Movement, and Dr. Sylvia Hill, of ••• Walker who had been to South the Solith Africa Support Group, · Africa lorlg before jerry Falwell, carried a banner which read, • 4 • said, ''I don't think we will ever get ' Apartheid Kills." Xhere were the Moral Majority on oUr side, but numerous other placards sOme of. we will' do whatever we can." which .read, ''Free South Africa." •· Forrest Wade , Hilltop Staff Photographer' Earlier, Bishop Walker was < The marchers 'also were accompa· accompanied by ·Iinam Sultan nied by groups of drummers and·, , Muhammad of the Islamic com­ the chanting of ''Freedom, Yes; FORMER HOWARD STUDENT KEVIN TURNER munity, D.C . Del. ·Walter ;"aun­ Ai)artheid, No!'' -- • I troy,cochairman qfthe Free South After the 50 coffins had been DISPLAYS HIS DISAPPROVAL OF THE POLI­ Africa M·avement, Rev. Robert blessed for burial, the religious CIES OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN GOVERNMENT I Drinan of Georgetown University leaders noted that the prayers said • , Law Center and a Rabbi in con­ for the occasion were meant for du,cting the memorial service. both the dead and living .Blacks in Comedian Dick Gregor.y was South Africa. It also signified the present on the makeshift.dais from burial of apartheid. Imam ·where the religious leaders de­ Muhammad remarked that peace Now you con hove two of tile lDO J/ recognized and' occeplec' , nounced the ''sinful silence of cannot come to South Africa until credit cords in the world... Vi10 and Moslercard credit apartheid has been removed. cords.-··in yourncime# £VEN IF YO U AM NEW IN CREDIT or American leaders'' in regard to the HA VE BEEN TURJrUJ DOWN BEFORE! events Of atrocities in South Afri­ -Finally Del. Wa,Lter Fauntroy V7SA and Mo'srerccird Jhe :' , ,cfl.. Bi•jlPP \l(alker explained that . led' \he pr9t$Stett in foingilli the credit cards you deserve and need /or-ID-BOOY.S .._ ,,;.' the men:wrial service w.as not 1'.. first stanza.oftlie"Battle Hymn of -DEPARnr.:.NT.STORES-nJmON-E.NTF.RTAfNMENT the Republic. -£M!RG!NCYCASH-17CKETS-RLSTA UP.A.1175 l political affair. Instead, it was a -HOTELS-MOIF.1..S.-GAS-CAR RENTAlS-RLPIJP.S j ''comment of religious communi- -AND 70 BUILD YOUR CREDIT RA11NG.I This is Jhe cr&dil card inlormatian bl students hove · been r&oduig about Jn pubJicQDonS trOarcoast to eoos1 and incluc'es SPECJAL SnJD£NT APPUC.AnOA'S . . • /or Moitercard a VJsa os well cs other notional • Nigeria's Instability Hurts Africa charQe cards. ApprovcJ absolutely g uoronteed so . . Robert Adu-Asare derdevel o pment and the Africa as indications of unequa{ Hilltop Staff Re1,rter accompanying human misery. An­ development characterizing the ~~;e•s}o;he f~~~~~i~go~~: .. : ~~;;;~~-;;;-B-~; ~;;;;;, b~-~~ -;L-;;3~~ -: It seems too early to Clo a critical other popular argument for ex­ world dominated by the capitaist must be seen to be workable by I I analJsis of the implicJtions of the plaining Africa's underde-velop­ economic system. In this instance, breaking down the artifical barri- I YES I I change in regime Tu~sday when ment concerns the question of we may cite social upheavals in ers and travel restrictions in- I • /·want VISA/Mastercard Credi.I I the Buhari Admin!isti"ation, ideological inclinations. Most Central America, the Caribbeans, troducedbyEuropeancolonialism I · cards. Enclosed find $15 which Js . 100% I reportedly, was replacfd by anoth­ often, failure~ economic and Latin America, Europe and Xsia tose~vetheirimpe~.ialistpurposes I refundable ~/ not approved immediately I er military junta in wpat appears political condition~n some Afri· which also are characterized by and interests. , I NAME I to be a palace coup d(etat led by can countries have --Qeen attri­ tensions, convulusions and rup­ ' Gen. Ibrahim ·Babang_f-da. Howev­ buted to references of so~a)_ism by tures. In fact, no corner of the We take this opportunity to urge . I ADDRESS I er, the event itself aitracts com· the Western press especiallh The globe h8:,S been spared by acts of the Babangida Administration to I CITY STA.TE ZIP · I ments within the con xt of broad- latest examples include Ethiopia exploitation and alienation. continue. to resist the IMF loans • er African interests. - and Mozambique. This type of While welcoriting the new reg­ and the accompan·ying con­ : PHONE SOC. SEC : • !:\ome scholars, and indeed most mindset view stands to be cor­ ime in Nigeri·a, we hope it may be ditionali1ties. ·It mU.st be warned I SIGNATURE . · I journalists of the' E!Stablished rectea considering that Nigeria, that the IMF and the.World Bank, , possible to see an immediat.e re­ I N011 : ..~ • • ....., 911 .,_....rically includes an au- continue on.page 13 . . •

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' > 30, 1985 J ' ' '

.I nterventi_on Likely • '

cont'd from pB1e 7. gustino Neto, 'endence of_An- dercover operations, one cannot of Angola (MPLA), led hY< Au- predict the prolongation of tension in Angola, according to Serapiao. "Everything will depend on how ' much economic and military The most dvanced study Millions have disooveied the Discover DIANE I !CS. • assistance the MPLA will 1eceive­ aid you ha e - your keys to successful living .L. Buy this book today! from the Soviet Union," he said. 'own mind. and so can you. Should the U.S. intervene in ' Achieving tbe ucccss )'OU w&n1 in DJANETICS is one oft he most popular Angola as a result of the repealed school, and ifi Ii e. requires concentra­ self-help books in America today\ with amendment, Walters suggests it tion. discipline.1nd'using your abilities nearly 8 million Copies sold. People aU 3931 Georgia Ave,, N.W. to the fuUest . , ' over the world use DIANETICS will be counterproductive for ita Yet you r11ay J?e runnihg at a fraction technology , to improve their lives and ,, Washington, DC objectives in southern Africa as· of your true pot~tial . accomplish what they really want. (across from Wendy's) under the so-called collBtructive The hu1nan m nd is the most valuable tool you have to achieve the success you "Thanks to DIANETICS, I continue , Introducing engagement. When the civil war· wan! . It is farm re advanced than even to achieve my goals." in Angola intensifies as a result of Chick Corea. topjal.z keyboardist , the most, sophiS1icatj:d computers, It s • • assistance to UNITA, U.S . potential is nea~' l y _infinite. But how do businesses, especially the oil com­ you realize that tential ? ·•oJANE11CS has provided the tools ' to understand and make life go my . panies will suffer, Waltera said. 1 * way." DIANEII ~·technology Diana Venegas. Fashion designer A Salon Specifically De- \ helps you [ linderstand and U.S. interverition will also jus­ tify the continuing presence of use ·your mind to its fullest. ''With DIANETICS. I am able to 0 honestly and confidently communicate signed For Your Total Cuhl.tn troops in Angola, to coun­ ' Millions are n~ discovering D1AN£T. with 9thers in business and gel results." terpose South Africa's infiltration. JCS technology. a revolutionary new LF. Byrnes, President However, Serapiao says because of Microcomputer software company Hair Care Needs. -"- • appr.oa'ch to thC mind and life. its illegal occupation of Namibia, DIANETICS. the besisclling book by ~ L. Ron Hubbard. is about understand· South Africa must have a very ing :fOlir mind j and using its full poten­ For more information on DIANETICS, strong reason other than attack­ tial to live a , ~appier, more rewarding or. to order books by phone, ctll ing the Southwest African Peoples life. Through \he p.liges of this remark· 1·800-367-8788 Hair Care Consultation Organization, to move into Angola able b()ok, yo~ II discover: • How to ~ emove 1he men[al blocks * • if it is to have the support of its that can 1nhi.bi1 ,nemory. Call For Your Appointment Today Western allies. • • The keY,s to -increasing mental Ir------· D\'i 'lw1nttok:1mhowtoimprovemy~re with DfANETICS. Plc:•se send me 1 speed an1 ability. • How to USE your mind more .I copy of the book DIANETICS rights 1w•y. Enclosed is my Walters noted that the repeal of efficient! . . with concentration and (' es. check/ money order (or SS.00 to cover my order (i ncluding pos· the Clark amendment will send a I 11gc ind h•ndling). disciplin . to lcam more in less wrong signal to African countries. time. / Trena Morgan I NAME PHONE ''African countries have been • The hid~cn barrierS to happiness I . and fullfitlment - and how you I 723-5343 (44) sensitive to the fact that the treat­ can hanltlC theM.. . ADDRESS APT. NO. ment of their countries in the con':L • How t believe in yourself and I . text of the East-West conflict has reach ~ r what YQ(J want in your I . life. C ITY · STATE ZJP usually resulted in the suhordina- ~ Salon Hours: Monday .1-6, Tuesday 10-3, Wednesday 10-6 ~ -'~ ~ 111 ~n~il!!i.11!;/feir, i1,1taresta to thOOjl of ,_ l - Thursday 10-6, Friday 10-6', Saturday 8-3 Jr··~• the-contlict,n he said. ------·I ~ ' ' > ' •,

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• T)!e Hilltop, Fri~y, Aufst 30, 1985 Page 9

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M anotti L. Jenkins

Welcome! ow that school has Howard, which is deemed ''one of Smaller version; same· brutality . reconvened it is time 'to get to the most cherished institutions of As a prelude tO what is to follow, grabbed by several guards and - prise of rity own·, the only con­ wort<. When I say work, I mean the bigher learning." (Ebony, Septem­ I feel co111pelled to express that af­ handcuffed, at which time the tingent· willing to disc~ details serious business of academia. Ad­ ber 1985). We want to uphold that ter reading this column, some fel­ guard with .whom he had ex- were the victims. As a matter of ditiOnally, w,e must not disregard reputation. , . low students and Howard Univer­ . changed blows struck him in the fact, I wo.uld be willing to say, the importance of the cultural and We also want to uphold and en­ sity officials will probably accuse back of the head with his night­ based upon Qb~rvation, that Ho­ soci8.l work ~ere that Will pave the courage the open communication me of ''exposing Howard's dirty stick. As if he had not already ward University and the MPD way for better relations among us between us that we so desperately la¢idry to What the student body and the ded to inform readers of the var- for compromising truth. When all was said and done, surrounding community must be­ to the student body, The Hilltop • staffs business this year-will be to ious happenings in health care at On the night of August 13, 1985, Perry, Leeks, and Aaron Gooding, gin to realize is that the same vio· - provide· accurate, factual, timely Howard. Our eQitorials will bring the brutal arm of the ''law'' man­ a former Howard st'udent, who be­ lent, vicious, repressive attitude and thoughtLprovoking news. In insight, analysis and interesting ifested itself on the campus of Ho­ came involved during Leeks' that permeates the mentality of our efforts to do this (and I think it opinions in order to incite alterna­ ward University. When the dust encounter with ''Howard's finest," America's police force in general, is safe to speak for the entire staff), tive thinking. All of our sections cleared, two Howard students had were charged with numerous particularly in relation to people all sectionslof this paper will are geared toward enlightenment to be escorted toD.C. General Hos­ criJl?.eS, w_ith ferry and Leeks of African descent, also permeates attempt to horoughly address a~d more -~x.t~nsive coverage qf. pital; Wayne Perry, because of spending the night at the 3rd Dis­ · the mel)tality of the D.C. police issueS"that are pertinent to the Ho~ campµs act1v1t1es. multiple bruises to the face and trict jail. force as well as the smaller ver­ · ward Uniye~ity community. · Finally, for all students, this body, resulting from a scuffie with .Perry, in addition to the three sion, Hbward University's secur­ What is irlipbrtant is that the iear should be one of learning and several Howard security guards charges of assault, was charged ity1force . The reactionary, brutal educational needs of readers.. are tnvOlvement, while avoiding an and one Colorado security guard, Wayne Perry, after ~ cuf~ with HU with destruction of property, philosophy that inflicts the gener­ met and that we maintain the idyllic lifestyle in orcler to search and Stacey Leeks, because of a security attempted burglary, and assault al psyche of America's ''enforcers for solutions. For the staff, this right of unbiased· f\-eedom of wound to the back of the head, constraint by five or six security with a deadly weapon. The latter of law and order'' also inflicts the year should be one of responsible general psyche of Howard secur­ speech in a world where tliat privi­ requiring six stitches, resultihg guards to the extent that this type charge, I was informed by a 3rd lege is not enjoyed by everyone. journalisin. from a blow received from a secur­ of force should be used? Secondly, District police officer, was imposed ity. To be even more accurate in Since January 1924, The Hilltop The Hilltop is approaching 61 ity guard's nightstick. because Perry, while he was hand­ my assertions, security guards, years of excellence, and this year Perry was handcuffed behind the has f.een the nation's largestBJack Based upon the stories I re­ back with mace in his eyes during cuffed to a chair in the security who are generally looked upon as student collegiate newspaper at we plary to carry on that tradition. ceived from witnesses, Perry, and the entire scuffie. Please tell me main office, kicked a piece of ''rent-a-cops'' and charlatans, ' .. have more of a reason to be overly the 3rd District Metropolitan how effective a man can be in broken plaster that had fallen on Police Department CMPD), the in­ resisting constraint under these the floor, hitting Lacy. Pretty de­ ·violent and vicious since they have to ''prove their authority." This is cident began when a Howard conditions. adly weapon, right? Leeks was in their own-words security guard spotted Perry sitt­ While walking near the scene of charged with simpJe assultand de­ not an attack on each and every • ing on the balcony on the left side struction of property, while Good­ security guard, but the dominant • the scuffie, Leeks, ·who is a good of the Blackbum Center after wit­ friend and roommate of Perry, said ing was charged with disorderly theme in the general makeup of • Abdul Al~alimat, formerly ing class in sev~ ral ways: nesses informed·hirn that someone he saw a crowd gathering. Having conduct. America's security force is char­ known as Gerald McWorter, is the 1. The ruling class makes sure was attempting to unlawfully en- . no·· idea what was occurring, he In my attempt to get the un­ acterized here. former di ref-tor (if the Afro- · that the trustee boards of colleges ter a party given by the Campus rushed over to satisfy his curios­ iversity's perspective on the in­ What is most distressing here, American StuH.ies program at the and' universities are ''dominated Pals fOr the freshmen. Perry said ity. What he found was his friend cident, I perceived a well­ although not surprising, is that University ofl Iltinois at Urbana by merchants, manufacturers, the guard handcuffed him after he literally being stomped ·and be­ organized plot to covel-·up the scuf· the administration of Howard and associate )Professor. of socjolo­ capitalists, corporation officials, jumped down from the balcony, at aten by Howard's ''enfoi-cers of law fleas well as de-empl).asize the de­ University has not taken more of an initiative to find out just what gy.' He received his doctorate in· bankers," as several studies con­ which time a st'ruggle ensued be­ and order.'' Experiencing dual tails of the injustice. The deputy sociology fro~ the University of dude. tween them. director of Howard security, Lloyd happened that night. Or could it be emotions of shock and anger,_ that it knows what happened, but Chicago. He has been a prolific According to witnesses, five or Leeks demanded that the guards Lacy, responding to my inquiries 2. The ruling class insures that instead has chosen to take the de­ writer in edutation ,and pPlitical six otner security guards, all but discontinue beating his friend aii.d on August 21, told me he was not science. In t~is passage_,· taken the ideas which are taught in uni­ one of them from Howard, rushed authorized to speak to the press ceitful; hypocritical route? If so, versities are those which reinforce attempted to intervene, but was then it's about tinie the students from the book, Introduction to to the scene of the scuffie and com­ held back by persons in the crowd. about anything of this nature and Afro-America Studies, 'he a~ses­ and do not threaten the existing menced to bombard Perry's head, The guards finally picked Perry that I would have to talk to Alan demand that it discontinue these ses the Ame· tcan educational capitafist social oTder. This is done face, and body with nightsticks up off the pavement, Leeks said, Hermesch, the university's ''snake-in-th'e-grass'' tactics. through fundipg only selected pro­ 1 spokesman. He.rmesch, when I HUSA is currently in the process system. . and fists, while at the same time and after slamming his head on jects and through selective hiring dragging him into the parking lot contacted hi"m on the morning of of investigating the incident a lit­ the top of the security car, placed 1 , ._ _ and firing (e.g., denying employ- tle more, so we can trust that it is between the Fine Arts bulding and him in the vehicle. A security August 22, knew nothing about It is popul~rly believed that ment and tenute to faculty with I not yet over and done. Regardless • the women's annex. In addition, guard who was not involved in the the incident, but suggested that education's mrin purpo~ 'is to. be- radical ideas; as has h&ppened one of the security guards sprayed scuffi e informed Leeks that the car call him. that afternoon and he of what HUSA finds from its in­ would have some information for 4 vestigation, my question is, and ~efitthem ~sofpeople~~tr8:in; ~ith ~any activis~ in the Blat:k mace into Perry's eyes. was en route to the security main 1ng them for jbb8 and faeil1t:a:t1n g ,· ltberat1on movement). ' Regardless of whether Perry me. When I called him back!, he I'm sure others have the same office located in the Freedmen's question, ''Where is Howard's upward mobi ity. Our anal'ysis, · · was aCtually attempting to do as told me that the most he knew was however, reve ls th8..t the primary 3. The ruli11g class maintains Square building, and volunteered macho security force when women accused, the force used by the to take him there. According to that there was a scuffie between function ·of ducation in the close ties between the universities security and the students and that are being raped in the valley or and the government (which it also security g\lards ''to constrain Per­ · Leeks, his reason for going to the whipped in Meridian Hill? Where United States is to serve the in­ . ry'' was undoubtedly unwarranted office was to try to talk the guards four security guards had to be tre­ ' · closely administers). The govern­ ated at a local hospital for injuries. are they when students are robbed terests of the ?1ling class throllgh me"'11t prbvides billions of dollars and perfectly exemplified the into releasing Perry to his custody. achieving tw(! main objectives: {I ) He had no details of the incident. at gunpoint?'' foi: war-related research and other brutality of the Howard security But after getting a glimpse at his Yes, Howard University secur­ to train a disciplined and skilled As a matter of fact, this same storv needed functions and draws heavi­ force , which is but a smaller ver· friend's swollen, scarred face and ity is just a smaller version of labor force wh ~c h can take its.place sion of America's ''protectors Of was parroted by Dr. Carl An­ ly on university faculty for its bleeding nose, he began to verbal­ derson, Vice President of Student America's brutal protectors. But if in the existin~ order and contrib­ ly denounce the guards and also staff. pri va.te property.'' Affairs, when I talked ·to him. it is the U.S. government, through ute (mainly il'j labor power) to the · The MPD report stated that the hit the wall with his fist, leaving its trickery and deceptions, that For Black people, of course, the force was hecessai'y to put Perry holes in it. Let's take some things into con­ • , mai~tena~ c~ ~nd exparl~ion of the_ covers up for its protectors, then twi'n objectives of education and into the'security car. He was later Leeks continued to verbally de­ sideration. Being that both Perry capitalist srstem; (2) to in· the operation of the three mech­ and Leeks are associates of mine, I shouldn't there be a strong doctrinate the1Youth of the Society chargid with assaultin_g three of nounce the guards when one of ideological connection between anisms l1sted above are· quali­ the guards. ,Well,'let'sjust analyze therri' ordered him to shut up. Be­ made a relentless effort to gather in the ideas, ~liefs, values, and the U .S. government and Ho­ tatively influenced by the history a few facts. First, Perry is about 5 cause of his refusal to comply, the as much infonnatipn as possible practices whic~ '.""e also important of racist oppression and economic from all the contingents involved, ward's administration, which covw to maintaining the: existing socio- feet 7 inches tall and weighs ab­ guard pulled out his nightstick era up for its violent protectors? exploitation that Black peopl8.( out 130 pounds soaking wet with and began swinging it at Leeks, those being Perry, Leeks, and economic ordei-. . Gooding as one, Howard Unvers­ Think about it. have faced. Thus, the educational . bricks in his pock~ts. Tell me, who connecting once to the side of his Control ov#r. educational experiences of ijlack people must short of Bruce Lee, with this type face. Leeks responded with a ity security as one, and the 3rd th~ District Metropolitan Police De­ Mr. Jen~ins ·is editorial editor of system is mairtai.nOO by~ the rul- be evaluated in that context. of bodily lnake-up, could resist punch to the guard's face, but was partment as one. But to no sur- The Hilltop •

• • •• • • r I .an1zat1on pea out Editor-in-Chief Pan-Afncan Revolutionary Socialist Party Carol D . Winn The Pan-Af: ·can Revolutionary capable of serving the needs of its effective organization determines Since its founding, the PRSP Managing Editor Witt llil lll1tp Socialist P ) is a pcilitical people. The organization contrib­ everything and seeks to contribute has made a few humble contribu­ Lanita Pace organimtion of !he Pan-AfriC8l) utes to the international struggle to the revolutionary struggle in tions to the Pan-African struggle. J revolutionary le. Founded in to achieve Pan-Africanism- by the African world in particular During the Party's ''Positive Ac­ 1983, .the o · ti.on joins· the in- building a party of the oppressed and the world socialist struggle in tion Offensive'' {Nov. 1983-85), its tense struggle · international and exploited classes of Africans general. The Party concentrates strategic thrust focused on the capitalism. The ~ seekS to beoome in the world. on learning from the people by ex­ question of settler-colonialism, • a self-relian~ organimtion The PRSP understan·ds that · changing and sharing skills. The primarily apartheid. With fiiat Party politically educates the peo­ focus in mind, the PRSP dedicated Business Man.ger It's Your He•lth Editor Circu~tion/ • ple and mobilizes them to move its calendar entirely to the Jonathan Matthews Marian Dozier Subscriptton Mlirl,jger . 1985 Kenne1h Page • . toward planned, organized action. issue of southern Africa. Campus Editor Assist•nt It's Your He•lth Editor ' • ' ' • . • Nkrumaism is our id~ology . It In conjunction with, HUSA, the Purvett; Bryant · Fr~a Satterwhite Photogr•phy Editor Forrest Wade • asserts the historical truth that all PRSP held its first annual student A.ssist.11~1 Campus Editor C•l'fff'S Editor Assist.tint Photogr.11phy ' . people of African descent are Afri­ conference in April 1985 on the ·Alison Bethel Grant Johnson ' cans, no matter where they are question of southern Africa. Stu­ Editors Loc.11L'.N•tioNI Editor Advertising Mai~ Marker Yates ' • born or are presently living. The de'?-~ r~i:>resenting ~alleges and TimQthy Harmon Vernon Matlow Stacey Brown ideology provides its people with · un1vefslt1es from various parts of lntetmtioNI Editor Editorial Editor . • priliciples that are used to connect Chief Copy Edit°" the country listened to, speakers Robert Adu-A!>are Manotti Jenkins Beth Hill ·, and 'channel actions and thoughts from the t\frican National Con­ Sports Editor . Production Director • • LE tters to the Editor in organized towan1 the Jim Trotter Copy Editors &n manner gress, the· Black Consciousness George R. Newcomb Donna Faulk objective of Pan-Ati"icanism. lt Moveme·nt of Azania, the Pan­ . Th.tit's Entertainment Editor Krystal Quinn Garry .Denny Production usistant also provides a philosophical Africanist Congress, and other Jeffery Jerrels • world outlook based on the histori­ Artist reVolutionary and progressive Joey T. Seisay • _uble spaced and cal experiences of African people, speakers on the current situation · p and embraces the universal prin­ and what we can do to contribute ciples of humanism, egalitarian­ to the struggle in southern Africa. • betwren 300 - 500 words ism, and collectivism. Using Posi­ In addition to producing pam­ tive Action as its theory of action, .phlets through the Party's Kwame . eac Monday by 5 p.m. Nkrumaism calls for the building Nkrumah Ideological Institute, . of pan-African socialist p~ies for the PRSP produces a bi-monthly All letters-to-the-editor.are read with interest, though space may _not allow us to print each . the achievement of Pan­ one. Submissions should be typed and double-spaced, and no tonger than 500 words. The • newspapert ''The Nkrumanist, '' Africanism. in an effon to contribute to the . deadline; for letters is Monday 5 p.m. Write: The Hil ltop, 2217 Fourth Street, N. W., Washing­ • I . ton, D.C . 20059. The PRSP understan~ the im­ flow of information affecting Afri-- ' I portance of working closely with ''The opiniom..tllprnwd on the fdilori;il pife al 1'IW HU-. do rwx ~ly leflloct the(lpini(IR$ al HowJrd Uni~ , its can people. idminiilrMion, the Hillulp &wd Of the student body." ' I other revolutionary, student and Ifyou are interested in receiving • . . community organizations· in an more information on the PRSP, ""' I effort to unify its '8.ctiOns, con­ write PRSP, P. 0. Box 23773, • solidate its streti.gths, and Washington, D.C. 20026, or call • • minimize weaknesses. . (202) 584-1011. •

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. . • Page 10 The H top, ·Friday, August 30, 1985 .,

HUSA Sponsors 'Azania, Update' ' ' continued from page 1 _ . ial segreg8tin known as apar- collaborators in South Africa." clared by the South African gov- theid, the United States Govern· ''There are four states of col- ernment. ment, he said, .. continues tO prop lab0rator8," he explained. They • • .. We are still victims and statis- up the regime of the Botha govern- are homeland leaders, who are the tics inSouth Africa," added XiphU. ment'' with its policy of ''con- equivalent of governors, urban ''They CAfrikanners) should also structive engagement.'' counselors whose role is related to be holding funerals in their Xiphu's observation un- that of a United States mavor. • townships," he said. derscores what some critics of the j>oliceman, and people working.as • Citing the mounting death toll Reagan Administration s8.y is a infomijltlts for the· government. of South African Blacks in the past widening rift betweehpublic opiri- · · He stopped short, hOwever, of as well as in recent weeks, Xiphu ion and U.S. foreign poicy towa~ avocating pr ?atioitalizing the LtE HOW TO.GET seemed to dismiss hope of peaceful South Africa. murder of suspeCted informers, negotiations with the Pi:;etoria- In recent weeks, press accounts saying ~nly that ''collaborators •' based government. from South Africa h~ve 1-epo~ rriust bf · Deutr8l~ . " = ,,. ''Talks of peaceful change bord- killings and mayhem o,f sus~ . " Njer1 Jangha, a member of S'UARTED IN OBTAINING ers on the ridiculous," remark~ government informe_rs at the · PRSP. cited·sqme statistics on for­

Xiphu. '' How peaceful can 8. '1 hands of Black South Africans,. eigri investinents in South Africa. change be in such a bloody situa- stirring conce~ here ainOhg 8.nti-· She said that over 600 U . S ~ com­ -LOR ONE OF THE · tion," Xiphu asked the crowd apartheid activists.· . paitl.es.have helped fuel the South rhetorically. ' Xiphu's brother, MothoZami African ecoriomy with some $2.3 FO .· LOWING .WHILE STILL . Xiphu also noted that while he · Xiphu·, who is also a student at bilion .• · ' believes the American P.Ublic isop-; Howard and a member of SASCO, The United State, she sa,id, is the posedtoSouthAfrica'sformofrac- atteme.te.d to ''explain the· role of second largest investor in South I SCHOOL • Africa behind Gre~t Britain. Jan­ gha did not give the source of her • statistics. · RE ·MONEY T IN Attenton' . '•· ~'<;}ener~l Motors," said Mothozami Xiphu, ''is not there in . . '' • • spite of apartheid, they are there .· MOST PART-TIME clubs!!!· ' because of apartheid. " • I JOB! BY: • Dean · · - ' ' -1. Op ning Your Own IRA Account 2. In ~ting Earned Money in Mutual Fund Gets Job. · AcJ, unts continued from page 1 . I dean was named. , 3. Ge ,· , g An Insurance-Agent's License We print your logo on The search Committee Was set up to assiSt me in the search for a 4. ·Ob -illing A Securities License & MORE *t-shirts qualified person, Anderson: said. "I • do not wish to name those appli­ cants, but there were 90 appli­ *sweats cants that came from' acroSs the ONE OF Tiffi 1\RE;\'S iVEll'EST AND FASTEST GRO\\'ING FINANCIAL count ry." . SERVICES COMPANY IIAS ALREADY SllO\\'N STUDENTS LIKE • Keene said advertisements for · YOURSELF I-IO\\' TO ACIIffi\'E ALL OF Tiffi ABO\'E. *caps the positions were published in • educational journals and were aimed at people with a higher de- • . *aprons gree of education. • FOR APPOINTJ\-CENT & FURTI-IER Il\'FORi\'IATION IN RESPONSE TO *et cs York C. Campbell, who has been TIIIS AD C01\1TACT 01\'Ll": 797-0958 with housing for 12 years disagees • favoritism was involved in the de­ . ' • · Please, SERIOCTS INQllIRIES 01\'L 1·111 (202)783·9385 cision to appoint Keene to Housing DON'T GET Ci\ UG!Il' IN TIIOSE OLD S t\ l "INGS Dean. ''I think it's a matter of the • • Ile \\bo Ilcsitates Is Lost Alreach·!" · vice-president for student affairs • . . (l02) 965·9507 has to feel very comfortable with •" & the person he selected. t don't "Procrastination Is The Art Of Catching l lp \\'Ith l "cstercla)'!" ' .think my philOsophy is the same Lowest price in :as his. ~ • . But I was one of the finalists •• • • that was selected to take part in ,, .... the _· ! ...... the iJtterview process in the latter ______parimf,t>he sumnier. ''

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' • ' " FASHION SHOW VARIETY SHOW AuClitions: ·. ' PROMPTNESS IS EXPECTED FOR Auditions: ALL AUDITIONS • ' • • ' . • • ' MISS HOWARD PAGEANT: For models • • • Deadline for all studen:t cbuncil pageants is Sept. Date~ · Sept. 3rd • Place: East Ballroom 23. All names of School Queens must be ~ submitted by 2:00 pm Sept. 24th. . . . , ' .~· , ' Blackburn ' - . ~ Time: 6:30-10:00 pm PERSON INTERESTED IN P ARTIC:IP.A TING .IN . · ' • • • • • . I • • EITHER THE HOMECOMING PARADE OR THE. • • • • • For designers ' HOWARDFEST/PEP-RALLY ARE. INVITED. TO (student designers are welcomed) A ITEND ONE OR BOTH OF THE FOLL.OWING ' • ' ai:e: Sept. 4th . MEETINGS. • • , 1 • ... Place: Social Work Aud. I • HOMECOMING PARADE: T me: 6:30 pm • ' Date: Sept. 9th •• All performers welcomed Pla£e: Forum, Blackburn Time: 4:00 pm . qate: Sept: 4tb HOWARDFEST/PEP-RALLY: P~ace: Human Ecology Aud • • .' • ,, ime: 6:00-8:00 pm '• Date: Sept. 10 .. \ < ' Place: Hilltop Lounge • ' Time: 4:00 pm • •

• . . • ' • SHARE '.THE ·EVENT ... SHARE • . VOL.UN'jfEERS FOR HOMECOMING ARE -· NEEDE . . CALL 635-5426 OR 636-5932. OR COME TH. . .E · EXPER. 'IENCE . . .. BY RM. : 16 BLACKBURN CENTER TO GET SHARE. THE-EXCITEMENT! INVOL ED. r. • ' • . . • • ' •• ' " • ' ' • • • · ------~------.;.... ______...,. ______.;...______....., __ ...__ •J . . ... I • • • • • • •• ' • I • ' • ' •

• ' , '.... ••' • The Hilltop, Friday, August 30, 1985 Pagt 11 • • • • • • ' • .. t's our • •

• . • New I1n1nunization ~equired • • Freda Satterwhite Though meaales is at its lowest in the same room with an affected for"" that date ''killed" vaccine was • Hilltop Stan Reporter ' ' level of outbreak in the nation's person. ~or th~s rea8?n, ~Q.e. new ·~which only. offered tempo~ary • As a 1re8ult of recent outbreaks history, college-aged people pre-matnculat1on policy is aimed , mmunity. Now ''live'' vaccines • • • of measles on college campuses represent the largest ·susceptible specifically at the disease. ' ar~ given which' give permanent ,. across the nation, new entrants at groµp next to elementary-aged According t.o District Law DC3- imqiunity. Howard University were placed on children·. 20, passed in 1979, students be- "If you don't know the laat time •• • medical hold and could not regis- During the 19Bq spring semes­ tween the ages of 19 and 26 must Y0\1. were immunized, it won't hurt ter for classes until they proved ter, many colleges experienced' be immunized against measles, to have the vaccine again," said ' • • they had been immunized against measles outbreaks.. and at Princi-' mumps, rubella, diptheria and Lacey . the childhood disease, which can pia College in Illinois, there were tetanus. There are also separate The Communicable Disease be fati.I. three deaths due to the disease. requirements for those aged six.io Control Center is providing tile • "Now public officials are say~ng The MMR (measles-mumps­ 19 years. vaccine to health services. The rubellBi) vaccine is being offered to '.get those students ;mmunized' be- · cause college stU.derlts come in ''We were the first ~rea college service is free to students. • students at.the University Health ''The heath service will continue Clinic who have not been im­ close contact. with students on or uniyersity to enforce this (pre­ • to offer immunization to the entire munized. Of the 1900-member other campuses," Said Lacey. matriculation policy, which is re­ During spring break last year, quired by law," Said Garrett. student population,'' said Lacey. freshman class, about 1250 fresh­ ''For the most part, we· have ' for example, studerits were vaccin­ "Even though the College of Allied . men have received the mandatory f.lniShed with the freshmen and We immunization, said Bernardine ated on a volu'nteer basis at both Health Sciences and the medical Howard and the University 'll'of school have already been enforcf are asking that upper classmen Lacey, a supei'visory nurse at the come in and request the vaccine." clinic. · Maryland in an attempt to halt ing this policy, this is the first year ''We sent letters to all accepted widespread occurrence due to the Howard general population After vacc~nation, students ' ' . vacatipn interm.~ngling. Since has seen this law enforced,'' Gar­ • students telling t11e~ what to do must remain in the clinic fOr at • y.:hep they got h~re," said health then, about 35 cases have shown rett continued. . least 30 minutes to see if there is ser... yices administrator Col . up at Maryland; Howard has ex­ ' The other consortium schools any reaction to the iajection. McLain Q. Garrett, Jr. ''Over 1700 perienced none. ! . have since added their own ver­ If in doubt about your shot his­ . . students came out the first week to Even when dia~psed promptly, sions of the policy. tory, the immunization clinic, on is now required for al1 new students. Above, Howard A mea8le1 lmmuniza rhAke ~ure they were cleared. They measles is a highl Yj~ontagious dis­ Students are not immune if they open from 8:30 a .m. to 3:30 p.m., 9tudent Robift Diggs et8 ttie ahot from Supervisory Nurse Bernardine La.cey. ha~ io~how me those records." ease. It can be caught by just being were vaccinated before 1969. Be- may be able to help .

• • •• • . " ·Health ;Fee~ lt Covers Yotl in.·sickness and Health " • • • • . • • 1' ' 1 Marian Dfl~ier ' . Administered by N,ational Stu- ·''T.he ;f0 r~ is tliis: if we are open where else," sS:id. Ga!"1'ett. ''That's health center. Any other costs are fees, according to published fig­ Hilltop Staff ~epof1.er ,dent Servic¢s, Int:., it offers medi· and the,stu dent is within 35 iniles'- what Was happening and we '1ad to paid for by the university. ures. While Howard students are Because the l)ealth be 'cal care during the school year . somefhat." · ·. . This year's insurance premium charged a one-time fee that in­ • f~e · may ofthisofficei,hem ~ustcomehereor · rest·ri~t ' tHat hard to notice nex~ I~ the whopp- covering general health, sickness,· the insurance plan:' will not cover · Claims ,amounted to $665,000 is $1 .l million, compared with last cludes unlimited health center ing price of tuition, it receives accidents, preve.ntive 'f!ledicine .t · · · las\ year, some of it going to those year's $750,000. · visits, free medication and lab 1 scant attention. . I and heal~h. educi:ttion . . . ·,, , • outside agencies. ''Paying ollt ''Even though health care goes tests as well as the insurance For this reason, rpany students It ~ stop in: order.for us to vide good comprehensive service town and George Washington th~ charge. Just wh t do we get in eye te.st.s, sonie orthoped.ic ap- Hospita!. If he d?esn t do ei~er , ~ep the health fee down'' said ... and we haven't skimped. We Universities, for example, receive return for that $150 a year? In a pliances, pregp"ancy, . iscarriage wearen'd G trespons1bleforthat 11. ," '.'.G ·arre tt . ,· · · ' couldn't do this without the men free consultations only, included' word- lots. , I · or abortion. · ~ · .. - 581 . a. i·ett. . . · - · Gar'rett added tha·t it is not holding the purse strings caring in their tuitions. But they must IS pay extra for any lab work and to ."We have built r system that S.t j~~· to get ~hat is ~vai lable ; a_ll The 1 r:t::ason that Jn the past, . heaJth care that, is being red~ced , about the health of our students," will insure that stpdents at ~o- you ne.ed 1·s your Howard studery tsllavego.netoot~er. health but the aµiount o{ money paid to saidGarrettofPresidentJamesE. get the non-mandatory insurance ward University a~ healthy and identificStion card, certif1cate of , agenc1e~f~rserv1~es,wh1ch . means other agencies: · .' Cheek and Vice President for coverage, they pay $275 and $245 can get on with ~l}e business registration and an understand- !foward s 111:surance .pla~ was pay- Of the $150 pa, jd y~arly by reg- Health Affairs Carlton P. Alexis. a year respectively. they're here for: · studying," said ing of a few regulations. ~ost im- 10?, fo ~ serv1~es outside its sphere. isteredstudents, $\ l0-0f it pays for ''We are very fortunate in that re- "I think it's a good deal, I really Health Services, 4dministrator portant ~mong them: for full The services students at .Ho- insurapcebillsandoutsidecJaims . spect." do," said Jan Moore, a sophomore Col. McLain G. Gavett, Jr. coverage, students must fome to ward }i:niversity need;}'~ have at (which, except in sPecial circumst- Howard students are fortunate in Liberal Arts, of Howard's In part, our health.fees pay for the health center first or risk pay: Howard_, Un·iversity. ~.. .shou ldn't ances, go .4) ~". HoWard University in another way. Of the nine con- health services. ''I always come the university's in!sw:arice•plan.1 ~ nR their own.bills. · ~- __ : be n~ess8;'"Y tQ fthe!!). to go anY- H..ospjtal) and ~h~ remaining _$40 · sortium schools, Howard has one here (first). We're paying for it, · pays for-seT"vicCs rendeied ·8.t the of the most inexpensive health why go som~Iace else?"· - . . • A No e Fr.o·m Y o~r Editor · . - . --1 . • . I • • When plans for. t~e new Health way we will know if we are correct · fessional answers to them. page started taki~g . shape l~st ' is through yoilr'feedbhck. It is very As+ matter of fact, we couJd use, week, there was concern about the necessary for our ·readers to par­ some questions on our next issue's kind of response it }vould receive. ticipB;te by leafning Something topics of AIDS in the black com­ A central question , ~ame: could. fr.om· the infonriation presented munity and the continuing saga of we be effective.· a1d still spark l!nd by asking for more 'informa- Sickle Cell .f\'nemia in Black 1 ; reader interest? "' - · tion. , " America. As it now stands ~ the 'response . With this in mirid, we have ere· My assistant, · Freda Sat­ has been tremendous, both from ated both a question and an~wer tenvhite, and I 8.re very excited the administration. and the stu­ section and a section called ''Heal­ about this new project, and think den~ . Lots of ideas!Rre being tos­ thlines," a collection of short in­ it. 'Yil1 prove to ~e a successful pd- ~ around and th~~· ergy is flow- formational takes, which appears d1t1011 to The If1lltop. ' ing. . , today. Send us any questions of a Keep in touch and stay We will attempt' cover issues health related nature a week prior healthy. Marian Oozier we think students i:<>uld deem in­ to our page's bi-weekly publica­ Health page Editor teresting al).d impot)tant. The only tion, and we will 'try to find pro- • • • •

• • "Hom1esick? It's Okay • time. home, becoming forgetful and Charles Garrett Jr. · "It's nonnal to wish that we displaying ·anti-social tendencies, Hilltop Staff' Reporter were back home in Chicago,'' said according to health sources. Despiw what ap~s to be a Allison Smith, a freshman in the To 1 combat homesickness, the Give your student living quarters a touch of class with fashion furni· move towards inde~ndence from College of Liberal Arts. ''But the Office of· Residence Life and the ture from Aaron Rents. You can furnish your place in style at rates that home for first-ti_fle college chance to get away from all the Officbs of Siudent Activities and action back home is an experience are guaranteed to be the lowest in town. We offer next-day delivery Students, in the nef'_ .few weeks and a convenient short minimum rental period, and our decorator • many students will i8xperience a to capitalize on.'' - normal life-p.rocr ss c.alled Resident assistailts in many of showrooms are full of quality, up-to-the-minute furniture so you can homesickness. · Howard's dormitories say •that the ''Once the pq,rents make your place a real home away from home. Come to Aaron Rents Every year, thousjw.ls of_ new homeSickness syndrome ranks pull off . . . a lot and see for yourself why more people rent furniture from us than any Howardites travel ~e Distr?d high on their agendas for the first other c0mpany in the country. You're sure to· in cars buses and plp.nes with few weeks of the semester. discover that the reason is • • of students start their most precious 1 SSlOns- Accordi~ to · Joyce Raynor, a VALUE. high school yearbpoks. fami!Y junior Resident Assistant in Eton pictures and memory books-m Towers, ''Once the parents pull feeling loriely. '' tow. · . I off for their return trips home, a Each August, · 1he campus lot of students start feeling lonely and then tend to isolate them­ Recnritment, among others, have becomes 0 for most students, the place to be and to. fultivate.new selves from other people.•• put together progr8JllS t)lat at­ • friendships. For ot~s, however, · In fact, subconscious isoliltion is tempt to lessen the symploms of ' it is just the place to Irv and a classic srm.Ptom of this.problem. homesickness. The Campus Pals, overcome the experiences of Others include worrymg ex­ itn o,rganization of upperclass being away from home for the fim cessively about situations at students who help smooth the . ' I . . transition from home life to Ufe on caqipus, is one example of these programs. "After a person has had the • chance, to mingle with more of aron ents • other !jtudents like themselves, • homesickness tends to fade,'' said • During the rep.ryxtuctive life­ Atlanta. Raynor. time of the average male, about As the next issue of the Health In teml8 of physical health, urniture® two trillion spenn r' produced by page will report, a surprisingly homesickness Cjlil drain energy hjs testes. large nµmber of AIDS victims in needed to perform everyday 4 STORES IN THE WASHINGTON AREA: • Acquired Iritmul}e Deficiency the District are Black or Hispanic, college activities like stu<¥nii for Syndrome (AIDS) _1 is spreading according to health sources. example. Loss of >' appetite !llld unu.Ual eating patterns, are also · 10211 Bocon DrlVe • 4124 WMIOY Rd. 5720 Gon. Y'll'T Ave, 41 D1rwood Cli Cll rapidly in the United States, as is • According to a University of B1ltlwil1, MD Ch·"llltly, VA A'""1dll8, A . Aoclcwl1, ., Mississippi Medical Center report, common. · evidenced by all the media atten· · Recommended . cures for (301) 937-1433 (703) 378-0080 (703) 941·7115 (301) 424-3122 ' tion. Up to now, 4early 12,500 almOBt three of every four people ho11ee«1rrteia include claily eocial cases have been-re~rted nation· who start exercising quit within' interaction, eating well-balanced wide, with half of qtoee c•rer be· nin~ months to a year. . meals, excilrsions in the ·city, coming fatal, according to the Cen­ limited mmm•IDicalion'a with the ters for Diseasej C.ontrol in C.cwpl'td bJ CHARL.E8 GAR&rrr JR. folka back home lllld moot im­ portantly-pooitlve tliought. • ' •• • • ' • .· • .• ' I • • t ust 30, 1985 • , • / • • • ' • nterta1ninent ' • • ,.,. _ ..... lrlti1e IP lf)1f; II lfl1(; • ' -· ii ii L u x L: H y 0 F· L I F E Based on her performance in the television series "Fame," lffi e ut singer Janet Jacks.on has been assigned a starring role in a , film called "C.C.'s Mystique." . For those who didn't already know, Apollo Creed, the Black ' character in the "Rocky" series', will die in the upcoming or un sters,. "Rocky-IV." It would be nice ifthe series o(sequels died also. - ' Nipsey Russell has found a role in Goldie Hawn's upcom- Bernie Price sounds alot like ''19'' Hmmm, in- ing comedy "First and Goal." _ - - ~ Hiiitop Stalf Repo r teresting. From the strange file: next spring a movie called Striding across the At!antic;the Handclaps and the plunking of a "Breakdancers from Mars" will be released. guitar beg"in the mediu·m paced British group 5 Star hf.• hit ~he Vanity's newest flick "Never Too Young To Die" is current­ American shores runq.1ng. with number ''Let Me Be The One." their deb·ut album ''Uuxury of Electronic wizardry forms a web of ly in post-production and should be released on' schedule. Life." Singing and dan')ing to the sounds for the singer with a sax­ Believe it or not: Jimmie Walker has actually been work- beat•of electronic evemhing, the aphone solo in the middle of the ing on a movie!. . Peanon family appears fo be mak­ number which is the only con­ 1 ventional instrument in the sonll. And now for some pleasant news from South Afnca-a ing head way in the Col~nies with sequel to "The· Gods Must Be Crazy" is currently in produc­ the first single from the album ''Hide And Seek'' is the second- "All Fall Down." . I single from the album. The syn­ tion. This number begins l"ith thro~ theziser, guitar, and key~ards As late as last night things look good for the whimsical, i Part harmony and hand claps. combine to form a fast harmony not crazy, Ted Turner to purchase MGM/UA motion picture Hon)B smash through t'!e song be­ and melody. Toward the end of the company. hind an array of electroljliC percus­ song, the singer is accompanied by 1 sio,n instruments ranging from a synthezised voice that is more Speaking of whimsical and crazy, a production company in The Peant0n crew of 5 Star drums to cowbells. O~erall, the bothersome than cute. Hollywood has corp.menced with plans to introduce a cartoon number is very well arrrnged and noises. , This combined with the version of the movie "Ghostbusters." is climbing the single~harts . There are ten songs on the ''Love Take Over'' is fast paced album but only one of those songs fact that nine of the ten songs are For those Howard students who may be out of touch, Melvin number The synthezi r plops in is slow. ''Say Goodbye'' is the one sung by the same person doesn't "Quiet Storm" Lindsey of WHUR is leaving for a higher give the listener much of a variety and out of the song as r.he guitar slow number. The song begins paying job with WKYS. plays the same tw chords with strings and piano carrying of sounds on this album. throughout the song. The bass the harmony while symbols light­ The album from the Pearson In what has to be the purchase of the year, singer Michael plods along providing a foundation ly crash in the backg·r ound . family is not that good but it does Jackson recently bought a company called ATV Music based offer so'me mindless dance num­ fo~ the yocal harmonr and the Although this number is a wel­ in England. Even though that. in itself doesn't sound too im­ come change fro.m all the fast bers. Side one of the album can be played and danced to without lift­ pressive, consider the rest. Along with Jackson's purchase ing the needle once. However, one I comes the rights to more than 40,000 songs by The Pointer songs, the singer is in dire need of • voice sharpening skills. At times, should not try to listen to the lyrics Sisters and Little Richard. The price· for all of this? A cool the singer seems to be straining to because they really aren't worth Deniece Peanon-head vocalist • 47.5 million dollars. Jackson's bid was only a few dollars hit certain notes and does not seem straining to hear. to be in control of her breathing. From across the Atlantic, a new higher than Paul McCartney's. listener is' spared from/bordom by 5 Star basically has one sound group plans to introduce An1er­ ' S Star's The Hall & Oates tune "Nite at the Apollo" will benefit a saxaphone solo that s too short and shows little versatility on icans to the '''' but it Live Aid and the United Negro College Fund. The song also appears these young musicians to save the song. Thls number, their American debut. The songs " Luxury of Life" features Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin, mixed by Paul Hardc~stle, has a have simple lyrics, arrangement.s cannot find the life in which they keyboard arrange ent that and are smothered by electronic want luxury. Singer Phillip Bailey is in the planning stages for another ** solo album. Guest artists may include Mick Jagger, Grace Jones and, of course, Phil Collins. The rap group U.T.F.0. is suing any and all groups who have made reply tunes to their infamous "Roxanne, Roxanne." Eddie Murphy is scheduled to host the second annual MTV Video Awards on September 13th. · Another believe it or not: the city of Detroit has renamed a major thotoughfare "Aretha Franklin's Freeway of Love."

I HOWARD UNIVERSITY.

• ARMOUR J. BLACKBURN· • UNl·VERSITY CENTER . . presents • • - • I I

I \ A , • little adventure ' • Garry Denny this point that the script and plot understanding the plot. •v Hilltop Staff' 'eporter turn into a series of indistinct vig­ The real standout in all of this It's been aboui t~~ee years. since netites that i;;erve mere!)· as mess has to be Pee-Wee himself. "the privacy of myl home was in­ spring-boards for Herman's bizar­ His performance is undoubtedly Ground Floor Plaza vaded by the likes of a new comed­ re, twisted sense of humor. Several juvenile and irritating, but at the PUNCH*OUT*DISCO* ic wonder. Ever sihce that intru­ scenes in particular stand out as same time he manages to main­ • sion I've spent seve~al waking mo­ probably the best comedy mo­ tain a level of humor which is DC FLASrt'9:00 pm -12:00 am ments pondering /Pee-Wee Her­ ments on screen this summer. For necessary in one-man shows. His example Herman is picked up by a walk, his talk and his sense of com­ HILLTOP itOUNGE-C.V.D. man'sjuvenile form of comedy and • his motivation to~ perfectly si lly. woman truck driver wl10 tells a edic timing is certainly a breath of But, that wast~ years ago. A tainted ghost story which comes fresh air waving away today's ENSEMBLE 9:00 pm -12:00 am period when Pee:~ee came into true right before our eyes- the more foul-mouthed comics. ' my living room. !jlow, in 1985, I payoff here is something to see! In essence, ''Pee-Wee's Big Ad­ find myself going tp theaters to see But, as the saying goes, one venture'' is tolerable, but First Floor RM 142: TAROT READING . him. In his motio~ Eicture debut, scene cannot save a movie. For ev- obnoxious. This is a movie to see if "Pee-Wee's Big A venture," Pee­ you're at all curious '&bout lfer­ AUD. -SOLDIER'S STORY 9:00 pm-12:00 am Wee Herman man ges to draw au­ ma~'s strange behavior, but try diences into his ~i l_ly world and not to go expecting a big belly­ (Movie) RESTAURANT- make each mom/ent spent with t=llM laugh every five seconds- you'll be him seem like an eternity. gravely disappointed. TWO SHOWS:9 pm-.10:50 PIANO MUSIC -WITH Decked in his ~tandard bow-tie . ery funny or bright moment there pm & 11 :30 pm-12:50 pm· JOSEPH SAUNDERS 9, pm-12 and very high-water pants Her­ are at least ten which are dull and man directs us lhrough a ~t nrv unimaginative. FORUM - MASTER am which at first skms innov atl \' ~ Beyond all of the on-screen anti­ but narrowly mi¥es being boring'. cs are the behind the camera cre­ HYPNOTIST BALLROOM/MAIN STAGE 9 • We find out the ol)ject of Pee-\Vee's dits. The script is a mess do in part · aft'ection is a large gadget fill l'd to the multiple contributions of CHARLES FAULKNER TWO pm-1 :00 am ' Red Flyer bicyfle which t··1 u ld three seperate writers who receive BREN CARR DANCERS alm99t subtitu~ · for a · She1·1nan equal credit for the content.a. It SHOWS: tank. Early on i~ the film the plot seems as if they just threw scene 9:00 pm-12:00 am GREG ~OOLE - COMEDIAN ie set when P~e- Wee 's bi ke i.'­ suggestions into a hat and put etolen by hire~ thugs and con­ ideas together as they were drawn. RMS. 148-150: STILL & MIGHTY POPALOTS - sequently ahi~ped to various What's that saying about too locales across ~Jt country. many cooks? MAX- BREAKDANCING _ As director Tim Burton really "Pee-Wee's Big Adventure" The adventui.e begins. Or, in " • th.ii case gets si lier. .Armed with didn't have too much to work with. VENTRILOQUIST 9:00 PRESIDENTS-OLDIES BUT I · only '8 hobo bag and an infectious Granted, it is the directors job to 1 GOODIES gri.D., Herman Bt1ts across thn lanr ensure cohesiveness, but in this · ** pm-12:00 am ' - to recover his pr r' lnd .· - hat's almost as impossible as • • ' • - .. I ' ' •

• • • • ' . • •

• BISON YEARBOOK POSlTIONS ATIENTION! - A1'I'ENTION! 1986BISONYearboouavailable. Room for Rent (unfurnished) If you are a creative individual H-E-L-L-0 If you did not pick up your 1986 $250.00 incl. Util. BISON last aemester, you may do Services• and would like the challenge ofl!e­ R---U 'A REAL? N. Capitol St., N.E. ing a part of the 1985·86 BISON ATTENTION : There is an so,bow in the yearbook office, room My name is Adrian, I'm sure you'll four blocks from Slowe Hall ATTENTION! All tiberal Arts Yearbook staff, come to room G06 Blackburn. Supplies are lim­ students interested in volunteer ~ Emergency Gen ral Assembly agree that my choreography is GOG, Call after 9/1/85 in the Blackburn Center and aign ited, so don't delay. Meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 4, in really me. I spin like a top tight (grad. student preferred) ing to assist with Freshmen Elec­ up as a volunteer in any of the the Blackburn at 6:30 p.m. tions, please sign up in room 108, Fo~ down to my knees. P.eople think Call DEE - 635-1694 following areas... Atten~ce is Midatory!!! they know but they do-n't kn-ow me. How&rd University's Caribbean Blackburn Center orcall 636-7009 photography portrajt/index Cause I'm wearing the mask and it Students Association ia proud to To All Interested Ladies: by September 10, 1985. advertising clerical The Brothers of Alpha Phi 1 lNSURANCE . FINANCE shin.es A.0.D. (Artists of Di· welcome all new students, return­ copy writing layout onysus). I'm skeouing (Bending ing students and faculty members Alpha Fraternity Inc. Beta Chap· Deadline: September 5, '85 • MAJ:dRS Positive Vibrations) in the name to a prosperous achodl year. ter announce their perspective TEACHERStrEACHERS AIDES Obtain your insurr.nce and secur­ DAYCARE of Terpsichore, the Greek Muse of lllt General Meeting Friday, Aug. sweetheart court reception Sept. 4, ities license's w ~thout begging PARTIIME POSITIONS HELP! REACH OUT! the Dance from history. But! You 30, ·1986, 4:00 pm • Reception 6:00-6:30 p.m., Blackburn Au­ Volunteer Special Friencl/l'utors large firms and C01f1panies to spon­ can call me TERP, right from this · following. · ditorium. Refreshments will be 7:00 am - 9:00 am and 2:30 pm - sor you. Get th~m before you 6:30 pm available. Located in Be· needed to work with inner-city earth, dancing to the beat, down · served. children. Also needed are Satur­ l gradu~t~ and ea n substa~tial . the Universe's street. Cause when th, Rock, Olney. Call Carolyn 946- ~ commissions at , ~ same t1Jlle. 1213 for more information. day recreation and after-achool - you're a James you're bound for TO ALL INTERESTED LADIES: Petitions are still available for home work lab/enrichment aides, I CONTACT 797-0~58 FOR APPT. fame. It may not happen now, so if The Brothen of ALPHA CHAP· EOE/MF . & T E R , O M E G A p S I p H I those Liberal Arts Freshmen in­ and WSI's to teach swimming. FURTHER I~FO . SERIOUS I'm late I hope I'm great someway, lNQUIRIES ONLY!!! FRATERNITY cordially invite terested in running for a Fresh- MARKET RESEARCH ASSIS. Will you COiijJider investing BOme sometime, somehow. Being . man Class Office. They are avail- you to attend our proapect ive bl . Bl kb c TANTS · Bright, articulate people extra time this year in eome very unique is in the feet of Adrian t · . a e in room 108, ac urn en- special relationships? Vincent J"ames ... Can You move'! s wee th ear t cour t recep ion, te ti"! TODAY' needed for consumer opinion sur­ MEMO NDUM: Wednesday; September 4th from ' r un 5 p.m. . veys. Original Research, 19th & Call the Community Children's Can you groove? Can yob act out of Applications for'the Who's Who 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm in the Black- Pa., 293-5055. Ministry, 232·5112. Among Student~ In American you're pants? lfso the H.U. GYP­ SY'S a.k.a. the D.C. GYPSY'S' are burn Center Hilltop Lounge. Re­ Universities anp Colleges, are freshments will be served. I now available ,n the Student looking for you. Needed are To announce an ATIENTION PARTY PEOPLE! Activities Offipe. Room 117, talented individuals that can Stop settling for second rate disC dance, sing or act well for perform­ jockeys and get the ULTIMATE in Personals J Blackburn Uniyersity Center. To Whom It May Concern: event send your ances at Howard events and the party productions. Hire the L.A. Qualifications 'fo~ Who's Who are On the evening of Wednesday ' To Xi Chapter, KAPPA ALPHA attached to the ap lication and the D.C. community. All interested the fourth of September, the Afri­ ''Hilltopics'' to GROOVE, featuring PSI FRATERNITY, INC. Our DEADLINE IS OCTOBER I , people must be able to rehearse can Methodist Episcopal Campus D.J. PARIS LEWIS warmest and heartfelt thoughts ' 636-2649 1~5 . l l/2 hours 3 days a week. Contact Ministry will be holding their first for a productive and prosperous the D.C. Gypsy in the College of meeting of the 1985-1986 acadein­ 2217 4th St. NW, new year. Our goals of achieve­ The· first m' eting of THE Fine Arts, or leave a message in ic year. The meeting will be held in HELP .WANTED! ment are spelled out ii\ Phi Nu Pi. MARYLAND C UB will be held the-A.O.D. box in the Drama Dept. the Little Chapel of the Carnegie . Washington DC Sales Reps needed immediately Phi Nupe ya bubbas! -' on Thursday, Sefltember 5, at 5:30 For further iriformation, call 927- Building at 6:00 p.m.; all members for special promotion. Call aft.er l-Xi-84 Barry Jerrels p.m ., in the Birckburn Center 8549 (A.V.J .). Peace-Love-inGod of. the Howard University com­ •20059 five on Friday, ·Aug. 30, 232-8000 2-Xi-84 Jeff Jerrels Forum room. Old and new mem­ ·we trust, let the music Play as we munity are invited to the fellow­ Ext. 1012. 3-Xi-84 Tony Coleman I 1 • bers please attedd!!! pray - Dancing· in the key of life. ship.

• • h'i!!Y {)(/i)E'i 11/TEJfi!!K.' \ 1 MA~~AND HOMEB()Y.{1 l'M A NE"IVMJ\N, THANKS ,.----'-- I C.AN'T c;gr ONE •.. TO YoV ,TH ...T IS .... YOV • ' . 600 0 - fJ'r'/: CRt/IE l. l>'Oli'J.Q.' AND THE f{/l.LTOP.' ·

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• I • -· • • I ' ' • I '• • ' J - Assis anc'! -I ne Numbrr ' tion of food an petrol-chemical nistan or Grenada. It is, a safety SI ffD llEADING- COUllfS products, the industrialized va~veforp~ttingnatio~~ sl~p,'' HP.41.Seri.ll NumbH 362-7386 ... _,..._..,._,,.. ,. t ...., countrieo have a greater bargain- said Ake. We are not hvtng ~a Hew ..n-hctaN C.., t;/e Dkw1 M9ll ing leverage of _the international world system,, ruled by ~or~lity '1 j tslM-M. P.0 . 8u lOSM. Pw•' nil, Oa s i7IOI pricing system. I but by power, he emphaalf.ed. lil1 •CCIII tM.N.W °"""- ___ _.,_ .. Already thei:e exists a Jag of · In reference to the Lagos Plan of 'JN•lllONI, D.C. lllOt• .. &o'lll?l-llllWSS. _ .. .. 11111/M. 0...... pricee bet;,een products ActiOn for African developme1;1t, •1-1 ,...,_. IV1•;'ll.LA I .--_...,...._- ·~rimary - -- ... _ ... iMot· &omtbedevelo~ingcountriesand sponsored by the OAU, Ake.said, manufactured roducls from the '"The older generation of Africans

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• Feels Freshmen Set Foundation • Delay

• Jim Trotter When asked if the two are syn­ ''He's a prolific passer," said onymous, J~ffries replied, ''In be­ Jeffries. ·'He has a lot of velocity The Bison football team will : Hilhop Reporte~ t" ing the best team we can possibly in his arm and he has all the tools play all of its home games, except ! After accepti'1.~ the head coach- be, I would hope that would be to to be a· real great one; but I think for its first one, in Washington, 1, ing poaition of roward's football the level of us winning the con­ last year held him back a little bit . due to delays in the renovation of team in Febr~ary of last year, ference championship; and it because he didn't anticipate hav­ ' Howard Stadium, according to Dr. Coach Willie E: IJeffries said "I've might be that we are better than ing to start playing most of the Carl Anderson, vice president for got to get a shovel and concrete that. I wouldn't say so at t·his ballgames.'' the Office of Student Affairs. i In an, interview -from his office and start building again.'' point, but things really look good The Bison ran the bafi 85 per­ I • The "buildin( proved to be an out there at this point." cent of the time last year, which I last Tuesday, Anderson said arduous task la~t year as the Bison He added, ''We want to be didn't help Brown's passing statis­ I Robert F. Kennedy Stadium and posted a 2-8 record. It was only the respectable. I don't know whether tics. He completed 58 ofl47 passes , • several area high schools are be­ third time in Jeffries' 12 year we have the team that can do this (39.4 percent) for 743 yards 8:nd ing considered as possible sites for head coachin~ career that his (win the conference champion­ three touchdowns, but he finished this year's home games. B~t he ad­ team suffered a ~osing season. But ship) because we haven't played a the season with a flourish. ded that there are considerable -rhe Architect"las he is commonly game this year. I do know that we - In the final three games of last cost factors involved." One factor known, feels h' has laid a solid improved at the end of the season seasop, Brown completed 34 of 62 he mentioned was the cost of rent­ fo~n~tion upo~ which to build a last year because our freshmen passes for 662 yards and all three ing RFK. He said it costs $16,500 winning progratn. had become of age, and they had of his season touchdowns. to play just one game at RFK! "I definitely think we've laid the almost a year under their belts. Coach Jeffries said he feels his Possible area high schools in­ foundation wittl the freshmen of They were really sophomores by team suffered from its lack of a clude Coolidge and Theodore J'i the class of 19~9," said Jeffries. the ninth game of the season." passing game. He said there were ·Roosevelt, said Athletic Director WHe said this may not have been· Last year, the Bison had to start "too many dropped passes and too Leo Miles in an interview last Ju­ i shown in the WQn-loss record, but ''17 freshmen out of 22 positions, many chances for big gains that ly. But there appears to be sche­ rather ''in lhow they did 11 offensively and 11 defensively,'' - o -~-- dule conflicts with Coolidge, as it we either over shot the receiver or Read Leada ground attack. academically arid how th"y went according to Jeffries He said that something happened." plays !Of!le of its home games on abOut their waxs to show us (the meant a lot of mistakes due to in- He said one of.the proo1e1ns may the same day as the Bison. coaches) that they Were .going to experience. have been that the quarterbacks Felder (6 feet 7 inches, 370 Also leading the linebackers Due to possible travel problems, stay in school." \He added, "There But those mistakes should be were concentrating so heavily on pounds) all look good, according to will be George Lynch, 5 feet 11 universitY officials made the deci­ are some pretty good football play- fewer this yea~ as the Bison return the option in prRctice that they ·Jeffries•. inches, 220 pounds and George sion to play the first scheduled 1ers in our sophOmore class and I a strong nucleus of players. (quarterbacks) didn't throw Tight ends are con~idered offen­ Gardner, 6feet1inch;220 pounds. home game on the road. It will be Ithink the foundation is there and When asked to choose the most enough to get sufficient practice. sive linemen in .Jeffries,• system. Competition at the outside played·September 14, at the Uni­ we can build on it with this group." important area of his team's "I thought we practiced enough According to Jeffries , his receiv­ linebacker spots should provide versity of Rhode Island. The reason poach Jeffries . offense, Jeffries said, ''in our through the week (on the passing ers had some trouble hanging on to the most interesting battles this According to Anderson, delays speaks of building on the class of offense, it has to be the quar­ game), but practice through the the ball last season, but he's look­ yeQr. Last year's starters Phillip in getting construction underway 1989 is that h~ inherited a pro- terback . . . Our quarterback has . w.eek is not like doing something ing for that to change this season. Lee and Carroll Hughes, both this summer resulted when Bal­ 1 gram in which there were few up­ to make decisions." , in a game . . , wejust didn't pass Maybe part of that outlook is due seniors, are battling sophomores ,&n, the company that submitted perc)assmen. Ff r example, this to th"'e strong finish of senior tight Sheldon Hamilton and Darryon the lowest bid to,do the construc­ 1 The player making those de­ enough," said Jeffries. year there are 1only five senioi-s cisions this year is sophomore He added that he hopes to get a end Maurice Haynes. This year's Robinson fdr the starting spots. tion, received the contract but and 15 junio~ qn the team, com­ Leon Brown. Last year Brown ''normal'' distribution of running team captain caught 28 of Ho­ could not come up with a perform­ pared to 28 sophomores and 40 shared st.arting duties with then ward's 59 pass completions last ance bond. The bond is type of in­ and passing this year, but said his • freshmen. j senior Brian Sloan. team is a running team. , year. Over the last three games, in surance that. shows that a com­ ''What that's telling you is what That claim appears to·be backed particular, Haynes caught 21 pany has the monetary backing to fthe state of the program we came · by the fact that the Bison were led passes. ' ''Without a complete a job. For example, if i11to was like," !"!id Jeffries .. He ' ''He'·s doing much on the ground by two freshmen Sophomore Curtis Chappell work on a project is not done to added that most pf the pl.aye.rs who last year-Harvey Reed (603 heads the list of returning wide specifications, the university woUld be upperdJassmen this year b h • yards, 5 touchdowns) and Ronnie receivers. Unlike Hayne& whose doubt, when would be reimbursed monetarily lhad either failell or had personal etter . . . e s Epps (530 yards, 3 touchdowns). play seemed to improve during the for the unsatisfactory work. · jproblems under!past systems. • Coach Jeffries describes Reed latter stages of the seaMn, Chap­ Billy is out of Baalsan received the contract in '[ .J'his year, J<;ffries said 98 per- doing extremely as ''one of the best running backs pell's level of play seemed to de­ early July, according to Joe Di­ cent of his player~~ were eligible for in America tod8.y, and he's going cline. there you know it Geronimo of Joe DiGeronimo and this fall at the ~nd of the spring well run1iing the ~ to get better with experience." , In the Bison's first three games Associates, who is a consultant to semester. He sajd only three play- . That should be good news for of last season, Chappell caught 12 ... '' Coach the university on this project. He ers had to atte'\d summer school, football, Coach Bison fans and bad news for op- passes. Over the next seven said that he feels the university : will wait ''no longer than the end compared to a ~ ·many as 35-40 ponents b.ased on some of Reed's games, he caught only two passes. Jeffries says of players in the p~t . Outof30 fresh- Jel'l'ries says o.f' accomplishments las't year- Coach Jeffries feels this was due of this month'' for balsan to come men from last y ar, Jefferies said ;JJ' 'J conference rushing mark (for ·a to some '"personal obstacles'' that defensive lineman up with the bond. 28 have retur ed' to this year's b k freshman running back, 197 yards Chappell had last year. But Jeffr­ DiGeronimo said Balsan bid squad. He at.tributes his team's · quarter ac on 18 carries, against South Caro- ies said Chappell is back with a approximately $1.3 million on the Billy Dores. project, and if they could not come acad·emic sucFess to the un- Jina State; longest kickoff return ''new attitlide.". . iversity's tutori,1 system. Leon Brown. in Howard)s 'hisiory, 100 yards Other receivers include .TYrone up with the bond, the contract - I "I think we (Howard) have the against North Carolina A&T; . Prath~r an~ Tony M~lain , ,,who would go to the next lowest bidder, best tutorial sy$tem of any school ''There was a lot of pressure on placed sixth among all Division 1- Jeffries 88,i,d are having a fine The defensive line is led by Billy who he said was Royal Athletiaf I've worked at, ~nd I've coached all Leon last year to have to come in AA kick returnors with a 24.7 preseason. ·But a player wh~ Dores. The 5 feet 10 inches, 260- Industries and All-Pro Athletic over," said Jeffries. He added, and relieve Brian Sloan and do yard average. , seems .to ~ave caught' Jeffr1.es pound sophomore was also chosen Services. He said they bid ''The players t~emsel ves had to certain things," said Jeffries. , "Harvey is a winner; he works at~ent1on ts freshm~n Derrick to The Devision I-AA Football approximately $1.5 million. have somethin~ within them to ''He's doing much better ... he's hard," said Jeffries of Reed. - Faison. !he 6 f~et 4. inches, 190 Guide's pre-season honoraQle DiGeronimo s8.ys it takes get out and do r.hat was expected doing extremely well running the . ''We'll build our offense around pound ~ide receiver is the ~astest mention All-America team. "approximately 70 days" to com­ ! [(of them)." football, he knows what to look for him, but the only thing in running play~r tn the team, according to ''Without a doubt, when Billy is plete work on this type of project. · But now t~at Jeffries has now in running our option. He's He said if a bond was secured by I op tion. .oot< b a JI 1s· they (opposing · Jeffries"W · k d h . · 4 3 (40 out of there (the game) you know ' accomplished his first goal ofkeep­ not as shifty as some quar­ "lb k e c 1oc e im in ' · it,· when he's not on that field you the end of this month, work could te am ) can takeyour ta1 ac away ds) d I' . · ing his playei;i .academically eli­ terbacks, but he's fast and he from ou •• yar 'an m going to say 4 .4 in can tell," said· Jeffries. start as soon as Labor Day (Sep­ gible, what is , is second priority? makes good decisions. We like to Bul J~ffries said that will open ~he ~o. t>e<:ause I just .don't be,lieve Also in the defensive line are tember 2). He said the university ''To win the conference sav that a player runs 4.7 (seconds things up for other players such as in giving out 4.3s. I JUSt don t be- junior college All-America trans- would have to make a decision as championship and be as good a . in the 40 yard dash), but he makes Epps. fer Reggie Miles (6 feet 5 inches, to whether or not work should be­ football team as we can possibly 4.4 decisions, and that's What ne The 5 feet 11 inches, 200-pound • 270 pounds), Paul ''Biscuit''. gin this fall, because he said wea­ ~ said _Jdfr res. does. sophomore does the inside work Gardner (~ feet 4 inches, 265 ther problems would play a factor. Anderson said that "the latest ,---~~~~~~~~...---~~~~--, while Reed operates on the peri- pounds) and Curtis Stokes (6feet1 meter. Epps' 530 yards rushing inch, 230 pounds). information provided to me by ... - - were second on the team to Reed. ''11. e is just a very The area that caused Coach Purchasing (Howard's Purchasing , - Epps averaged 5 . 9 yards per Jeffries· the biggest headache last Department) indicates work will rush- the best on the team. t I'. tb ll year was the secondary. Teams start this fall. He said the decision • ''Ronnie Epps needs no introduc- srnar JOO a completed 48.5 percent of its pas- would have to made by the con­ tion, if anyone ever saw number 30 . Dlayer h , ses against the Bison·, totaling tractors and other university om- .' run with the football," said Jeffr'- .,z:- • • • e s 1440 yards and 16 touchdowns. cials involved in the pro~. Anderson and DiGeronimo em­ ies. d d" ' d d TheBisonintercepted19passeson .­ The,coach also cited freshman e lCat~ a.n the season. phasize that it is better to slow Fred Killings as pushing Reed at 1 Jeffries said all of the blame down and do things correctly, than . - the tailback spot. "He is really to .ugh.~· Jeffries can·t be attributed to the secon- to hurry and have problems with -- pushing Harvey and that is going • dary. He said things such as the' the field later. tomakeusabetterfootball team," says of.linebacker pass rush and the linebacker's Anderson said construction said Jeffries. drop backs all contributed to the •would consist of replacing the grass field with a new synthetic But the offense cannot sue- Marvin Jackson: problems. turf, as well as resurfacing the • • cessfully run or pass the football Jeffries feels that ·with the en- without the continued improve- tire secondary coming back, it can track. Other renovations would be ment of the offensive line. only improve. The secondary con- the building of new stands on the I ''I think our offensive line is sists of Doug Dickerson (2 in- east side of the stadium, while eVen mucli better than last year," terceptions), Conrad Austin (4 in- eliminating the south stands. New • lighting would be installed along said Jeffries. ''We're going to lieVe in saying that a guy r8n a terceptions), Frankie Hall (2 in­ average 283 pounds across the 4.3," said Jeffries. . terceptions), Earl Kinney (5 in­ with a renovated press box. An· front." Last year, the Biso.n's lineback- terceptions) and Chuck Taylor, derson said he is alao working on The unit retums intact except ing corps proved to be the strong who":"'asred-shirt;e

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