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The iH lltop: 1970-80 The iH lltop Digital Archive

1-23-1976 The iH lltop 1-23-1976 Hilltop Staff

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Like a sword Hilltop Highlights The Hilltop 1s• a weapon Eye on Africa ...... p.3 I . for freedom , PSS on Rut>n ...... p.5 Cheek Discusses D!rmnds ...... p.5 and· truth is the Art Exhit>t ...... p.6 • ··t ·Q ,\ J,\ I UNl('1\ ·1-1: ·1·0 • Azar lalfoA'"eflre; 1\1\?llow Sax .. p.6 foundation of D 1:: 11U(:1\ ·rl ·1·lJ ' Lll ~ l : 1{ , \ · r1 · ·· ~ Escape Bison ...... :.p.8 ' I • our efforts . SMm Team Troubled ...... p.9 l Hilltop ftlppening; ...... p.10 • I • I .

• VOL 58, NO. 15 HOWA RO UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTOl\I D.C . 20059 23 JANUARY 1976 . I • High Court Rejects Wilmingt~n 10 Pl ea Progress Rep~rted. I I~\ F rc !() fhe r1gh1 10 UP heard b\ th<· Supfenie Cc1ur1. Or;i Student Demands Ot l1er 111ernbers o ! tl1 e 1he ~upren)P CoL1rt. 111 ,1 IJrl<:'f . I. urle;"(fJla1r1ed clPt1-s1011, r<'ll1Ct t•(J t/-1e W1lm1ng1c)11 10 are Marvih P,1tr1ck , .ipf>eal ol' tl1e c f'lt•bratt•d \'\11ll1e Vereer1, Jerry Jacob;, W1ll1a1n 1 ''Wilm1r1gt fJn 1[)'' th1~ \Vt'ek \!\}right, Cu11r1ie Tyndal l. Rf'g1na lc! • The ''\.Y1lr11 1r1gt,)r1 I{)'" ga1r1ed Epps, larne~ M cCoy, Wayne fv1oor e, Tuition Increase Still Doubt ' 11.:ition.:il dttent1(Jn \vh1•r1 tht>~ \VPre dnd Ann Shepard, the only wh11e 1nrl1ctetl and <. or1v1Cted 111 : ll7 2 of ~1erson 1n the group Dan1u Smith, a \vorker 1n the I iiurn1ng a gri1{1·r~ ,t il rn1 n1 stratior1 officiatS, 1 Jelivere ~ by Chief )ustice fa11ey of .iva1!at)le The $1 2 rnill10J'\ renovat1or1 o ~e mc st er 111 tl1e old l · reedr11an '~ 'lll'111bt•r ur tl1<• \\ 1i1111r1gt(Jl1 !(l, i1t•ld founder's Library p~~sently under ~ ·could no lor1ger be c1ttlens ut tl1l' 1-lo.. pitJ! a'n d on Du11bartu 11 C i!,n 1 pu ~ d rail) hl ·rc· 1n Wa~h1r1gto11 ldr1 U111ted Sl ates, formed no part or \Va y the additio n 01 ne\v o utlets fol • and 01 t1 c 1a l~ said tl1at 1111~ \\a5,1r1' at- .! l l!) de11 ounc· e tht• !C'( l' fl l the peo111e· · referred to 111 tht' books and su ppl1esj jJreparat1on fo tmep\ tu con1pl}' \v1tt1 't ~rlL·' r1ts rlt-'l t'>l•Jr1 a.nJ to .ir1rl () UtlLt' tutti re C<> 11 s111u11or1 . dnd had ·· no r1g h1 <. construc11or1 ·oi a 11€\-v student cen 1cquc~ts for mo1{' Q utl.et~ 1 J)i.111~ \vl11ch a \vh1te rnar1 are b our1d I<> ter. and settlernent. in the case 1n1 . ' $AVE Tilt Prepara:1or 1 iur cons1tlJct:cj11 1>1 .1 1 l).f' Court" dl'c1:.1or1, !Jkf'r1 o n res1Je c 1 " volv1ng Dr Lc,l1e Rub111, are direc ~ "1or1rJa)" Ian 19 .. tu detl\ thf' 1 i1ew student cer1ter 1, a1 ~,i ,1 Ot l1 er speakers at the rally wt •r t~ WftMt'HGTOH. N.c.10 steps taken by ad1n 1nist ra t1or1 ... offi- ~ pos1tiwe step, ~orne SlL1dt'r1 t , !f't'.I, -tr1 pet111un 01 a 'vVr1t ()t Cert1orar1 al~ o --- -·······-··- . ' !)c,1r1 l_v.1ri, Cr<1wlord , Dean o f tl1f' .V! Iii~~\ !_W. ft/I W!t~~rHC!VM ~, !'1 c ials regard1r1~ the student s' d e j 1r1ean s that lhe bbr1ci s of ,111 ten aclr11inistratiL'k' Soul~ Church, 01 Charle~ 1.. ColJIJ .MA.RVlH P.ATR!C, c:rease 1n tu1t1or1 :.till ren1a1ns un ~ litJ\\ rna11\ n1orP <.hock trt' d\ · lt•tter, and !he lac k o ! <1nv tdf1\ Chd\ 1s t'v1dence 1nd1 ca1e~ thdt othf'r cl C' r 11 1s~1o n ror Ra c.. 1<1l lu~t1cc J[lt.Rl' JA,.t,)S. President Cheek, dated lanuar}' I] a~ l._t'tl a11 au d1t'~l1' 0 1 about 150 Cont. on 2 Ydngu Sa\vyer, ar1 orgar11zc_•r tor 1\!: u kALO fj addressed to the1 editor of th !l,-E:'.., ,irt• nut C) lli) tJ.lk1ng .i \).llPl-I_> • Jn Wash1ngtor1, JJ C Council (> ! C hllt "'u In rc1err1ng tlJ ~hf' derna11d tor th"! \llll'~L.l "i-<1LI llun·1 tr~ ltl l f1ar1ge • < • c he~ \'I. ere al~ o J)resf'nt • rern oval ·01 Dr. Rubin from the Ill Allll' f lCd 2• ' tf11~ l d (I~! ~ ~ Slt'ITI Dean C ra\vford a1111oun ced th.:it Po!1t1cJ I Sci ence Department, DrJ \V1thout l1e 1r1g pl1r11~l1l' 'j > the Ho\vard Sc l1 ool of Rel 1g1un \veil .0 Cheek stated 1n the letter thdt ·· th~ Re\ Cha\!S ~ ,11d t/i at lit' in t end~ 0 1r11med1ately niake plans to put tilt' ~ matter concerr11ng Rubin has beeri .) t .i. rr) ()11 t11~ roll· a<11l1t.- ht>J.d 01 0 \"/,lm1r1gton l(J and \•;hat they sy111 ~ ~e trled the \\' a~h1r1g(()r1 11f•ld tl1f1{. l' ul the ' ~ l bol1ze as a part 01 our curriLLllUrll. . ' :\n agreen1e11t ''' OS reached be U n1tel! Chu it h 0 1 ( l111st'<> Cor11 - Hcr1 1J,1ward stt1 dent .;ind n1·er11t>.-r (1 f 1h1· f!l Co11t. on p age 2 (11 ,1vi~. \V i lm i 11~ton l'-'ll'Pr; Rubi n anct ~c hool (Jft1r1al. i· \ \h •111..,'11''!1 i(J! Rae 1at .!11~!·( le 111 uu r1n g t11 ~ t\O'CI:' •) ••}r bv1h ~.des 14 • 1.•r1~w11 <111 tf ~dill 111· 1)L1:1r1L'll Li> (ilt..: drop lharges, v-.·l11l l' Rub1r1 \Va $ ·I \';I \ I i-,.:ilJP~U" ( J.Jf !lll' ' ) \'~ll'! g1ve11 or1e • ear ' ~ ~ .!l)bat1 c.;il leav~ ! \ and an .add1t1 ur1 al lt•IJ\e o f abser1c~ •\ io1: l or11 niu nit d l lliri<. di ' ,, Jt',l~{J!l_ \\ h\ Bru''- n, \\ hv h.:i, m .;i11 ~ A ccording to Hryant Harris, Chi11rl Black Officials The f<)ur1der ancl r1rs! d edn tit 1h1• Br U\'V • 11 ! 11 l' fl J {:'(j rT'llJr l: 'U(!1 J(_((!TD~Jll'hlllL'fll'-, I~ a 1na r; ul the Arch1ti>qt1.1re and Eng1r1 - :; c hool of Comrnun1ra1~011s T11'.l\ II .. ,1,,,j f \!;>lU\l\'e br)atd. rl1ernbt·1 I '\,J.(I Jn,11 8la l l.. !\ir Ha rri~ said th t plans \vere • Coin1nun .:_ Jtl(Jtl~ \\ i10 J)•l'll'trf•d -.,, tl'i )! \...<1/TI!~lll'lll J!'•_Jtl'- .:ind 110\Ve\;er, under\VdY o renov~le the­ • H <1 r,Q , to be ;i.Jer1t1r 1ed ~aid Bro\vr1 \~ as 'l 11'll (1111' 1)1 t~)l' 100 1\-.Jrcl li1\1\er~1l) "' 1l111lt'~~o1 l1brary even betore 11 became a ano f(Jffn f•rl' tl1p t1r<.I cl1•d11 or uur There are signs that lOn1c llf !ht; Unemployed c on~1dered a ''pol1t1cal l1 db1!1t} tu '',ll Ul.i. ~ A.1nt•r1c.:in~ c oncern of stucien•s,. and that • • ~rhJr11e IJ<1l1gla~~ I 1t>1·ra11cii1 \\\a fcl tor 11e\v air co r1d1t1oning unit \\' as star, bcr ~ al50VL' ) are being r11ei by Ad- o;:i ~ 1 .f d 1:>r1ts Jnd ra lult\ 111('r11IJ<-·r<. \\ 1tl1 StJu rce cl tecl Browr1's r1u111e rr>u~ 1J1onL·P 11 ng tflt' tit•\t•lUI (lt ,)l1glo!,1-.l1 (•((JJlt1·n11 11t•d rrv1n !ht· "' "" th'p {.i!OCCtlat1(tJl fll 011(' (JI j~~{J\\ n.., l _dence, re1ect> thf' µ1i)1J !c11 ...... Our!>e~. l'~y cl1ulog;- rJ! tl1l' C..h \"l l (l Congress begdr1 a rev1e\v of the ' 1t unclerr111nes !-hl· 1u11lla rj1C'r1tal ~ l c1ri.. L if'C" !f'rl f'l1IJ\tc (J11111<11-. ht>lcl ,.-· ·11,,, cu ur~c \\' a~ ,i 1i.•qu1r{·r11 t·r11 !~Jr stdt_us of Puerto (i:ico1last \veek, al a ri ght tot seli ~ ?c1 er111111a ! 1ur1_ b) · thf· ! >t·c!'111!)l', 11 11, 1(175 1\11- 1111 J- c0 111mur11 cat1ur1~ ~iud·1:>11i:, time ~vhen i11dependence tor than Puert R1ca 11 p1:>01 1ll· · rirr1 1rnd! l'll- !11(1() !ilac "' 1· ('( 1(' (, (l t " ' I ' ' ' Cari bbe.111 1~lan4 is fa~t be con1in~ ·rhr,J U $_ 1nil1 (a1 y •n1er\t'r1 \1 011 111 \1< 1.:il~ ar1cl 01l fJ<.1•r\• 'r<. fr1J111 c 1v1l .... l;jt an explosive issUc b£ttl1 1n the U .Sj 1898, P,;ert() R1t~o \Va ~ a11 11 t>XE'(l J11d 11 g!1f.<, rg,1r111at1cJr1 s t~lh1:. ~c·1n<-•'>lt:r l1owe1.t'r , tl1o~e and abroad. 1! 1c_or ~1 ura te d \v1t l11)L1\ thi: tt111 ~e1 11 ,11-.c ut,..,1 •1l tht' tl1f•rr1f' '' PlJ l1!1 i" a11d "'*""" ..,.,., i\:t1l1r11ur11lation' ~cn1or' \VllcJ l1avt> ' The H ouse s:ub-Comn1ittee on of its pCt)pll' I hf' .. olli111dl \ ldtl J~ 01 1~ lll.i ck Ll o11r)1111( ( (J11c l1t11in · 1101 taker1 the 11sychulog} ((1ur>C Insular Affairs held hearings 011 al the 1~lancl \'l.J~ occogr 111. t•d· b~ \ln P -"-::.? hdve tJet•r1 cxe1npted. ar1LI allo\ved In a relatecl llevelop1ner11, the "" proposed ''Corn p act of Permanent. U N \Vhen :he Ge11er<1I A~~en1hl1 lo lake .1r1other three- hour {.<) Ur '> l ' '-at1o nal Black Pol1t1cal A ssembly Union'' bet\veen the United Sta tesi voted in Der ember 19 7) to dil1rr11 1rom the '' C rto cla~~es . rt1f' st atus ot t!1 e class 1~ ~"ou!d drafl Georgia Slate Senator ­ Rican pf'Oj)I(' to 1r1de1Jer1 den ct• a11d • jll,'nd1ng 011 rc;ufts of tl1l' 11cx1 <..or11 - compact advo c a ~ es a change in the /u l1 an ·Bund as ar1 1r)de11ender1t cc1n­ legal stattJS of the Commonweall h ~ elf - dCtP r n11 r1a ljun 1 fi l1r11tat1oi1 ~ rurr1culur11 (.tJn1n1 1t1ee '(J1dot(• for Pres1df:.•rlt of Puerto Rico to 1ha1 of a ''free- - K<1llv1 rl.El arounll 1l1 t· ~1o g unc1I JJ0\1!1<.al r1g/1t~ the new bill as ( another option of bbean 1slar1(l fru1n the U1l1!ed ~t atc s ~1i1cer M1Chl,llc leSanl' The assf'rT1blv' <, tl11rc! b1 -anr1ual equal d igr1i ty an(j validity as either 1n 197·0 jtlt has bee11 ~ugge~ted ll)' tf1t• '1at1ondl Black Pul1t1ca! Cu11ver1t1or1 Tony l:!rown, Executive l' rodurer of the Black Jo11rnal lL'll'vision series independence cJr statehood _'' As une m1)lo~mt?nl Jr1d 11lflat1on crea n '~ olftce thdl BrU\Vll 1etur11 a~ ii iS scheduled ror C1r1<111r1a t1 . Ohio H owever, the Puerto Rican Solid- escalated on the 1 ~! .t nd, tht' p10 i11 and firsl dean of the ~hnnlof Cor1 1n1unicatiuns, l1a' rl'signed ·•!' an lecturing prcJfessor \/\arc h 17 - 21 instructor t1ere. arity Cornm1ttee,' a broad based ·- Con1. 011 p~ge 2 S 1 11111.;or~ tJI tilt' I l11rll Nat1or1al lr1<.t1 ! lJ I(' !1' 11 1l1Jt a!1!1(Jugl1 1l1f're .• . h.)cl f)p1•r1 , v1<.1lil<' Jlf<1grt•<.~ !Jv !llack<. 11) 1n<1t· a~1n~ 1icil1t1(,1i 11.ir11< 1JJfl~IJI~ <,(J.t 1• c! !flt'lr cJ(•ter On 1111· t)UfS1cl1° 1t arpt•ar' t tl'll'>P dtld iltl1t'r 1tt'r11' \vt11 le cir· C'4uip111cn1 th.11 r11akt' Uf> · vvH!jl f fl(' ,J,11 • JI\ \\ l11t ti 11·tur11('tl t ,1 I hP !It'>! 1i111r1t 1.11 tl11· 11r!titl('r\I' 1r1 1111· \1 l11 i ril 111 (ru.i r) 2r1 ll flrlfart• !ll(Jgra11l', d!1(j t1.-1<. fJ ('!•r1 Yl'! ~thec l ulPcl 11Jr1,r111lll't" 1>r1 •, (•r1 ll\ 111,tallt•c! 111 th

• • Page 2 THE ILL TOP • • l. ' 23 January 76 Black Officials Cont. from page 1 Puerto Rico News from ~- Cont. from page 1 income. They also said any welfare dependence movement ha s gained Fuerzas Armads de Libericion program is ''doomed to failure'' un: taneolis bombings in New York, momentum. A sel'ies of crippling Nacional Puertorriquena (F.A.L.N .), less there is more job training an'd Chicago and Washington, D .C. in st rikes have hit the island and a a pro-independence group, repor­ ·elack Schools an expanded child Care prograrn. October. wave of bombings recently took tedly cl aimed responsibility for 25 Cuba held a Conference of Soli­ and adult education; and right to The third point calls for the place on the mainland. TALLAD EGA COLLEGE, bombings Last year, including sirnul- darity with .Puerto Rico attended by educat ion legislation, according to government to approve a com­ Talladega, Al.illb ama representatives from several Social­ Smith. prehensive health care· program 1r,­ fl-If ",,~'''.,~ W( Sr 1.. DIES is t and Third World nations last • The H ororable Henrietta Canty, . Sini th ha s se rved the U .S. Office cluding preventive, diagn ost'i fl · me1nb1:.•i of . the Georgia l.Jou se of treatment, and rehabilitative se r1 :­ ' year and has promised to support a of Educa tion in se veral aclrni nistrat­ drive for a de-c olonization at the Represe11t a! ives, was gLiest speaker ive ca 1Jaci ties si nce Pri o r to ·ices fQr everyone, 'regardle55 of I 1969. U .N . When the U .S. expressed its for Founders' Day service.:; rece11tly ability to pay. !'I. , !h is he was a CO L1nselor and ad ­ displeasure at Cuba's action, Pre­ at Talla clega College. Serving as re­ n1ir1istrator in the public sc hools of For a more positive Africa:n < presen!at1ve icir the 38 th district, policy, the spon sors said 1h e a~ mier Fidel Castro responded ''we Cleveland, Ohio shall never desert our Puerto Rican Mrs. Can l y 1~ dl'O active in civil ministration must not support n1ir~ ­ brothers even if there are no relat­ rights NORFOLK STATE COLLEGE, ority rule in Sou th Africa, mu st stop , ·• , c ions with the U .S. for a hundred ·"1rs. Ca~t)' srJoke· c)f the founding Norfolk, Virginia importing Rhodesian chrome, ar:id . Ye~ rs.'' fath~rs . She emphas1zecl the ac­ must impl~ment a United Nations 0 c Puerto Rico has beenthit by the I compl1shr11ent and the posi tive Along with three other Virginia resolutior:i calling for a new Inter­ ... ..0 . economic crisis of the U .S_ Unem­ att itudes of lht• 11reser1t clay found- national Economic Order by ar.- ' llfAfO • • . state colleges, Norfolk St ate is in· ' .tcc: o 0 • 1ng fatht•rs at Talledega. The cam- suring ''just and stable prices f11r • ployment is said to be ~lose to 30 ·volvetl with a plan for a proposed per cent. The "price of1 food has pu s new -.paµer, The Student, did primary commodities." ~ 1oin1. doctoral program in cli nical • N e A • taken a 37 per cent jump in ·the last • not !"!entic>n the naines of ihe p.1 st 1 he conferees called for Cong r ~ R < A ! psyc hology. • ' • • ' 115 months. Wages cin the island are or J l•~Sent ·tou11d1r1g fathf'rs' Tlie J'l f CJ flOSed program, whi c h ~ in ­ to extend the Higher Edu cation Aet ' • f • appro)(imately h?.lf those in the U.S . • l"hf. Georgia rf'JJrt·~.entat1ve volV('S em 11l oying instructors from and to renew the V ocational Ecj­ \ tressed J)t ~r.;cin al ach1e\·e rnf'nt a11d ucation Act. Emphasis \v ould be on , I A pro-independence ~ pokesman Norfolk Sta te, W illiam and Mary, • • commented that the U .S. is reaping acad en11c exceller1ce, .1r1 rl st ated Olcl Dominion U niversity and East- assuring student financial aid for • that , '' Ytiu cl ()n' t kr1 ciw what your those \vith tfle greatest r1eed , in­ higher · returns ''on their Puerto 12r n Virginia M eclica l Sc hool to Rican investments than they obtain ful l <1bili tit•s ar~· . ur1t1I tl1e rP i"> rf'" t('rtc h on an agreed cam1Ju s, is the creased funding for developing in­ • V!NI02t1E L A in Japan and half the returns ob­ ~on lo fincJ ou t ·· fir'> t of its kind ir1 the stat e. sti tution s, arid hiririg an,d promoticin of mir1 o ritie s and tain.ed throughout .Latin Arneria." • Only five other colleges in the ' SOUTH CAROLINA STATE U 11it ed Sta tes offer a doctorate in women. " • • COl(EG E, psycliology degree. Orangeburg, South Carolin t1r1 th<' Sc1utt1 Carol- rnt>n !al l1caltt1 services. This degree k . ·lions by American Indian leaders Jo bless rat ~ and an average yearly 1r1a State C1illege cam11us rr·cer1t!y 1S s1rnila r to an M .D . and is not re: Follow-up • While preparing to indulge in a\i. \vhose goal is self-cl'etermin.i. tion for income of ~600 , less than a quarter F0Cl1~1ng c1r1 the que<;t1on or searchers ~cientists as was formerly • e)(travagent Bi-centennial America's origina l ci tizens. of the nati.o.nal average. Their in­ "'T•~aCll!'r [ducat1on Future D11ect - the case.'" celebration, America has recently Herded together on Federally fants have a survival rate of 500 out Cont. from page 1 ' 1or1s," Srn1th ccJ11cc111rated on the '1oriolk Statr•s J)Sycho logy de- con trolled reservat i or1s . Native of every 1,700 t mands .are not Considered urgent 1r1!c 1 1~1Vf' effort ncJ\V underway to been hit with a series of in· 11.i.rtr1ient. which recently won ap­ Native Americans can e)(p,ect to priorities by the administration. establish a l1felor1g rJtP~'r dPvelfifJ­ !Jrriva! for its proposal for a masters· die by 431 years of age. Their Steve Poston, Undergraduate Stu­ rn 1'11t f)roce.;~ for !C'athl'rs. • clegre(' in community 11sychology Accredidation· in Process housing - . dirt huts, tar S>hacks, dent Coordinator, said that efforts f~1i~ rlt'W ci1ret tirJr1 1n tea cher , beg1nr1i11g ~rring will be plan­ 1976, abodes and grass huts - is offid \'- 11h1r1 crtr1 l1ster1 !1• church on rlie radi o," schools ac credited under hts lea­ can perhaps bes t be illustrated by say anything." ''Students should be somewhat 1111· nf'X1 rno.r1th .ri dersh1p. Only t\-vo tradi! ion.-i lly the case o.1 Ira Hayes. Hay~s, ac­ Black schools have gained accredit­ cording to a story in Bil,a/ianj News, cautious concerning student tuition Chari('\ l'1!(S. \.\' l-lB C l)rrJgrar11 . E In i..Pf'j)lrlg \V1th 11~ student orten­ ctl ation: Texas Southern and At!a11ta wa s the ma ~ ine who raised the flag increase. The matter is still a reality IJ1rectur. ar1(J "1dy1J bcilll (•x11!,11r1c-'(l in the sense that it could w.el l be in­ ;ed br ci ac l cast~. M.-iyo explained c: Ur1i\'ersity. at lwo Jim a in World War II. !hat thr\1ugh a 'Ur\t')' iaker1 las1 that th('re is only one scheduled ~ Curricu !ums 1n housing and real ''He was beme.daled, honored creased," Poston said. "erni,stt•r , the~ t(JlJnd 1l1at a n1a1or1t\ nl~\ \'S f the ~tucient 1 1e~r ! s ;in c.! • c<1r111Jus 1~~L1es ''"·111 be aired One· '' Operational Partic i pa lion'' he was withou t work and w~ thout have to maintain pressUre ar1d let df' ~1rf's,'" .... drcl MJyo 1 ~u< h 1~Sl1<' Mayr) c11ed is a, corn· hope; a Vic,tim JOf racism. I · • !he administ ration know that they l' rc1~ra!11\ ~ch1·dui(•d for this 1)ar1so11 bpt\v(•eri ' tfie ha nd ling of By Li llian W ashi ngton A se rie s ()r 1 ec tu re~ calleirig ·designed to br1r1g srudents ancl Ira became a drunkard and finally Respondirig to Dr. Chi;::ek's letter, 1 the hub of ac tivities re cen tly, th e 01 l·i .U 1'vc•11t'>; ''Off ·111c' \·\ all," 1\cc<)1cl 11ig to Mayo, t\vo faculty members of the Adm)nistrati1n to· died while fy-i ng in a draina2:e ditch Brown said, that the matter. of . stu- most important of \.vhi ch is \he 1 wl11(• h l1<;t\ {)11 ar1rl riff c arnru ~ rnf>1nl) t'r <; who have been i nstru­ gether. is fJlanned by t he Student in two i r-Jc hes of wate~. ." the dent input into the tenure system process of evaluati on for und,er· ·~o{ 1al (o'\l'111~ ("'1 11c.iull 1r1g trec•f)ll'..~.~· ITI(·r11,1I ~vi1h the (Jf)era tion of Council. fl\.'e V1ce- l)res1dents of tf1 e Bilalian Nei,vs ~ tory continued. was ''dodged a little bit." gr ad uate ,1ccrl'(lidltion tlO\V lJ11dcr\va~. ~a1cl l'1lt ~). <1r1cJ ,1n o1 her calll·cl "l.es! WHBC .ire Ri chard Bf~ verl}', Direc­ University have beer1 invited to Recent demands by Native · ''We were serious about getting • tor of thf' Broadcas1 Train111g Marion Barry, D .C. Councilman speak for half .in hour or1 Wednes- Americans ior bas ic human rights some input, and we want to review Pat11·ri1'' \\1 h1ch 1<. ar'flotir1c_er11en1-; at Large , \va s guest ldt:turer at the L;iborator) fr)r W l ~BC and WHUR; da)'S beg1r;in1ng Feb. ! "! .Al! lectures and self-determination have been faculty members, and have some bf acacl£-•1n1c atf<11r s (reg1strat1on, school on YVednesday afternoon. ·and )11n Sfflate Of lhe School of will begin at 11 :00 a.m. 1n the Stu- accompan i ed . b y in1Cre.Jsingly input into the committee for pro­ adcl-clro1J sc- l1(·dule.;, e1c) Barry d iscussed financial and Elt·ctror11cal Eng1neer1ng. Senate der1t Lounge and \\.'ill be> followed rni lilant actions. ' I motions," he added. RecorcJt'fl cl1url ~ '>fl'\ ices \\.'ill legislative problems peculiar to directed o,, 1gh! Mills, WHBC Chief by question and ans\v er sessions. Contradiq ions in the beliavioUt _,Ad dressing the matter of tuition, al'O be hroa{lc a-.1 " tr;r those \\' ho 0 .C., such as '' Home Rule'', w ith Engineer. arid other s 111 the con· ~tudent Council Pre~1dent Jimrny of America toward i1s o riginal Br own said ''Increase in education· 1 < a11't ·nake 11 u11 (1r1 '-'uni; lrt~' thf>' -.1ruct1on o f tht• ~1at1on about 100 students and faculty' '\ust1n hopes that '· Operation Par11 - citizens were brought to ;i head al costs means a decrease in Black members gathered 1n the Sc hool's cipation'· \Viii el1min.-ite '" the hear-- w ith the shoot-out at the Pine students at institutions of higher student lounge. learn ing. No way w ould students say'' .-ir1d ''a!le\1 1.-ite many problems Ridge re servation, South Dakota in The Chairman or the Finance and • bet\veen the stutlen:s and thP Ad- July 1975 which left twd F.B.I, tolerate a rise in tuiti on and there 1s Revenue Committee al so 1 stre~sed ministration.'" agents dead. - ; •no .way to pass the buck 011 that the importance of competent blis1- one. ." A Co-Operative Education Club The most! spectacular .single act nes s and public adminrstrators to 15 1n the forrr1at1ve stages. The recently was the establishm~nt of a Brown added that · coritrary to , ' the community. orgar1 izati on is expec ted to serve as short- lived sovereign lndian i;iation what has been reported by the 1 white media, ''The students are be­ Accredidatior1 ' a vehJcle to influe~ce some aspects after the .ta~eover of the Wou nded of the Co-op program, a 5-year pro- Knee reservat ion t;>y Amer i~ an In-· hind Dr. i;::heek a.s tong as there is progress." , • According to Or. Richmond, a gram comb111 ing ~c ~ool arid work dian Movei;nent (A.l.M.) members labellipg the studen ts' demands professor in the School, '' the great - exper1er1 ce. ·Co t 3 • of November as ''ques tions'' and deserving of nothing but ''an ­ est benefit...... ······-~o n r•ge swers," Earl Ferguson, presisent of HUSA, said ''there are some more 1 . .x ' ~,;,1r · • · important concerns that we need I .m ·I to address other than those and­ wered." He pointed out that the new student government constitut­ I I ion, the regi strat ion problems, and or a more active and positive part in • I I forming the policy of this. Institut­ • ion should be ma jor C·oncerns of I ODONNELL'S® I students. I 1.lf'I! ,, lhl' '"·' I(! I ''This semester we ai e going to IODS. have to be on our toes, because this is a very criti <; al iime in the Get Acq11t1ir1ted Witl1 the Best . . Chase Bank wants MBA's who I ro I hj ~ tory of the U niv'ersity," he ad- ~-eafo f( d R estt11Jra11t / 11 Metropolitan I r1eed more than one \vay to grow. ded. 6 • I Wa.tl1ingto11 : A student in the College of Fine Arts, responding to the question of We offer diverse and flexible the demands, was more concerned • careers in financ;ia l management . I . - ~ I w ith the unanswered question of And we aim to.develop managers tu ition. whose career options broaden as ''What's rea l ly being done about they prog ress with us. I I the demands for a freeze on tu~tion? ' '' she asked. ''That was the •• To find out more about Chase­ I . I main issue of the demonstration. .and to !et us find out about you­ No real attention was paid the \ check our career literature in I I • j demonstration. They (the admini­ your Placement Office and sign • stration) are just going along with , up for an interview. I I what they had already planned to I ~..,._.. I ..d o . " • Campus interviews February 3 I 1J I If you can·! make ii to an inter­ What is a •1i ew. write to Linda Verhoff at the • Tonight start your own I O'Dor1ncll's tradition with a succulent address bel6w: I , I scafqod dish, crunchy green salad, and l. DIP? Ollr celebrated home-baked rl1m buns at . Chase: Manhattan Bank I I one dollar off all food entrce s. si)( dollars :1 1 ChaSe Manhattan Plaza. or more. This offer is goOd Monday thru I ' ... New York. N Y 10015 I Thtirsday aflcr 5 p.ni. with this ad at tlie downtown ( !22 I E St . N .W.) ()UJ 54.th I An Equal Opportunity Employer I O'Donnc/l"s only. ' l\"dl I

2 Hour Con1p. f'arking After 6 p.n1 . • I ., i I ~ 122 1 ES ct. N .\V . Otfer !-'..nil, i-;-ebrtiary. 29 I I Wa shingt n, D.C. , • (Near the N <1 tion;1l l he aler) - Phone 737-210 1 I 1 • REWARD for ~turn ol Nlkromal camera or undeveloped film left in a cab I 1 : J,anuary 4 driven by 4tft.yea"\- Howard U. mechlnit al engineering studying frOm lrak. Call O'Rourke 4~1SO. No questions asked. 'Po ··················•ii• ' • • • •

23 January 76 • • TH E HILL TOP I' Page 3

I

eye on ofrika D.C. Plans for Bicentennial • ' • ' 111 Wash1ngtor1. She said that therf cncompleted Metro station and a by Venola Rolle 1 By Sam Chudi lfeagwu \viii al so be specially invited guests portio n .o f the public library to add ' J"he Mayor's office ha s len t'a11vel y 10 these func tion s.. some scope to the program. · . sc heduled ''celebratory eve ritS'' for fhe second type ·of celebratiop In o rder · I? incorpor;;ite local the t:lt~ , · ~ Bicentennial observances will occur in e<1 cli service ar ea of tale{lt, M s. Sa! f these neigh­ fo r · local group performances, • tributior1s of Wes t lndiar1s, t!1e 1 ClJltu ral heri ta ge of residen ts, a11cl lJ ·direc tor in charge of Culture and A special .Commission of Inquiry Heritage '76, said chat becau.se the Nine such festivals are planned - partic ipation of city agencies in ef­ said that rPferendur11 \vnuld /Jc' the lnrnlJ1a11 llrt·~1 < l C'r11 Ke1111l·th . . has been set up by the Federal orle fo1 each s er ~1 ce area. forts; to incorpo rate import<1r1t lan­ most effec1ive way cif d~ ~l'SS1r1g K<1ur1da hns blar11rcl 1t1t· office has not ye t received its ap­ Nigerian Military government to l he third celebrat ion, which w ill d marks and streetmarks which can pt1!1l1r "L1r11nrt f11r c · ln~f'r r1nlit1c-al ()rganiza11t1r1 11f Afr1car1 Un11y fcJr pro priation from Congress, some of probe periodic clashes between the pla11 s are not '' an absolute cer· involve the entire city, will las t fb r lend meani ng to the B ic en ~ennia l unity arno11g the 11ar1r1t•r ~tat(·~ 1r1 r1 11res(•nt [ast Atr1ca11 ( orr1· ~olut1ur1 fopLl l.rr· Caribbean festival will ta ke place collapse. The purge ended with ar1d 10t h streets She ad ded t ~a t ''Sure, why not," said Charles Muven1e11t) whi le a11(1thl'! 22 rnore. than one d ay duri11g the mass ,.sackings (firing) of Nigerian tt1ey \Viii also be using a natiorial To lbert, who lives in the ndrtheast favored the tJtl1er l\V () Western· n1or1th of June an4 will highlight University staff on grounds of age , co llec tion of fine ;;irts as well ,:is tile section. ''They blo w money fo r backed r110\1 e111er1 t ~. llll' FNL1\ an(l the contributions of W est lr1ti1a11s inefficiency or corruption. I every o ther thing, why n ot for UNITA • somet tling t hat is going to f>enefit IVORY COAST ZIMBABWE (Rhodes ia ) the entire community. I ;vi ii be The Un1or1 of African Ne\\'S Companies Recruit on Campus there to take part in them, and m y leaders of Rl1 o dc'~1a'~ \.vh1tt• ·I Agencies (UAIA) t1as agreed on the ch ildren w o uld too. Jt sounds goo d r111r1c>r1!}' r<'g1n1C' ar1cl Africar1 fe asibility o f set ting up a Pan­ tr1cal, 1'v\e char1tc a! and (1v1I to m e'', he said. , 1'\J<1t1onal1~t Council (ANCJ n1e111 - Ensineering. African Ne\.,.S Agen cy (PANA)_ Cer­ JANUARY 26, 1976 A couple who lives in the nor­ b<•r s, l<'d tJv \\r lcJ~hua Nkor110, A"'I ER ICAN CYANAMID COMPANY"" DOW CORNI NG CbRPORATION "' ta in members of the Union called theast· sec t ion of the c'i ty, who rnet recentl) fc1r a 1urther 1ouncl of BS - Chemical Eng ineering, BS/M S/PhD 1\ccount1ng, Finance, Engineering, ' . for the c rea t ion of regional ne\.,. S prefers to remain unidentified, was const11u1ion<1I talk~ Tht' 1alk~ e11 - - Chemislry. Chemistry, Marke\1ng. distribution pools as a first stage MORGAN GUARA NTY TRUST COM­ not as pleased w ith the plap s put dt~d , hO\\'<'\.'er, with r10 ag1 cer11(' 11ts CA RNATION COMPANY"" Others \\'anted the Ager1cv 1rn­ Busir.ess, Liberal Art s. PANY"' forth .b y the city office. ,. Ol>servf'rS s,:iy \.Ir Nkor110 IJU1 media1ely estab1ishe(l. MIDLANTIC NATIONAL BAN K' Economics, Bu siness, Accounting. Particularly d isturbed b.y the tor\\' ard pro1)os,1ls i t>r a ~ frar1 c h1~1·. All interested ba chelor's cand id ates; NA"f l ONAl BANK O F NORTH Caribbean festivals, the w ife'S reac­ GHANA PresidenLSamora Mil llel of the S)S IE'm th.-it 1vt>ulcl le.lei ttJ ar1 early MBA 's AME RI CA ' tio n was, ''Why give it to the Peoples' !Republic of ozambique Blark 11arliar11 e11tary rna1or1ty , ·rhe FEDE RAL COMMUN'ICATION COM· BBAIMBA ~ Busiri:ess l "he Ghanaian government /1as foreigne_r s, when they don' t !give it MOZAMBI UE talk~ Ct:'r11f> rt0•cl 011 tl1r' N,111cJ r1al1'c'· /\-11SS10N PRUDENTI AL INS. CO OF AME RICA " to us," she said. ''We should come • aprroved !he cornstruc tion of a 42.5 Libera l Art~. Ma thema tics, Accounting, der11and for 1111rnt•ci1;1t t' rul(• fo r . IE .E betp re ~hey do,'1 she addeb y.'ith million Cedi ($24m) mediJal center f"he Samor,1 1'vlart1t'I governrr1t:'r1t Z1r11babv\1 f' ' ~ ~1x r111ll1cJ 11 Bl~ c k ~ \Vh ;pcrf'I A ccounti ng ,~ Architecture, Management, '{ BALTl~ORE AIR CQIL CO, INC. ChemiEal, Electrical ar.o Mech;inical M.E., E.E. stitute sa id t he neighborhood proiec t which was first conceived recen tl y. l·l e,:ivy ca~ udlt1<' ' \V f'f (' Eng1neer1ng. DOYLE, 0 1\ NE, SERBACH " cel~ brat io n s are ''too sprea~ out''. ' b y the late Presi d en t Kw,:ime reported 011 bolh s1clek U1\llTEO NATIO N S . Nkrumah was being revived to IDEAS • • tvl BA's for Account Executives. ··W hy not merge clnd have 9 ne big I\ Jl t't 1t1ur1 callir1g lct11cal Eng ineering With • as foster som e feeling of ''oneness'' p opulat ior1. REYNOLDS M ETAL COMPANY"' some computer orientation. The Pol1~ar10 Fr o 11r lntle1Jt•11 m1t1r•cl f)\ a grcJLJ Jl \\' hit h 1t1cluflqS among the city residents. The Center, near the Universit)' Electrica l, Mechanical and C1v1I SOU THEAST NAl lONAL BAN~ " • dence Mover11er1t ~a' dt•111Pd thP 11r11r11 111f'111 Black ~(tl\l'-f A..n~('[:i\ H owever, whether these p lans • of Ghana in Accra, \viii house the Eco11orn1 cs, Accounting, Business, 1 reports that 11 wa' h(llcl1ng ~ever1 rJ a v1~ 1 ":!l • Eng1neer1ng_ present medical sehool attact1ed !O , CITIES SE RVICE CO,\.I PANY Finar1ce. • m at erialize or not depend sl o n if Frenchn1en hostage 111 ti1e \VC' ~\E•rr1 T/1e 1)e!1t1or1. s1gr1f•cl by l{J(J,(J(){J the U r11vers1ty as well as the GULF OIL (0,'v\PANY SU N OIL COr.1PA y• • and w h e n . the Mayor' s l office region of 1he terr1tori l ht• ~rc Jnt 11c.•ople. \\dS organ1Z<'(l by tl1t... · Schools of Den t istry, Nursing. PROCTER & GAMBLE IRS/S RS - Ctiemtcal, Mechanical ;;ind receives its money from Congress, • said 11 v..•as holding ''01 11~ t\\'f) rrt•r1 - '\.a l1o r1<1l Ar1l1·lr111Jer1al1,1 1 laborat ory Technology and a • Elect rical Eng1neer1ng for summer accord ing to a spokesman, which chrner1 ·· The Fre r1crr11 1•11 \\CrC' \lo\· Pnier1t ll \\d~ [lr{:sen1ed t(J JANUARY 29, 1976 pos1t1on s. Finance and Accounting_ Teaching Hospital. • means that w ithout the ge1ero sit)' taken pr1sor1er \Vhf•n .i /lvlorr c1cr ar1 Gu1r1ea11 -\11 1ba<;<>a. n Equ

• • •• • ..• • • ·i'' •• •• 4 • P•a•ge•...... ~ ...... (T \EHILLTOP 23 January 76 THE HILLTOP h•s •dopted •policy of only publl1hl111 le1ten lo die . editor thit are 500 words or less. Letten should be typed, double ~ • sp.ices, •nd in by Tuesday .1.t 5 p.m. Because of the lncreulng volume itoria/s/Letters of mall, this policy is to allow ut to print •• many letten a1 possible. keep on w riling! Academic Freedom :HU? • •• • Letters I HU Must Devel0p More Awareriess The dust is now settling on ''the Rubin affair'' jand we're sure Dear Edit011: gel involved in world as well as . An ope n ~ letter to the Howard the Administration would just as soon forget atlout th~ whole ncltional 'issues. We must participa'te Community. ! in o·rder to negate any and all pre·­ thing and want us students to do so as well. But wait a m~ .nute. • As a student' of Howard Univer­ conceived notions of our lacka­ Howard's handling of the affair raises a key issue concerning , sity, a sc hool labeled as, ''The cap;. daisical approach to affairs other the academic a.tmosphere of the University, especially in con­ stone of Bl ac k education," and also than our own. trast to its handling of cases involving two of its respected highly ·regarded among all in- ' It is a disgrace when Black stitutions of higher lea:rning; I am faculty members. students at a U niversitY as world­ • appalled at our mediocre approac h Here was one Dr. Leslie Rubin, a white South African political renown as Howard cannot intelli­ ' to current issues outside of the gently discuss the situation in science professor, who in spite of his reputed ''anti-apartheid'' Howard University community. Angola, South Africa, or Chile. activities in the country of his origin, had earned quite a different I maintain that a potential force lack of knowledge of situations reputation at Howard. He was c harged by his students and .of such magnitJ de as Howard's has abroad is not critical in and of itself, a responsibility; no, an obligation, colleagues with being riegligent of his profes.sional respon- • but when it is comPounded by a to be, at the very least, among the lack of knowledge of situations at sibilities. i vanguard of all groups dedicated to home when the information is at Even though Rubin is now gone, it appears that Howard made • eradicating injustices wherever t~y your fingertips (i . e ~ Wil~ington 10, : f1 :---..:IJ. -- ' may exist. every effort to a"ccommodate his desires, judging by the arrogant -· Lj [j' .. assassinations of Kif1g, Kennedy, statements Rubin _made to the press and the statement issued W e must not only take interest in 'Malcolm, Food Stamps and welfare :::_ -- . -- --- . last week by Dr. Cheek. -·- --- ' the discre pa ncies that e1 ist in the rip-offs, covert operations by White - --· --.. -· lrloward comrnunity, for of greater On the other hand, ''the Welsing episode'' was condu cted ---. ------~ Hous ~ against A'mef ican people, conce rn are the discrep n~es that · etc.), then ii does, in• fact, become with st udents away for the sum·mer and With no public exist in the local, nationaljanO inter­ .tantamount to a s1ate' of self- tatements being issued. national communities. imposed, self-determi·ned stupidity. Dr. Francis Welsing, former professor in the School of W e must, in order to rt.:-es tablish our role a s ~ great Black ~ n s titution ; Medicine and nationally respected scholar, was deniec;I tenured David G. Jefferson promotion ostensibly because, she did not meet one of her ...... -- ' boards. It is no secret though, that her ''Cress Theory Of Color ... ·and Mo' Letters 1 Con.frontation and Racism (White Supremacy)'' made some Howard administrators uncomfortable. • from the Brothers Within Dr. Welsing, very popular with Howard students, certainly was ' one o_f the University's most nOted faculty members and a Dear Editor: I can p ick up a piece oi paper, pen valuable scholarly asset. Was every effort made tq reaCh an I d on't get very many letters or pencil to writ~ a letter with, and ''amicable agreement'' with her, as was done with · Rubin? because I only have a mother and get a stamp to mail that letter with. Sincerely, A l'li_d now, a resignation has been tendered by com­ aunt to w'ri te. Their letters are so few in coming that when I get one, /ohn l . Wright munications professor Tony Brown, another of Howard' s most • it raises m.y spirit and mo1a1e some- • P.O . Box 787 noted facu /ty members. . what highly. ' , Southern Ohio Correctional Brown, former Communications Dean and still producer of ·Letters. • • I will write to a female as long as ·Facility the ''Black Journal'' t.v. program, left as of this semester because Lu casville·, Ohio 45648 reportedly he is considered a ''political liability'' and ~as not to Im proper Tribute to Dr. King . be rehired in the fall. ' . Again, we ask, if a professor is doing his job, why would an at­ answer all letters ' and appre- Dear Ed itor: . firmly feel that jt 1is pathetic for mosphere exist in which he or she feels unable Ito function? In As the Hilltop newsreporter· who the reportedly largest, most I am preSently incarcerated in ciate whatever assistant you can fact, word has reached us that another of Howari d ' s most noted covered the many events com-G prest igous Blac k academic in­ the ''Maryland House o ~ Correct­ give. professors is to resig_n after this semester for similar ''bad menorating the late Dr. Martin stitution in the world lo insult and ion," for my political ideas and val - Thank you for your undersJ.and­ , ues. I am w ithout any out ~ ide relat­ ing ear, and service to the need of atmospll'ere'' reasons. • Luther King Jr.'s birthday, I was ignore in such a way the spirit of deeply hurt at an event which did the man who sought equality for ives, o r true comr~de-ship , the people! ' Certainly it w9uld seem ironic to suggest that Howard U niver­ not take p lace on Howard's main his Black brothers and sisters. therefore, I am requesting your aid Truly. Yours, In Our Struggle • 1 • .sity, which. for years has produced outstanding scholars in all campus . It is even more sickening to kn ow • in a desperate attempt of establish- ·· Nelson Simms No. 121-404 fields, wants to stifle ''controversial'' and progressive thought, ing a communication li e to the ~ P . O . Box 534 When I walked on campus last that it seems eas y for the ''decision­ but an alarming pattern appears to be developing. makers'' at Howard to pay cash to a outside w orld. Jes sup, Md. 20794 1 Thu rsday, I saw the American flag Because we are proud of our · school and ~ now that the at fu ll mast. white professor who rep o~ tedt y neglected his dutieS as an instruc­ Welsings, the B·rowns and the other noted faculty members help I was shocked. Was not Dr. King tor, but cannot pay proper tribu te to attract students, we wish to bring attention to this problem in worthy of such a iribute? Was he Dear.. Si r: , ! tude to those who ha\'e found time to a Black doctorate wh o and cared enough to write me, and the hope that something can be done about it. This is a c all for not the affec tionately named knowingly took care of his duties as am writing to say thank you for ''Prince of Peace'' who sang, mar­ printing m·y-letter requesting corres­ those who didn't write, ·please do. more academic freedom at Howard. a leader among men. ched and went to jail with hun· pondence. in you r D ~cembe_r 5th I'd love to hear from anyone,, no And to those who say that t~ e matter what age. Again, I say thanks dreds of people to demand justice flag might have been towered at edition of 4he Hilltop, and .for sen­ for all American s? 1 ding me a copy of that same paper. to all of y,9u. Take ca re. Love, pea c~ half-mast had Dr. King's .birthday ' and happiness to all of you. Was he not the w'orld renowned been a national holiday . must we I have read and real! enjoyed Sincerely, ... Unanswered Issues Nobel Peace Prize laureate who w ait for the white man to ''make it the paper ve ry much. I p!sed it on Wallace Brown met with president ~ . kings and legitimate'' for us to properly honor 1 to other brothers here ho al so 138-109 stat esmen? And did 'not die for a and respect ou r own Black martyrs? • he think the Hilltop is d nomite. I , P.O . Bo~ 78 7 dream he so fervently 'believed iii. Think ab out this. 1 We view with great conc~rn the non-action taken by various want to ei:press my deepest grat i- Lu casvi lle, OH 45648 not just for himself, but .for components of Howard's Administration over vital issues raised ·,~// Americans? .. lmani (Terry M . Cros by) ' • b y The Hilltop during last semester. As a consc ientious student . • paper should do, we presented the concerns and demands of Dear Ed ita{: prison without family, friends, and Angol."a: Get Out! My name is Glen Willia ms, I am I the students. However, we have found that certain departments well wishers, I am in dire need of 2 an inmate incarcerated in the so meone to c orre.spond w i th. of the University have paid little or no attention to some of p African s see c 1ear1 y TH E Southern O hio Correctional facility, Thank you in advance, I remain. those demands. Dear Editor: " Plea se permit me a space in yoft.r MAXIMIZING AND MINIMIZING lucasvil1e, O hio. Students have asked to restore the old mural on Cramton • I find myself in an extremely un­ Si,icere'' ly y.ours, Widely read Hilltop·, to expre~s parts you played towards the Auditorium, but the Art Department has given 'ittle weight to my op inion in the case of Angq.la deaths of l umumba and Nkruma, pleasant position. Co1fined in Glen Williams ~ the student's demand. trouble politics. ;\ the part you played dur i ng We raised the issue .of the dangerous crossing between ANG OLA: Another battlefront for A·w olowo's campai~n in Nigeria, • the frustrated ~e s r and the and in the N ige ria/ Biafra war, the • Bethune Hall and 4th St., but so far nothing has been done regar­ Dear Editor, .f presenl state is one of unusual cir­ d isillusioned fasr. '~ part you are playing in Ethiopia, in cumstan ces, however, it 1s a ding the situation, which has resulted in several accidents in- So uth Africa, in the Congo, the part Jn as much as the W es t represer,i­ Please ac'cept this composition in position I ·hope not _to hold much volving Howard Students. . yo u are playing with-our w ild- life in ted by the USA is warning f~e · .the fa i th in which it is intended. My ,j longer. . . ·, East Africa, with Nige ria's oil, with We have asked that the paging system be repaired in the Soviets for th ei~ military . in ~­ intentions are those of establishing ' I am 25, 5 feet, 10 inches in 1 our antiqit1es, the part you are Meridian Hill dormitory so st'udents will at least have some con­ volvement in Angola, the peopJe of honest, real istic, constru ctive com­ height and weigh 150 pounds. I playing with ha~mle ss, but brave , veniences which ·they paid for. It seems as though the Housing Africa •are silently, but dangerously, mun ications 1n hope of future have been a resident of the Wash­ cou rageou s students, the part you warning the West and the Ea st to co rrespond ence with fema l e ington Metropolitan area my entire Office- has dooe little , to correct the situation. are playing w ith the whole of stay clear of the ''virgi n'' co ntin .~nt students at your university. life until my incarceration. We have asked that more space be provided to hold the books of Africa . · Afri ca. All these are green in our All letters will be an swered. Any minds one by one and we since rely we need as well as the volume of students buying the books. We Africans shall not forever sitl-and Please perm ft me to explai n. I am consideration given w ill be appr~­ pray that our enemies live longer to a Black man incarcerated here at are pleased that at least some progress has been ma.de, but it is see themselves divided, bombarded ciated immenselv. .\ see our future betterment. Petersburg 'Reformatory in Virginia, far from complete. and shelled, confused and Jam es Hall The future of mankind is in ours where 1 have been for three years. I P.O. Box 1000 We have asked that tuition be kept at the level it is now, but deceived, robbed and fooled by and in you rs as well, and to save am deeply suffering. I realize my Petersburg, VA. 23803 we have not received an adequate answer from either President both the West and the East in a mankind or destory it, is a task tha t - J calculated attempt to divide and C heek or the Board of Trustees. • must be done. Angola w ill over­ rule the whole of Africa . The Hilltop has raised a number of other issues and will con­ • come, so dear East & West save Dear Ed itor: derstanding of others as well as my- AFRICA SHALL REMAl l')I FOR yo ur instruments of dest ru ction for My name is Charles Rivers, I am a self. , tinue to do so. We hope that by doing so, conscientious EVER AND EVER A DREAM LAND you might need them badly to 26 year old' Black inmate presently ~ I sincerely hope that you will ac­ stud'ents, faculty and administrators will work to move quickly to TO BOTH THE WEST AND TH E, defend your big selves when the incarcerated al the lucasville Car· cept this letter with your purest un­ reso1ve the problems of our great school. EAST . Your stategies are no mo~e n,eed ari ses. rectional Institution, in Lucasv ille, derstanding and deep considerat­ • novelty to every D ick and Harry in Ohio. I am writing you this letter as ion, and I'd like to thank you in ad­ Africa. Comrad Emeka an agent ot appeal for correspon­ . -vance for any and alt ·consideration dence and friendship. concerning this matter. Remember loneliness in a place lik~ this is sir, t am somebody, · though Black Thanks to Cheek almost unbearable. It is very much and incarcerated, I am somebody, like a quiet drama, which keeps let freedom ring! building and building seemingly I am seeking correspondence Dear Dr. a.nd Mrs. Cheek, University Library Assoc iation and without end. with realistic, uninhibited and con­ It is most fitting that on Ja nuary th'e U ndergraduate Stu dent Assa· r The experience of such a feeling cerned people. Regardless o f age, • ci ation. As a result of the cooperat­ .-~­ 15, 1976, what would ha Ve been has to be felt, to be clearly under­ color, religion, or ethical back­ -"'~ Aao Co., · the 47th birthday of the Reverend ion_ of these groups we were atl ,..stood. I have no w ish to c~ntinue 1 ground. My astrological sign is Scor­ Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., that we able to provide ba'sket s for the to be swallowed up by what ap­ pio, my interests are: Chess, music, EDITOR - - ••...... •...... •. ... .•. .. .. , ...... Hodari Ali in the D.C . Survival Project extend over 200 fam ilies. pears to be a vacuum of emptiness. all sports, martial arts, poetry, ·read­ MANAGING EDITOR ...... ••...... _";. ... .• .. . William Scott to you our sincere gratitude"' on be­ We are very grateful for these Nor do I w ish to remain jUst a faint ing and psychology. Please send ADVERTISING MANAGER ....•...... •. ." ... . . Oe:-netrious Powers half of the many needy families that supportive actions and hope tha t echo of hidden soul, in a desperate photographs, as w'ell as a few PRODUCTION EDITOR .....•.•••• • •• •.. ..• (Shiba) Vikki Freeman were touched by yo ur kinP ness. the Christma s spirit of concern and effort to emerge from the internal stamps with each letter, I shall an­ The positive lead ership demon­ . NEWS EDITOR ...... •••...... Kadallah Khafre participation in our ac1 1v1t1es tow · of lost hopes. I have written to you swer all letters. strated by you a ~ the President of ards Black Survival wifl continue this letter- in an attempt 'to Sincerely, FEATURE EDITOR ...... •• ;, •••...... Pat Kelly Howard Univer.sitf, and by yoUr 0 ' SPORTS EDITOR ....••• .. .•. ..••••.. ••. . .. , ••.. .. . , , Roy Betts and increase. reaquaint rtlyself with the outside Charles E. Rivers w ife in participatihg in our Food ''With this fa ith we w ill be able to Pt10TOGRAPHY EDITOR ...... ••• .•••.•...... Calvin Reid w orld, and ~ o become associated in" P.O . Bcix 787-142-283 and Clothing Drive increased the hew out of the mountain of despa ir a more meilningful strength 1n un- Lucasville, Ohio 45648 COPY EDITOR .. •• •.•...... _ ..•..•••...... •. .. . .• Mike Alexander number of families that received a Stone of hope. With this faith w e •· • CONTRIBUTING EDITOR ...... Charles Barber Christmas - Kwanzaa basket s of will be able to tran sform the jang· • • ACCOUNTANT •• ...... ' ...•...... ••. O'Anna Hosey fo od, clothing, and toys.'· ling discords of our nat ion into the Peace Editor: des ire to relate with some of the The additional sLccessful efforts THE HI LLTOP is the weekly student newspaper of Howard University. beautiful sy mphony of brother­ I am writing this letter hoping brothers and sisters ~t Howard or It is distributed free each Friday morning at over 20 convenient locations of Mrs. Cheek, whp organized and hood_" your newspaper will consider plac­ anyone having time to correspond mobilized the pa rticipation of all 1 throughout the campus. Mail subscl-iptions are $3 for thf spring ~emester. 1 Rev : D r. Martin Luther King, Jr. ing in it your weekly paper. I am an with me. the Vice- Presidents of Howard Uni­ '' I Have a Dream'' speech inmate at the Monlgomery County I am a very lonely brother. I am Deadline for copy, Hilltop happenings. advertising and letters to the versity and o thers is to be espe­ editor is Tuesday, 5:00'p.m. 8/28/il'J March on Washington D.C. Detention Center in Rockville Md. 18 years old and a realist of life. All cially commended. The warm, hu­ consideration concerning this letter O~r address is 2215 4th St., N.W. Our mailing address is Howard mane conce rn she displayed led to Reading your paper every week will be very much appreciated. University, Washington, O.C. 20059. Phone number (202) ~36-6868. the pfoVisio, ri of Christmas - Kwan- • has inspired me to write you Thank you for your time. · The opinions expresSed in the editorials are those of THE HILLTOP, zaa ba skets for fifteen large fam ilies. beautiful people and see if I could Brother in .the Struggle and may not necessarily represent those of t he adnlinistration or all In addilion, it mobilized mean­ Respectfully yours, . start Communication with my Raymond Yougen Williamson segments of the Howard community at-large. ingful efforts from other divisions at Executive Director, people i;:i n the outside world. I feel Rockville, Md. 20854 Howard, especial £y the H oward D .D. Survival Project r isolated at this point, this is-why I M.C.D.C. CB II • • ' ' • • , • • I 23 January 76 THE Hl+ LTOP • Page S I \-.

~ • ' " • ' • Cheek Updates Responses to Demands • .Bring It Down Front ability to finance th e projects. It is On November 7. 1975, I respon­ expected tha·t this will • i~formation f1sc·al Year 1977 of serving the public are taxing. ;s ituation. I cannot understand why 'd ed to the concerr1 s expressed by a be available for relea se early in the What I am concerned with here ~ ecurity would hire monitors for cornr11i ttee of stl!ldents which.were ' Sprir1g semester. is the security of.the Howard Con1- ' presented to me tw o .days earlier_ International Students ~ he parking l.ols and not have The Vice President for Student munity. You see, sir, the rhetoric.II monitors for !he dorms. Is the M)' respor1se Outlined the status of University Bookstore Affairs has met with the Studen1 question of security is just as much protection of a car more. important matters rel at ive to those concerns, Action ha s already been taken to Advisory Council to the Office of i' a question today as 11 was when I than the protection of human life? and in(ltcated actions whic h the provide increased book service International Student Services to came to H oward .as a freshman two Is making sure a pers,on is in the University planmed to take regard­ sales operation during the cu rrent discuss international student con­ years ago. No\v, I ask, sir, should it right parking lot more important ing thern. 9 sem ester. In addition to sales at cerns. During these meetings, be? than making sure a person is in the The purpose of this letter is to ad­ the main bookstore various texts • various mechanism fo r funding in- _ I know you must won-der what is right dorm? .., • vise you of the c urrent sta tus of will 'be available in 1he Old Freed · ternational student organizations it that makes individuals criticize It seerps to me that hiring parking each of the concerns ou tl ined at man's Hos pital complex and on the and activities were explored. Funds public servants so much? For that lot monitors instead of dorm that time Dunbarton Campus. We are attem:. for support of international student questidn I answer, what is ii that monitors is a waste of human piing to locate a si te to provide.im­ programs have been made · makes public servants so sensitive resource, · If I' m wrong, please Tuition proved fa ci lities on a permanent available. The Advisory Council ha s ~ to c riticism when their job is self­ correct me. Perhaps what you need A s indicated 1n rny earlier letter, ba sis. agreed to assist in a study regarding :,;; defining-- public, servant? ' cf ec 1sion s co ncerning tuition rates is to reassess your man power. I'm the feasibility of establishing an In- '{• A lot of times, it's easy to say, sure that if you needed mare man ' are inacle by the Board of Trustees. Library Facilities and ternational Student H ouse. . ' 1 ·wow!'' l',m glad it wasn't me," power, the president would give . lr1 view of student concern s, this Services William Scott - ---- j· when you hear, that someone's you the appropriations to hire more '> Ubject ha s been proposed as . a. The 24-hour library se rvice of the r oo m on the campu15 was B,clard of rrustees agenda item. • U niversity is to be located in the ' . . . men. Intercollegiate Athletics burglarized or that they. were rob­ Perhaps w.hat needed, sir, is for library of the School of Sociiil is An agreement has been reached bed. Sometimes it becomes difficult you to do some introspection, Deferred Payment Plan Work. I! began on January 12, 1976. Open Letter among all interested parties (in­ to stand up and'. say, ''No! 'This has Maybe it has escaped you, but you I here are r10 plans to discontinue With reference to the renovation of • cluding student representatives and got to stop!'' have students to protect as well as tl1i s prograrn for th is ~c hool year or Founders Library,. dontractors are • staff), regarding the 1Jriorities for ·~ ' Sir, time and patience have man­ ro r thf' 1976-77. school year. to. Di rector faculty and administrators. I was use of the John .Burr Physical dated that I make that essential fhr o ugh c onferences and under the irilpression that your Education Building. During the stand and say that I am highly upset cor res poncl er1 c e the existing responsibility was around the clock second semester the Committee on that after it is commonly known Df'ferred l'ayrnent Pla n is being of Secu.rity and not until the president leaves. ~ Intercollegiate Athl.etics will review that during thJ Christmas "recess ·Don' t get me wrong, Mr. Nor­ publiciLed to acbieve maximum • the entire varsity athletic program Forgive this brief intrusion into most of the burgularies occur, a wood, I have a great deal of respect ~t udf • r11 awareness. with the objective of recommen,­ your dai ly sc hedule. I know that burgulary such as the one in for you, however respect becomes ding correction of any imbalances grappling with a job as yours is not Bethune couldt be allowed to re- The Matier of Dr. a losing gladitor if willful negl~ of "'' hich are found to exist. an easy task. But then,. si r, most jobs occur Leslie Rubin Iresponsibility is allowed to enter r t1e mat ler cor1cerning Dr. Rubin which require that laborious deed 11 an extremely puzzling into the arena. Angola's Independence " ha <. bPc11 settled. By separate letter, , , I Mr. Charles Cobb, a member of • J dclressed to members of the the WHUR staff, was sent to cover Un 1 vc r ~ 1t y Community, the set­ Angolan Independence activities. Li~e Nixon, Leslie Ru?in Has tlt'1 !l t' nt i'> d1 <;c ~ssed in detail. As a result of the political si tuati on, Mr. Cobb had to remain a fe\.(r days Tenure SyS"lem in Lisbon -before he wa s allowed to ' 1\ll tenure systems cJ f the U niver­ Taken Our Mpney -an Run! enter Angola. Mr. Cobb's reports -, 1t y r11u st be aJJ J) roved by tl1e Board , from both Lisbon and Angola were • of 1 ru stees. i ·o insure that any By Wanda Hendricks• • Dear1 Owens replied that' he carried on WHUR. We say to the faculty of the r i '( (Jn1r11 1-·ndat1011 s w "hich are made !)resident Cheek could 110(; y'i!t he could inform During discuss ion \; with var_ iou_~ College of Liberal Arts that you· reilec t 1he Lonaerns of all elements Rubir1 is gone bL1t ah least we currently working o n the ground elected student leaders and Hilltop' H.odari Ali, the Editor of the ! were '' prof~sslonally o'imoed!'' We (~ t th1• U r1iversity, it has been forg et Nixon 1s no longer president and first floors. The University will staff members, I have attempted to Hilltop, that the hearing of the find such unethical, unprincipled agr eect tflat a rneeti ng of students, It ' seems strange to us that continue to expedite action o n the re-emphasize the fa ct that th e Ad-. eit~1er . charges against Mr. Rubin had been and unprofessional action by Dean fal 1ult~'. adm1n1 strators, and the both received the ve ry same treat· remaining renovation and con- ministration shares the dedicatior1 postponed. Why couldn't Dean Ower:rs inexcusable. We implore flrp.,1 clc11 1 \VIII be held later this men\, a slaf) on the \vrist and a lot struc1i on. of the students to the betterment of.: Owens inform the Political Science you to seek his removal immedi- tPr to" disc u ss tenure. It is ex­ of our money. I ask you; Will Howard University. From those P Society arid the Political Science ately! , ' pecl ed tha1 fro rn this meeting will students, faculty and the com­ 1 Federal Funding discussions, it is cl ea r that we ar e ~ Graduate St ud.ent Association? Returning to Howard after the ,-orne sorne 1d,cas which can be rl1u ni t y ever know the truth The University is con tinui ng to all aware of problems faced by thet Fo rmer professor Rubin 16dged holidays we learned from media clf'vt•loJ)ed 1r1 to ap1)ropr1 at e recom- surrounding these issues7 press vigorously for addi tional University. We continue to solici t three ct1arges again' st the Political persens that a settlement had been 1111-•11 d Jt1rJrl'> to the Board of ,• ConsiI!'(''> lr1 the interi m, student rnedia has portrayed Ho\vard's ad ­ mitted a st r ong appeal w ith members o f the University Com­ spec ial committee set up to handle Rubin. Just think how you would v1 1 · w~ a1t· bing obtained th rough ministration and students as his allegations? Stu dents have to feel if you returned home afler a reference to ant icipated reducti ons munity to overcome ~ho s e • ,t11rl l·r1 t JJrf'se r1tat1 (1ns such as that villians; clo uding the issue w ith lies, fo!low and use stand ing depart­ busi ness trip and a stranger comes .n1a d e /)y M r Luther Brown, in the level of federal support in problems. 1. e. Ho.. var'd students are racists, we mental and colJege mac hine.ry but to,. your house and tells you that l'rt> S1(i e r1t 111 th e Liberal Arts " \Yonder. But \ve hope that this ar­ not ·Mr. Rubir1. Why? )'our youngest child · is and has been Stucl•··n! CcJun c 1I , to 1he Council on Feb. 6-8 • ticle \vll_I help clear the air. The College o'\ Liberal Arts held a in the hospital since you left . .\( ad t> r111r Affairs at its December When the Political Sc ience faculty meeting in which there was Meanwhile, when you question'· 1neet1ng Society and the Graduate As so­ no quorum a,nd many rart time the rest of your family, they say ''No Angola Confab Set for HU ~ ciat ion c>f PcJ litica! Scie nce i-ea lized faculty membe'rs who are eligible to comment." How uncaring! they could no longer to lerate the l vote w ere no't allowed · fo do so. ,. Yes, Rubin is gone but he has • Cla ss Drop Date Dear Brothers and Si sters : Cuban ~id . In a short time the civil .~ fJrofessiona l neglect exhibited by When challenged. o.n the question again taken o ur mon·ey and ran! C have been discussed with Black ac ti;vists and in- liberation movements became an as ked various rnen1 bers of the Ad­ istrators as we do, we're sure that \v 11t1 the l) ean of the various rellectuals around the country, a all-out war of international propor- mirlistrat1on \vhat w e as students ~~I paying Rubin's salary for the next ~C fl O( JI S and t•ges. The Deans ~, ;~~~ ao National Meeting on U .S. In- tions. · ·ctJuld d o to rem q ve suc l1 a two years is how they will justify a .-11 1' 1r11ll1cl111g t is item on the volvement 1n Angola has been Considering the information professo r. tuition increase for next year. Funny agt•l1cl<1 f(J f facu y cl is cussion. called. published over the past year, the Their ans\ver was ''The removal how a rat waved his tail at what The meeting is proposed for facts contend that the U ,S. had of a professor rnust entail violations was supposedly a great lion and the Cramto n Audi orium Mural H oward University during t he decided ·that there ~a s to be no " outlined i r1 the fa culty har1d book." lion became meeker than a mouse! \Vlit•n !be nurals were first 1n­ weekend of February 6-8, 1976. Un- Government of National Unity, no ~ We asked Dean 0\vens if he had a Unders\a nding that there are '>lJll ed 111 1972, 1f1e fes ponsibiliiy <> fortunately, all participants will coalition Government. in fact, no , r opy of the fa culty han dbook that positive and negatives 1n ~ r1r l .iu1 l1or1ty for 1t1 e selection arid have to provide for their own tran- Governrfient at all which it did not \Ve co uld borrow . His answer wa s everything, we want to point out JJ)JJroval for dis1)lay \vere given to ~ sportation and lodging/food and ex- control. The facts further suggest ''No." We asked where could we the positive aspects of this struggle, -t !l(' C l1a1rr11ar1 c)f !he Department of penses. that the U.S. has attempted to exer- ~ get a copy of the handbook; he an­ Students should now realize that •\ r1 and 1l1e [)ean cJf the College of For further info rmation contact: cise sUch control in Angola, first , S\verecl ''Faculty handbooks are (1) if you carefully and concisely . F1 r1t.• Ar1 <; BrJth 1he Dean and the Organizing Committee, National 1hrough FNLA , then through given to fulltirr1e and some parttime research your homework you_ can [)('J)artrnf:'111 Chairrnan hav~ been Meeting on U .S. Involvement in UNITA. • faculty members." Ndw we're sup­ CHANGE things (2) that as a con-­ • <1J J j >r a1 ~C' d ()f the StLJden t's concern Angola, 4708 15th St., N .W., Clearly the U.S. and South Africa posed 10 follow the guidelines of a su mer you have the right to ques­ 111 1h1 " art·a I l1ey are curren tly at ­ Washington, D .C. 20011. (202) B29- are the principal enemies of the book that we dor1· 1· even ~ave ac ­ tion. th""e quality of the good or ser­ lt' 1i11 it1r1g ro clevelop a feasible 6484. The following is Our Angolan people. D ~s pite c_on­ cess to! vice that you're paying for. '1( Jlut 1cJ11 l!J 1l1t' problems o ( the statement on the Alngolan situation. tinuous efforts by Afro-American W e proceeded to doc un1 ent our Do not fall for the invalid cor1di11 c1r1 tlf the ci ld mural and of and others to convince the U .S. charges. argument that your tuiti'on does,n't 1J1 1-• fu11 c!s rec1ui'fej)erat1 c>n. the U.S., fearful of an MPLA­ U .S. the opportunity to carry oul the D epartment. of PoJi tical Science posedly called to reaffirm a Rubin constantly rtferred to ''a dominated coalition government , this agrcssion on the people of our charges carefully d ocumented. resolution that Samuel Nabrit, for­ dirty little .;orner'' within the • undertook to impoli.e its will on the Angola. Therefore, we call for th.e The fa culty \Va s convi nced that rner Presiden1· .of Howard, , had university that needs to be cleaned Student Housing · total withdrawal of U .S: forces, their colleague had willfully neRlec­ iss ued during st udent pr?tests in out. We concur with Mr. Rubin, The Dean of Res idence Life ha s Angolan People. lt lvastly ini;- reased men, arms, and material and an end • ted his professional duties and '67. The resolution deplored the However, this dirty little corner is rl 1et with the Residence Halls Ad­ its military aid lo FN LA , thus . helping to destroy any possibility of to any and all assistance, overtly or , voted 15 to 2 that he be dismissed . use of violen ce and reaffirmed the not a group Qf students but sup· Vl ~ (:ii"y C<)ur1c.il, a group of students even a tenuous Unjity Government. covertly, it has committed to thE t Dean Owens, "upon request, righl of any p,erso11 regardless of posedly respectable faculty mem­ re11re sP11t1ng each of the eleven 1 The U .S. hired South Africans, ' visited our department and we han ­ race, religion, and ethnic back­ bers and administrators. We are f'lo using ur1its, I C> obtain· input pursuit of this intervention into thtl affairs of the Angolan people. ded him the record of the faculty ground to teach at Howard. sure you are aware that this group r~gar

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' Stories Come Alive Through Paintings Late . Artist • . I . I ' • By Rick Pow efi . c1dents, yet f1o ldihg back on inf<)r · H IllTOP Staff Wr iter rr1a~ion . It makes us use our brain~. ' rna~es us think, and help ~ us . to ' One of the r11ost inn vat1ve and enlivt>r1 our i1naginations, which­ fresh exhibits to visit 'd11e' oi the ha\•e been bleached and drai ned by ' established district museun1s iS Tee Vee. wine and pills. Y . ·,,Bob Thompsor1 1937-1966," cu~ ­ Taking motifs from Greek rently showing at the N.ttional Col­ legends, Thompson strips them of 1 lection of Fine Arts (NCFA). Bob their fig leaves, thPir icy white mar­ ,,,.. Thompson \Vas a Bla ck artist \Vl1ose ble statues, and eve·n their faces . He brief, but very fruitful ·fareer was replaces them \vith dayglow colors • - .halted \Vhen he died of lung com­ and funky flying birds and angels I ' J)lications ir1 1966. with . hats cocked on the sides of Only 29 when he di d, Thomp­ their heads and ''sou!'' from the I ~on was a ve ry prod~ctive artist h(J' s. during his brief lifetime. ~his can be Hr s art is like a Robbe-Grillet • readily seen from .the la~ge body of n<)vel where the an swer to the rid­ ... •vorks colle.c ted by NCFA, which dle lie~ within !he reader's head. '• cover the years 1961 t 1966. Titles l ike ''Tribu te to an American ' Hts •vork is quite unlike the • l11dian," ''Descent from the Cross," • """' \ 't • majOrity of the art whic one usu~l ­ ~ ar1d "'TJ1e Beauty Parlor'' tell u s that ty links with thtt late fifti s/early six· • • fi e is a.~vare of the root, the pit. the ties; art such a,s lacks n P<>llock !s core Of our lives, our black and • Abstract ex1)ressionism , Warhol's browr\l and red lives. ' Pop images, ar1d Bridget Riley's 0 1l­ t1cal eye ganie's. looking' at Thompson's art gives It 1s also quite diff rer11 fron1 you the feeling that is \vhat Afro-Arnerican 'artists like 1)uffir1g away in some smokey Ne\v ' Norman Le\vis, CharJes V\1 hite and York studio on· ''My Funny Valen­ • 1 Hale Woodruff were ding. To be c111e ' ' / that Jo hr1 Coltrane and • perfectly honest, there .is a sort of M cCoy fyner are bent like musit:al ' obscurity and labyrir1tp-tike con­ equations, revi'talizing ''My Favor~te fusion about Bob Ttompson';; ·rhings." One Sees and one feels the visual motivations in erieral. ~ut • J)rcsence of early OO's in Bob The late artistic genuis, Bo. Thompson (1937-1966), left a unique leg.icy . ' th is does not stop one rom feeling Tho111pson's art. through h 1s works. • · • . • the art's pull, or frnrn !i~king the ,fruity colors off of the ~ canvas .. , Portraits of Nina Simone, LeRoi Red Vaginas, Jesus, Adam and Eve, is a for' real genius and creator. The One of several i11r1ovative portraits of Bob Tl1om1)son's 1Jrcsc11t\ylon display His art is an allegor1c~I art, tell1n~ Jones arid Family. The Devil, Blue Snakes, an.d the People in the exhi.bit continues through February at NCFA. the viewer. stories. ~elaying ~n.; r\r1gels, long Distance Runners, , Streets - Bob ·Thompson was and 22 . " Azar L wrence Delivers·, . Th,,.. .ru' Mellow ' Sax Living for the Weekend ... ' I • gor1e a difterent plac;:e" and now ''smoker''. After experiencing two cCoy Tyner's recent albums, one By Billy Hall 1 Azar is trying to form a group of his sets on Friday, I had to go g ack alb.um with -Elvir1 Jones, entitled Norman Connors .lnd Jean Ca rn ~ '' Saturi;jay Night Special'' at Ed fhere are many ~ en()r dnd own so that he can sa}' some other Sunday. And I use the word ''ex­ ''New Agenda'', and a soon to be Murphy's appearing nO\v till Sunday. Sho~vs at ltl µn1 and 12 pin: triday soprano saxor1t1or1e tjlayers, ~ µ! things. periencing'', because listening to relea sed album cut at Carnegie Hall nor1e to rny l

( will be playing 23 & 24 at George • No Layaways-·Sale Ends Feb. 1-5% Additional on Charge Card Washington Univ. Rathskellar, Marvin Cen· A COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES • cop) ;' ight 1976 b.y Pat Kelly fer. 20th & G St., N.W. Washington, D.C. HEW STORE HOURS: 12 NOON TO 9 P.M. DAILY • In Kinshasa, • bird\ chirp 0 1 the \Vir1dow ELMO COLES Shop Sample Shop and Saue /11 Ki11shasa, 202-387·6783 ... fhey say bew re, MCNEAL PERK JACOBS be aware, 202-397-4625 202 -403-4856 . • CASH TRANSACTIONS ONLY

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• • • 23 January 76 THE; HILLTOP ! !'a~ 7

• • • • t Jon Lucien and Natalie Cole . .. I Histdry_ , I The Afrikan Slave T ade Two Unique Voi-ces Sing of Love Messages ' ' ' ..' . B Pi.I. Kelly bandaged and raped, their sto­ By Kwame Brathwaite also a prolific composer and writes macf.1s ripped open j and unborn International Phofoleaturesi a great deal of his material, ranging ~ for a fe:ea~u~:~~~!~~et ~ .s fo~~s chif.1Lren were crushed to death. Af­ from love songs, to sor;igs of life and on an historical ~xperienc, rhe ter this and the permanent separat­ Jon Lucien is usually described living and themes close to nature. ·. effects of thf Great At:antic Slave ion, the cruelities inflicted on the (by the ladies) as ''the sexy young RCA released ''Rashida'' in 1973, Trade on the African. Torn mostly people \lriere only the begir1ning. If a singer with tfie sou lful non-descript which featured Jon's own com­ from the shores a·f West and Cen­ mother was ca ught speak ing verna­ style''_ Jon, from Tortola, in the positions with the tille track being • tral Africa, the most outrageous and cular with her child, the tongue of Caribbean, was reared in St . lhe most favorite of the songs. His hideous abduction in history has_at either herself or her child was alJ­ Thomas, the Virgin Islands. He third album, ''Mind's Eye'' again no time beer;il without violent pro­ solutely cut out. BeLJeve it or not migrated to Harlem in his early featured original compositions by test. these are the true facts of just a few • Ion, and again was an exceptional • years. • Let it be k.rown to all that ·at _no of the horrors of slavery. Facts of a ff you have bee11 fortupalf album. time in history has the African cap­ brutal .experience. . enough to attend one of his ~Q n ­ Although Jon had diSplayed his f/llfve ceased his desire to be reuni- • As . i\.lalc.oJm, so beautifully certs, you probably noticed.Thow talents well, recognition was slow ted with th ~ home continent and described in a book f'intitled, MAL- women dominate his audiences, in coming, as the albums were not ' • consistently .fi as struggled for total· COM X ON AFRO AMERICAN coming out even if they 1have to pay very well promoted. LL1.c ien was, and complete freedom in Anlerica. HISTORY, ''At the end of slavery their own way and come alone. however, gaining ma'ny, many' fans, As we have / learned, :\frica was/is you didn't have 25 million Africans That is not to say the men don't especially in the east where most of the home ard birthplace of man­ in Jhe Weste.rn Hem sphere. Whal ·f9 llow his work. ' his exposure was. kind. And it as the descendt-nts 01 happened to those 75 million? Quite the contrary, ,he ha s cap­ Jon soon found another label a great n1an nobel and able-bod-­ Their bodies are at qhe bottom of tured their imaginatior;i, also. He's deal, with the number one com­ ' ' ~ ied, health.Y varriors who made lhJ' the ocean, or their blood and their the kind of artist that once you see pany in album sales, CBS ., He added -.._ ... ""':" 1 .;,...... ~ ,,, Slates what she is today. bones have fertilized 1he soil of this him perform, you are hooked a'nd a clavinet to the instruments that .-.."-· ,, We built he roads, the bridges, country." -"+ are a loyal fan . he played (bass guitar :tn~ some ' - ...._~'."Oi... •' '"~,,,.,· ' '. ~ .,.. , \ the cities, made cotton king. Remember the multitude of ·Congo drums), and prepa~ed his ,,.~ , I Lucien had three, excellerrl ' •.,,• .\ those who have been lynched, bur­ ' Paradoxicallf, Charles Drew inven­ albums out on RCA prior to signing first and current Columbia release ' \ ·~ I ted blood plasma, yet died on the ned, cas trated for looking at white with CBS . His first, in 1970, was ''I ''Song For My Lady," and ils doing , ,,,~~ • steps of a soLthern hospital for lack women, the rapes of ou r mommas very '-:'ell. - -·- ,,,.· ' Am Now'', and the song that " N:italie Cole has much more tnan just a great name. , of it. Americ~ was built by us, toiled on plantations by their ''white brought him his first recognition by He recorded ''-Dindi'' again, Her­ - . - f by us~ and if all the blacks were to masters'', the endles s flow of radio stations was ''Dindi''. He is bie and Jean Hancock-'s ''Maiden Voyage'', and Bernard lghner's while playfng a date in Chicago at leave here im an hour we'd achieve< humiliations, and the: sea of blood ''Motherland'' along with his own Mr. Kelly's, that Natalie 1captured our goals in seconds. I; we have shed . works, like ''S~ ulmate ," ''Song For the attention of Chuck/ Jackson .. The blood of Black America, is. _<\.merica is ours and we have not My Lady," ''Follow You~ j--ieart," (formerly of the lndepend"ents) and composed gt blood of a// races in forgotten the tears .and sweat of and the ever , popular ''Creole Marvin Yancey, that thing ~· took an • America. We are truly children of those who made it so. We have not Lady''. importanl turn. Jackson a~d Yancey the world ahd Africa. forgotten and will never atrt:mpt to Jon's spiritual bel iefs are· touched became the producing team !hat If you exaJnine the history of pro­ forgive. on i n ''Creole Lady'', for Jon, like has been responsible for jher rapid test movem~nt s, you will learn that Americans without a vernacular, He#te, chants ''N am Myoho Renge success. _, ' ' ' we have su~fered the most treach- we were taught from ''the womb to Kyo'' in the Budhists chants that ''The hardest thing to &e in this erous brutall ty known to mankind, the tomb'' we are no ~ hing , we were . guides his life. ·He is a very pleasant, business is yourself'' sayf Natalie, For beginni]'8 in the seventeenth nothing, and we come from no­ • spiritual and talented individual ''to remain yourself a:nd to remain: ce ntury, ov1r one hundred million \\lhere. • Probably the hottest female star honest, sincere, trus~ tworthy, Africans w re s\l.Jffi!d as animal · on the scene tod.iy is Natalie Cole, responsible, · nice ... t'm r.eat. I like · Born slaves. We were/are mis­ commodity and taken from their daughter of !he late, great popular being around people that are real, educated in schools: on the racist ' homes to th~ shores of the West In­ .~ ,singer, Nat '' ting'' Cole. Natalie, who I don't have to change my per- ideology which supposes the inher­ 1 dies for ''ojientation'' to the Ne\v ; whose first album ''Inseparable'' is - so nality for." ent superiority of the Anglo-Saxon, \.Yorld. ' -S awakening many music lovers to Natalie's ''Inseparable'' is a and the inhPrent inferioty "of the Upon arr val, a very !:>rutal pro­ Ji her fanta stic ta.lent, shares the same masterpiece. She cou19 release African. A s Malcolm X so justly cess oc~urfd, the African family label, Capital "Records, that her almos t any one o f the spngs as a states; ''The worst.crime the white 41 was ruthljssly se parated. This E father made famous. single and , have great success. man has committe!!I ha s been to played a f ndamental role in the \ ; Natalie didn!t int"end to become a Natalie saYs, ''It's a woman singing 1 teach u s to hate ourselves." destructiont f unity among Blacks :ii: show business figure, she had iri- to a man. All of the m.l.terial ex- 1 to this day. campaign of fear wa s ~ tended to be a doctor. She swit- , presses a woman' s love attitudes. instituted t destroy not only the jj ched to psychology, and received It's not about everyday si t'tations ... " We have not on ly been vic­ African's baf ic social structure, but 0 her degree from the University of Natalie Cole is a star, and not tims of the most inhuman physical ~de ntit y, langu.lge, ari d culture, f Massachusetts. While in school, she because she inheriled that royal savagCry in history, but mental and Which inclJded knowledge of the started taking · a few gigs singing, title from the ''the King." If all other 1 spiri tual as well. brilliant co ] tributions of Africans to whic h she found easy to attain on things were the same, save her civilization. the strength or her father's name. lineage, she would be a slar even if Fear was instilled in Black preg­ But it wasn't·until October of '71- her name was Guzi Obediah. nant mottrs who watched in • ho_rror as cir nx:n were destroyed. By Pat Kelly The Europ an would tie the limbs Racism and f' s ych ~' atry b\1 Alexan­ cited- the history of racism in this imagery displayed not only narrow­ of both ar rr}s and foot to a tree and der Thomas, M .D f a11d Samuel field by reporling on folk~ ' from Jen­ minded bias but a god-like worship Gallery pull them ~part . The pa in and ang-. Sillen, Ph.D. is 'a very important sen to Shockley. The reports that and u nquestionab!e accepl~nce of Photo • uish which!- the defense"less ferna\e book. Here two s,1ocia! scientists 'the Negro brain is smaller and less the law of Freud. endured whs suppose to infect her revealed the flagri'nt and subtle developed than the w~ite man's', The astounding fact is all of this 1 unborn chlld. forms of racism practiced in the the sexual primitiveness and com­ 're'search' had total access to the 1 In many cases, Black pregnant science and profession. parison of' the Black race to printed media which enabled !hem women thttmselve' ~ were forceablY In the early chapters the a!ithors Freudian concepts and childlike to be published in such medical journals as, The American journal • •l of Anaromy and the American • • Journal of Physical Anrhropo/ogy, to name a few. These 'scholars' got away with • erroneous 'facls' which greatly in­ fluenced the thinking of both 'laymen and professionals. Such a sensational example of this is given on lhe Sixth U.S. Census of 1B40 which based its theory on the high rate of 'insanity and idioc}·' among Negroes. Four years later is is doscovered, ''many of the Northern THE SUPERSTAR BOUTIQUE toWns credited wil~ menially deranged Negroes had no Black inhabitants a1 all!'' (Chapt.er One- Mvths From The Past) • All of these so-called experts had one lhing in common-they em­ phasized Black pathology. The • overall gross generalizalion came in two forms; Blacks are all ' inescapably pathogenic' or the ..... ,...• _ ' scientist is under the 'illusion of ;~\~ color blindness'. The utilization of lhe white mid­ I ' dle clas s family by Moynihan im­ poses racist ideology to equate I white sta ndards and weaken , '. whatever remains in lerms of Black • • family stability . .. ~ .; ' I found it absurd that these ' ~ !>.' 'quacks' can any longer be taken as ' t • • . i ~ anything short of a disgrace to . · ~ ·. academic research. Their findings ' ' .were beyond the juvenile and • ' should have been rejecled as mere ··'-"··r'.q"'\ -. ' trivia! No though! or research ,was I ' ' ) Ill • ' ' • . '.. I given lo those Blacks who have • positively adapled 'an·d survived Photo by Eric King ' segregalion's woes .for three cen­ ' ' turies in this country. • If such allegations were true for the majority of Black citizens, this ldi Amin: Profile Part I • l1eaders of the imperialist particular brand of genocide would ~eslern • by Sam Pinkston countries, particularly Daniel P. • have eliminated ITO'"e minds tha11i~e The Pres.id'ent and Commander of . \Moynihan, the U .S. delegate, who 'reported.' No doubt many''New-oes'.' the Armed Forces of Uganda, ldi openly called ldi Amin a racist mur- themselves succumbed to lhese ·• Amin Dada, is proving himself to be , erer. images biased whites created of perhaps the most forceful and It is often said that General Amin ' I hem. r vocal revolu.tionary leader in Africa does the unthinkable. ldi Amin, or I co.uld not agree, with the today. ldi Amin Dada is currently Big Daddy, as he is known by the authors' aSsertion thal the mind of • ~e r 'ving as the Chairman of the people of Uganda, has time and the racist is basically sane and· Organization for African Unity, again openly con.fronted the im­ healthy. For the g_irvival of Blacks in • whith recently conducted its 1975- perialist poW-ers, both East and • this country is not of prime con·. 76 sess ions in .Kampala, the capital West. Big Daddy has a remarkable cern to Caucasians, especially those of Uganda, Eas t Africa. . undersl~nding of the realities of / ,1 1n power. • The most rece nt actions of power. to continued next WMk Black social scienlists already be General Amin ' brought-' a tumult~ ha\ie the greatest job ahead. The\' uous reaction from the western must now address lhemselves to world. As Chai rman of the O .A.U., 1249 Wisconsin A venue 1150 Connecticut Ave. !hose people whose minds they_ • Amin . addressed lhe United must altempt lo heal from damages Less lip: Georgetown Midtown Nations. His support . for the Open SwKlays at MStreet already inflicted. · • ''Zionism is Racism'' resolution in Racism and Psychiarry is a the General Assembly of the U .N . more significanl contribution DIP produced .blatant criticism from the • ' • • • I 1' ' •

Page 8 THE HILL TOP 23 j anuary 76 \

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• • On t~e Hill .1n' ' SportsI B ~ Roy Betts ~--· Is 1t tru1:' lt hat ev1!ryb,Jdy lr kes a \v1r111er' We l, ask any HOward U n1 · ver~1ty sriort ~ fan· tha1 question and you're b ou rid tO get a profoundly ~ta !ed YES as 1he ar1 swer l'reserit this same question to l31son athlel ic officials. coaches, .. and rJla yers, and the"y too agree that .. wiririers are for keeps and losers are ... 1 -..: ...,, "' llut the w i d<>v.'. ~ ~~ .. However. my stniple question to ·all of you 1s '"Are \Vf' willing tb pay the utmost price f(1r success and victory?·· It 1vouk:l sciern that eve ry · one \Vanis 110 be a winner from recer11 observatior1s at H o ward basketball grrne:s. The team is 3-9, thLJ S, no or1' hardly show s for the garn es . When th do. they leave or at- 1ern 1l1 I<> w th less than a rn fnu te left ir1 a bajl game that could go either \Va y,~ as 11ccurred ir1 the Morgan St contest last Saturday ;,, ..•• ,,,,,,. ri1ght We fps! !hat game in the ' Roy Betts . - .... \variir1g secqnds, and peoJ)le \vere Is it going in ? A Hill top pl101ograpl1cr dL1rir1 g Sat .'s gJr11c c;:iugl11 tl1c ball jL1St atJout to leclve1 ol1r1a A&T, both spirited and fierce. If \ve aren"t beating So meOne's ly com1)etitive schools Ho ...vard just before it went in against Morgar1. ' \)rain; out. then \ve're a herd of seen1s to linger 1n this area _ ' lc1sers as 59me students on this But, do we have to? NO!! There carn1Jus beliC\'e r\ nd nobod)' finds are individual s on I his campus who '>ym1)a!hy for. or ast>ociates \vith a are progres~ive thinkers when it loser comes to athletics. They are So, a· ~ 1t turr1s out, the vv1nflers, as presently 1n JJosit1ons , that could they call th mselves, wind up stay· )bring bel ter days for the Bi son, but , 1ng at ho rn g1vi1ig their support !they cton't ~eem to be tq~ 'attractive ancl ti1ne t d televised ,\l\aryland­ in the eyes of those the.,._ se riously Norlh Car l1ri.l ACC ma tchup, n,eed; the stuUt 111ontlis ago. hor11e footbal·I aricl ,ba sk etba lJ rhe few J)eOple \VhO do show 'games, didn't go over lightly in the J11{J sta y at ~lo\v ard athletic event~ m1rids ·of fans Their dist urbed and arc labe!ed as crazy' and are told by ia\ t hall !111\vJrli a11c! Morgar1 ex- t hrows hurt Howard 11.1~1 \VhPr1 11 Black athl ·tes tl1roughout the na ·I I !1c 1ust111cat1on a~11ect of n1y 111(· gd11 ii, • 1. ( ht1ngcd lead~ ~t'vera l ti1ne~ ~eemed they had ih~ i11tJ1i1~r1tt1111·, 'irr1Jgg111-,, dri ct·, l1l''hr1'1a1i cl·r1tt·r rd11l(' (Jf1 the 1' 0 11ly· l1tt1r1f. that \V e nO\\I claim an 1natchu 1) 111 BL1rr gyn1 and see if you .\,iig,i11 1l1ltl 11 u d !11g 'r·dri rl1e l)LIZZt'f' to give ~ears a halfti me 1s what we needed'' l)l'll Ch a11{J \lcJr(·rl I':! llfllllt~ 1v!11l1' ever1 f1rr11er gr111 on the behind·the· ur1rl' f(Jf th!' ll~' 'lll 1.v!i1ch take place on tt"ie field; fl o \virig Orie year a Hilltop Sports • \·\ 'hen Bl ~k . schools such as Editor •va s ·escor red fron1 the gyrn tio\vard U 1vers1ty attemrit to i11- because of the jumbled confusion The Big Move Why HU Plays . Armory \ade the va t ar,.d po\verful area of of people pu.,hir1g and shovi r1g to at rnar1 agen1ent: arid fr ont office po­ get a seat He \vasn't recognized by j:S~ Roy 8Ptts Un1vers1ty basketball teams big spirit 1s generally rno1b1d, and on 290tl "arid acco1d1r1g 10 '.l 1leb . .; . '1t1ons 1r1 cor1 trull1 r1g the des11ny o f Ho\vard'~ o\vn Secur rt~· Guards. , it B1 so11 athletic otf1c1als are very \n11(l _;~(· 1all \\ 111· • ~i-re' 11· hon1e games \vith Juch sc."hools as occasion, many have \ erball\ 5,000 µeoi)le \'.rJulrl be 1r.1ng tO get !hc>1r o•vn ath!e! ic JJrograms. is up -0p t1rn1 stic \Vhen ' they SjJea k of up ,\.:1,t11rlgtr 11 I) ( ,, f irid~ d \1organ, powerful NJorfolk St., N.C. denounced the change in playing 1n \\hen ~-iO\\d'd flla\e(l \1orgar1 St to the thuu ; ar1ds of Bla ck college !1t1gt' trJr1 .... ,_l1kt 1 '1·ng ~ O~\r' A&f (leaders of t~e MEAC), and si te s. or !'\, 1;rth C.arcJl•r1d A& r ~ 1ucler1t ) to pledge their full ~up­ and cor111ng lio\vard teams 1n all tlit> [) '\r c '.CC. Lasl year thl>se games were Accord ing to HU Athletic Direc­ J)O rt 'IJOrts I lciwt1rd stadium is 100 com­ ..i~ A:. tor the drab atr11o~f>here that Jhrr>ug <)UI th• •''a .Jr· µlayed 1n the Burr gymnasi um on tor Leo Miles the gam~s played over Po\v~·rhouse 1ristitut1ons \\1th J)act, the field r~ \V1tt1out grass o r has bPen generatl'Cl clur1ng HO\\ ard astro·turf. arid tht>re are no park ing 11 l'r1 t ·(o ~trutt1c)r1 hri· k and ,1f1e Howard campJs. at the Arm ory this year are there to r1an1e~ --ri"iU:1. Gra111bling. Ten,,nessee garnes ~o far at the Armor\ , one· Sfla Ce> for large crowds. Burr gym \l('l'i th · f' of an\ _ rh1s move to Armory has prevent '' danger oU~ s1tuat1or1s' ' State, and ~uthern are takrng thest• 1~ ~ett111g nt~ t~e pos~1b1l1!y investigated and µreser1· • • from occurring. He stated, '' the 1i1a1 or ste1>s rn con1plete stride I has terrible lighting, .:isk any pho­ 11aturl' Yiu r1an1t• 1l. t~P I) C .'\1·- 'been the cen ter of con troversy and · ted to /\11les b\ 1h1' ·rep orter \Vas tor · 11 d anger comes 1n when the J}e01}I~ 11oward. should be no exception. togra1)her, and there are not rnllry ha~ l>t·<>n thi·' !lid~t:' uricerta inty among HU students the iac! or 1a11s ri! G .. i~ LIO}'d H_ Lat y, an. o it1c1a1 o\ the f1ger a.round and gets a\vay with 1t . Nevertheless, thrs cannot be R1gt11nov11r1e Coast G;.,arc1 , HU Security force. rer11arked 'v,hen lr1 coining closer to hl1me, ttie d_one without tbe su pport of • ' ,. •"n ,1nG 1von1en to ' 11nr:xirt.01n1 ,.,, i• • r questioned that !lurr could not 1\'1EA C has it's prodigious rnembers Hoy..iard st udents and D.C area j)lJSrt1011s 1n ~ver2; ' :{::\is_ r_on1p1 .t(:' ri ' T hold more than 2900 or 11 \vould be aS wt.'11 Consider '.:lquth Carolina residents 111f'nt. e11g1neer1ng. c>perat1011s !'l'Sf',1r, · a violat1o r1 of city f1 're regulatior1s. State. possi bly' rhe leaders 1n our Winning trad itions are not built ' economics. ar1c! c~1en11':> T"J to 11a1111'.'., '· "'· He added that by playing garries at co riference \Vheri 1l 1r iie~ 10 ath­ tJ y bread alor1e They need to be Wf' !}ave a IOI C' jOIJ<; !O ;111, ill lfl >\". t ·~ _, ' lo till tl1crn f.'10\v. the Armory the specJators \vould letic.;, Morgar1 St ar1ci N o r1h Car- r1ourishecl w ith pridf' With lite Coast GuarcJ _yOLir career t.. ( ::gnl'i • be ·· r11ore protected'' s1r1ce both I ~1e e,l~1v you get OLJl of otl1c.e r c a11tltcJc1l~' ~r !1' ~ Special security ·· lr•~S '>. ! 1l tl1e if· 10,000. Armory mar1ager . Willis draft. Bertram Bes=ket from Jamaica the country.'' C)Lir e11v1ro r1n1e111 as \ll'C ll Yc111 · .v or~ \\ • ' "'Cl 1- ,1lle11g111g arid exert i1g • Jol1r1son said tl1at ht• wa~ ''very w.:1 s chosen by Rh ode Island in the 'g(( St0riu1g pay as C.' 1'1a1 S<1i,;1 ~ : , • • • • s1)ec1f1cs oi Ho\vard·s contract \V1th Mclennon also of Jamaica and cro\v n recently as a selection o n / e! -I01X'rre!1l_ Med1(a' a11clc!e11t,1i. :1rr' '•t~ the ·Wrnory, label1!1g 1t ''11n proper''; If ~·Otl \"'il1lt IOC"011\l!lllC' \'(}!11' \' ·t~t: Rh ode tslarid took Keith Lookl9y of magazines firs\ team All-America sttictr~ ,1fier '1i'l)r-..-11g l1ot1rs. 11'.'C uf'cr le. · hO\\' ever. lie did ~ tale tl1a! Howard­ Trinidai. has scheduled to pla\ at tt1e Ar­ Accord ing to Curet9n /oh!)son, was named to Mutual B.l ack Net­ COtlSl Gli!r:icit1,1tc "J."llo:.> A11t1lilt" que~t1one(1 about the finances l X'lle' I [ fl)r career Otf (Pr-., 1<, :l gt'r It'!\ 'Lt:. I \ • behind Ho\vard's \VOrking t lt'l'.lClll ll~)\1011 ,1'1f't (lll!\1 ?Q ye,11'> l)t !'>Cf\11( t' • S..,)1 l lt ' 1I111 1g l/Ol I \\'1.)11. I fillL j 111(11 l\. , lli li 'I •'Ill agreement with the Armory h€- . ' ' . ._/ ~)lf'v1''"''1flcr· 11~ 1vi1 ;C' v(•t1're -..1 1111 ) l"\.1 :rY. ~tf · So far , l\\l(J 01 tl1e four garnes 1)111 '.lll l oil1ce< C:ill p:, Btrt 11 ,1 •' Cl(!t' " "~ I I scl1ed uled to be played a{ the r\r- · 111 111111.: Cc>_i~l Guard ':lt't!'ir!· "'' .•11,· f 111o ry ha,,e been cor1cluded and ".1,>' ... e lL~ 111ee11·0 •1l1 J.Ol1 AT YOUR now the o rily re1na1n1rig ma1chups ' CAMPUS STOAE Our representative are listed on the-sc·hedule for FPb . 6 ER RO RITE'" will be on campus on aga1r1st N _C .. A&T and Feb. 7-N.C. February 6 Cer1!1al I Ho\-.:ard's contest \'"1th Delaware St . 1s set for Burr g) m Ian. 24. The I Help ott Kr1 while you kelp yourseH as an officer in the Coast Guard. \ \' Or11en·~ team \\.1!! 11la)' at 5·45 and • . the mer1 at 8 p rn L _, I '

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• I • • 23 January 76 THE HILLTOP P.age 9

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' • Swimmers Lack Depth in Stretch • I I 1 • as Morgan St Bla,sts 'Walk-ons' 1 . I ' ·~ By Va nce Hawthorne walk-on, came in witha205.2 in his as the totally exhaus.ted ~i son ~j event. 1 \ Superior manpowerI proved to be swimmers fo ught to make a respec-' the downfall of the Howard Uni- But Morgan's B ~ ars , perhaps ta ble showing. versity Swim team, as Morgan State spurred by an en\husiastic and. Morgan's Craig Moselr and Etl is dominated th~ late events to post a voCa! following tha'.t jrurney,ed from Hilliard completely domi nated the 76-36 \V itl ai l he. H oward Pool la st Baltimore for the me ~ t , battled back 1 meter and 3 meter divi ng events -· when James Cox nipped Howard's and the Bears also faired well in the ( 5 d atur ay. I' Keith Gaines in thk 50 yd. freestyle lo ng distance competitio n, captu r­ Hit by a se ri ~s of intjligibilites and wilh a time of 23.6\sels. Gaines had ing first and second p having to rely l heavily lon walk-ons, ace in both the 1000 yd. freestyle Coach l oseph Bell's squad, which a 1·a battle of t am captains, 1 ~~ · and 500 yd. frees tyle events. has dwindled ~own to 7 swimmers, I had only 6 c;:Jmpetink against the Gain~s got so me rp~asure of re- Howard's Charles Gnee n sum­ • • venge when he winged his way to 16·man Morgan team. moned up enough energy and cl victory in the 200 ~d. butterfly, pride to give the Bison a con­ Neverthe1es1 the gallant Howard besting Morgan St4te's Willie Fagan swimmers spu rted out to an early ' This time Gaines tiad a 2:27.3. solation victory in the meet's 1 2th ~ lead w itt1 a comeback victory in the event, the 200 yd. breaststrois.i:'i 400 yd. rnedley relay and jeff Bas- But back to back 1-1 finishes by Green recorded a time of 2 : 4 2 . ~, the Morga.n swimrnerJ in. the 100 sinett's 11arrow win in the 200 yd. I Coach Bell felt his sq uad perfor- · I • freest.vie. Tl1e viedley team had a yd. freestyle and 400 y . backstroke med the best it cou ld un~e r the ad- ·- clock;ng of 4 , 1~8. wh de Ba ss; nett, a gave the<;> an ;nsurm o ~ ntable lead • . verse circumstances. ''Morgan just -.. had too much depth," he commen­ ted. He reiterated the fact that despite 6,000 ~iew lnterhigh Clas Howard's Division I classification in I the NCAA in swimming com· COMMENTARY petition, insufficient funding fron'i before the game's l tart, but the up· By Peter H arris the university has made it an uphill U pef deck on either side fontained a battle for his team, which has only fi , ' I sea of faces, whose roar practically one meet victory to its credit so far ~· last Friday t\VO new temporary 1 raised the roof! ' tenants vi sited 1-l oward's second this season. ' ba sketball ho me.f the D .C. Arrnoi"y, To say that these fans were ''I've had to resort jlo going and brought al o ng l>ver 6,000 emotional is unjuslt, the, Were ec­ around to all the swimming classes frier1ds and relatives' that whooped static, w ith· responses t ~ the action to recruit swimmers," said Coach 1 ·i ncluding rhythmic cl apping, foot 1t up \Vith no regard for surroun­ Bell. ''And the only incentive they ~ ding neighl)orh qlids. ' stomping, and loudl 'whoooshes' ori have is the love of swimming, inner ·"" each jump shot. And nol .only were The tw<) visitors \ver~ the basket­ pride, and the slim posSibility of -; 1 ball :earn~ from 0 .C. high sc hools the competing sChool~' students getting some limited aid for next :1 ~· ~~~ & there, but a cross-sectioj of alumni, year .. • Ea stern and Dunbar, in a battle for 'Big' Jol1 11 Mullen battles for a rebound against a Morgan defender in last Sat. 's MEAC sl1owdown. interested students fr m around ·st. the ar~~ a· :. r1 umb€r ur1e spot. They . I I squared c1ff in a battle touted as a the ci ty, and old-titne a.c. basket­ cl a ~sic , arid \vere vizw ed by a ball watchers; al ! • \vit~.I the same purpose: to see some ' fig ballin·. 1.r -- cr(J\'lld that 9ccupfed every HO HUM Attendance At D.C. Armory ava i'l.:ible ~ t·Jt \\'i/ h a liiew of the It was hard not tp get! caught up ·~\'· cou rl in the emotion of the e1.nt; I even COMMENTARY " last Friday's -- ~hould produce. such luck for H oward fans. At least Glen~ Harris, \vho does Bison jun1ped up occasionall as l wit­ Some people e\·en began filing it would have given those who did games, also did the hi°gh school I he ga1r1e let no one down, as By Peter H arrisl "' out w ith one rninute 39 seconds · attend somel seating options. game-. 1 !) l1i1 IJar r1ir ped E~stern 72 -69, but .it nessed well execut:ed ehind-the­ back-passes, lobs. to! the Oig men in· last Saturday HoY•ard's basketball \Va'- th" an1Qience of the evening left and Morgan leading only 66-64. Why don't people show up for I've got ii! Maybe it's the sport it- side, and above-the-rfm rebou nds. that · ;,111~ of ~ 9w.:ird University team was defeated by Mo1gan State In contrast, at last Fr iday's Eastern- Howard basketball gamesr ,\.-1aybe selfr How about adoqtir1g Field University, their most intense rival Dunbar game, near its end. the har- it's the P.A .- announcer? No . ... Pol e? Or lacrosse? Arc~ery? Or .. !)o~kE:lb all c·ould take n\1tes about. The excitement or the night sim­ From the OJ)ening tip-off 'till the mered and bubbled -- unctuated over the years, in what was thought dwood floor attracted those in tH<-> by athletic officials here to be a stands like so many tron ftlamenl~ final buzze:, a d111 ur1heard of at by ''oohs'' and ''ahhs'' fter circus \ Bi son co111ests, c;>f recen t years, sho!~ -- building to ja er scendo of game capable of drawing Bison fans When the buzzer sOunded. 1( in droves to the D .C. Armory. , looked like a tiny 1s\arrd surrounded ex1~ted thn Arn1ory of ficial ~ knew that maybe some of those people wer .~ ~ of those Bi so n spec tators at Sa1ur­ WHAT. IS A DIP? • 1 1 this (>ne was some~hing spefial, be ­ It's so sad that th~ m~st exciting visiti ng the bathrooms d~ring the!l¥ day's game · d id attempt .. albeit ca use tt1ey pulled out sec tions of atmosphere for basketb II to exist count. sporadically ·· lo raise some sar1d . • • bleachers thJt Ho\vard hardcourt at H o\vard's home cou •, had to The game wasn't disappointing ·· But their lack of numbers rendered watchers didn' t ev~n know existed. c3me as a res ult ofl a h"gh school it wasn't decided until the last their attempts futile, 111 comparison DORM FORtJM SPONSORED Not only wi;>re they ~ii led , ev¢ri game minute -- but there was flO close­ to Friday's capacit)' showing. Ar1d • ,.. game tension; no thick layer of those extra sections pulled do\vr. • emotion that this classic . --; or ever) . for the high scl1ool mat ch ... no • Sports Arena ·· • BY • Sports Calender LIBERAL ARTS M iles Makes Super Qfficial . Men's Basketball: • ' ' INTR AMURAL BASKET BALL: Leo Miles. HowarP · University dinator of tn1r.am ral and • Jan . 24-Delaware Sr Jan 24 - , ~ Athletic Director and NFL official, Recreational Activit!es, s on the Burr gym 8:00 p.m f ra ternity games was a hea(J lirle.,;mart in Super Bowl move once aga1r1. With basketball STUDENT COUl\ICIL Jan. 28-lincoln U 12 noon-Phi Beta Sigm a• v ~ KarJpa X \VOr1 by the Pi:tsburg Steelers in 1ntramurals begi11ning l is week • Away • \ Alpha Psi, Burr gy~ ; f\.11ami. A former NF! pla ye r him­ si Ph i ~elf, Miles ha s been an official book finally on !he Howard OPERATI0N CONTACT : J treet ~ . 'i:-11 , I :00-Groove Ph i Groove vs. Alpl1a 1 • within the r)ro ranks for seven year~ students can expect nevl- and ex­ Women's Bas ketball: ~ Phi Ornega A n Educational Forum Designed to D issem inate ' anJ earlier \Vorked Super Bowl VIJI . citing act ion. There are 10 B'Balt 1 • 1 Jan . 24-Delaware St. Thi;>re \Vere a to'tal of thre~ gan1es this weekend1!! Burr gym 5:45 p.m. ~ Professional Schools .' Informat ion That Affects ~ ou , T he S.tuden ts! per1al ties during the l er1tire Jan . 18 Jan . 27-George Washington I :DO-Faculty Grad ~ . \'~. Mr)!ars (S<. h. Super Bowl rnatchup and only one Jan . 29-Georget own of Dentistry) close call made by an official , if you Wome 's 2:00-Medical Schc)ol Frrish. vs law Opera tion Contact will provid mid­ Wrestli ng: 2:00-Sch oi Religion v~ Security tile L ibcrO ki11g for an all.cJ ay 1>art tiJne job tlter office maclh i11es? Did you take Secrel.or· your Bisonnettf>s! ' I

. ' I • • - • • • • Pagt• 10 • 23 January 76 THE HILLTOP . -

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• D'JUAN '.A. COTTON, Zoology, Sophomore, T•urus (Aries Cresl) 1_ I think this was the administrat ions • w ay of negtectir1g the ir duty to the students and the community. I only wish I had a job to be forced from and still draw in over $30,000 for the neKI ~wo DONNA BELL, .S./M.0 ., years. Tha t would be o n"e sw.eet Freshm.tn, Leo vacation. 1. Dropping the charges ago nst Rubin 2. I don"t think that there should be • is comparable to the Nixon rdon in any form of debating going on in the that the complete u~iversi iudicial U .N . considering the facl that the P.LO. PETER GO MULLINGS, Psychology, is not a state or 11a1ion. and that is wHat Junior, Cancer process was not performed. 1 2. If the United Stales ~nd Is ael would the U .N . was purposely set up for. Those 1. I think l hefe is too much mystery accept the recent upsuf8e of power by nations formed together in one common about the w hole Rub in ordeal. All the the Arab and African_ ~ount rties, th~se interest lo help make the world a safer students on campu s should be made lo cou ntries not subscr1b1ng I the in­ and happier place in which to live. The. understand what its all about. stitution of Zionism, maybe the U .N. P L 0 . in my opinion has nor tried to 2. I t_hink r_he U nited States really has could get down 10 some con st ructive achieve those goals. I n that case all no business 1n the Middle £a5 t .because business like se1tling ciyil u11 est. terrorist groups should join the U.N. all they are doing and have done in the • . . ! past is stirred u p tension alll!.lngst other ·t . ' countries. -·1 J • • 1; What do you think about the agreement • Howard reached with ALICIA DAVIS, Sociology, Fre§hm.an, BRIAN I(, KEllV, Fi n.lnce, Freshm.tn,. professor Rubin? • Scorpio S:c

SARAN D.X DASH, Math, Junior, Libr• 1. Really I feel tha t H owa rd is still ignoring the subject. So their just getting the easy way ou t. 2. I don't have anything to say about it, ·- ' because it really doesn't concern me. I'm just wonderins how long is it going to take the United States to get involved. kENNET.H ANDERSON JR., Politic.al LINDA G. BURK E, TV & Fil , Junior, Sc ienc e, Sophomore, Virgo S•ggittarius 1. Well you know how puppets are, I . H ow<1rd Un1ver s1 tfs dee sion con~ pull on the string and they' ll do cern1ng professor Rubin was ndication anything! of a spineless administration '•ll ing to • 2. Why should we be fOncerned about • pay $60,000 to a man ~o do othing. what happ«;ns in the Midd le East, when 2. I feel eKactly the fine ay about we the people of America haven't got the deb.ate in the U .N. as I fe el about the our thfng together yet. We should care price of spi11ach in CH INA about ou r problems first inStead of get- / ting involved with '• other5 Phot s b y Will Allen •

• • Happenin's ' • • jam s Angel Rush Bison Photos Founders - All Day Play • H.U.Film Series Bain • . . -\ll" E>-.; 110"-J ALL r~t\'l.\ P \ J<., <) K<.~·\'.JI .~ H oward Uriiversity presents· ~ilm The tollo•ving sc hedule for the 1976 I ht' i\l\t'11 1f11·i - \ nual Vall•ntint5 LV\'t''' f u r<.c Re>er>e Oir1l <'' <:'••r/)~. 1 lt' <1111\t•f · H1sun } l'~rl1on l... e ated temporarfly in tl1e sday at 7 Jl.m 16; (•vo111en) Ia n 12-23. B,111 fr;i ty. a11U 1he <..um1nyn1t) CtJ rl 1<1nv 1n­ he d.jlpiecia1<:>rl 1i !11 •.' full•i\v1ng ~cl1ool' S()cial 'vV ork Libr<11y wi!l 1Jrov1de around· Jan. 9. SHAFT IN ,\ FRICA. A Shafi Volleyball (mc11) Feb 'l-20. (1\·omen) !J 111 1<1 l.OIJ ,I n di thr> \l'l"t'! h'lo'rl. v11es all 1nter1•tJl1l r•·'Jl•>•1rl a., \(>flrl "'" thC·l· lock service from midnight Sunday • ·sequel Starring: Ric hard Roundtree r eb. 9·20; (co-ed) Feb '1 ·20 'l.1J\t 11t_ " R1••1 11 1 l12l;i ·-lth. Sc '.J E 14th Ru sh lo IJe held 0n ~atur(lily. I 11uarv ! 4 r,o., ~1 l)l! • 11 tl1t•) cJ1•, 1r(' 1 i h.i.•e 1he11 n1gh1s thrcJug h midnight Fridil y. Foun­ ( Ian. 16, HIT, Starring Bi lly Dee Softball (co-t>d) Mar 8-12. .• ,,,J ;.:1 ,,,,1,. !~l a t i A\·r . '-.; l) ~976 1n the Bald1\·in-\1Vht·.i11, \ L•>tJ•lg t-­ 1;r g.i1 11z at1< ~11., JJ1 Ctu1e> t<, .i111J~<1r 111 tlll' (JTl uill(_(' .ii 7B7U 01 \V \1( \11 ('1ia(•I Jt Ian. 23. SAINT LOUIS BLUES. Life M<1r. 29-A Jlr 2 (co-ed) Mar. 29-Apr. 2 ~ .. 00 dt t1l• ' ri 0 • t i\1u;1( ~) \ " !hf' nlh111gs • Saturday aricl 1 Jl.rn to 12 o'clock ·l'l \1 f;1 )a11u.i1y-l , l'J7fi •vf' .r t'all}'(!t)r1'1 , storv o f W ,C. Ha11dy. Starring Nat King Swimrning (r11cn) i\-lar 22 -26; (women) 1.111J ~1u if : ' llu11ir1ess latll fame I jan. 30, Tr-tE SPLlf, St arring Jim Bro1vr1 Fr(•t: '-Pt · UfJ); ll ()I r or"t1c ke1 :. see an y All 11•tl lit·a l1 l1, ;\rc h11e c ture. Com · Jlla1111ed for Founders Library during ! he T!it• rn r•n1bc•rs (lf ! ht• P;i 1· fl1,lll·n11 r11t•r1 1r at101'" · !1• •<1tal, f;c!l1r.il Ari \, i\\••il1ci r1e . ,">Jur } 1rig, f'h.Jr· ' sche'duled for the second 5emester. If 1 Bicentennial Progran:i Feb. 20, ALVIN AI LEY. Memories and J\t\d 1r1 01 s1)la y (a-.1; l(J< r to rJ 111 l ~ ll" l(JIJ!)7 ri1a t·y, .ir1r~ ytJU ha ve ar1y c1ue stion co11cerning lhese 11 ,. \-\' l"-11 IPs r FRAT f RNrrY \v111 visions. <>f Lricke l·lall T ~ll ''"' f' 1•11l,iv dll' Curi ' ,i c tivi!ie~ Cr lhP 11• xt <·1g!1t iice of Student life. al 636-7000. ;>J ILl r1 1J>.,'. id11. ~4 1476 at 10-30 until All ~ tlJdl· rrlf' ,vl1u hd\"' !J(•fn \ Pl(-"c tCU l·ti story flrese nts the First Bicentennial autobiograpf1y of i\1dlcolin X. 1.veek s Tl1e fe.i tu rPtl rdlt ~r r 1i r rur the Yoga - Mon. Wed, Fri, 6 - 8 p.m., An­ 1r1 dJJJ)ear 1n \'Vh(J·., Wh(J 11 ~ A1ner1 ca n Prge~ ml.ht rt'f)Olt 10 • Or_ Daryl Darice. Folklorist, from ·· Runr1 for Your Lile'' - (Jogging ClldJller \Ve 1nv1tt• .111 'tL•ll<' rl ~ ar1ct 111· 1/1(' B 1~•>r1 }'l'arlJmmonwealth University. \Viii Program) Tu e~. & Thurs, 4·JO - 5:30, ~trul tor' ! <' c:-1lr11c- by a11tl '- lt:'\V th•· The Howard University Christian 1111·11 JHLturt·" t.ikl•rt tur 1111_·· !'176 yt·ar give a lecture on ''The Quest for track. di ~ JJl , I) Fellowship-lgbimp Otito \Viii sponsor an Open Bo\vllng Tournament, place to Frat Smokers l1r;ul.. l h1 \ is tilt' !1 11 al llJlt• t11i 1)1< !ures to " f quality·· educational film se ries Sunday through be announced, tentatively scheduled Delta Disco tJf' t.i kt'll "fhe Ho1v,ird University lazz Ensemble, Til t' ·\\f'n 01 lt•!a Phi lh.iptl:r or !'(lph.i direc ted by Fred lrby, Il l. will present the Friday. lanuary 25th through the 30rh. March/76. _ ; The series is entitled " Sermons Fr om 1 l" l t< (')rnr11.f N.i11on<1I St'r'."<< <' Frd!Crn1Ci 111u s1c al entertainment. ··Tennis Ar1 yone '' (Tennis Clinic). Delta Disco. On Sat.. Jar1 24. im · For N. Carolinians Qnl~ · Scienc e'' and will be sh,_o wn three times Tues• • Thurs. 5:30 -• 7:00, AnneK Gym. ••ll 111\ ICC all 1fl1l'reste(t mer1 !(J a!tenQ Re ce1ltion immediately following. mediately after the ba~ketb.:111 game. 11 on Sunday (at 2:00 pm; 5:00 pm; B·OO beginn111"g March 22, 1976 !!1•· dnriu.i) ~fJ114ig S111ojcP1. \vh1cti ,., ill t:ie to 1 o'cllKk. Or1e dollaf at the p oof. Q n, 1\ll re s1fler1t' 01 North Carolir1a, who pm) and four times a day on weekday (M 11• I•! u11 Suncla~ . la11uary 25, 1975 a! 4 tario Lakcrs Com mur1 ity Cente11 7th and are c lJ rre:itly er)r1illed ir1 a college or Geological Society • 8·1S t1m ; 12 Noon; S:OO Jl m; 8:00 µrn), Speed Reading 1J 11i ir1 1ht' Or"\' liJll illue Rooin _. F1 t·~ ! 1- Kalorarna RG . Down the st eel f1om lJ[llVCfS 1!y, ei!l1er •V1tl11n (J r OUI Sl(le 1h<' w i th the eK ception that the 12 noon ~ 1•1 •''' .i it·' \vel(Onl(' R f' f rt\hmcn t ~<}Vill lle ~tall' a11(I >vh c1 !1.ivt• r urn fJl e> !ed a! tea ol s!Jowing on Friday the 30th will be ••··r•••·CI '-1eridian Hill. • All Geology ma1ors, minors, and in- .. The Liberal Arts Student Council an- t!1rt·t· ~' t.:Jr'i ol col lt•ge !Jy lu.ne 1'17h. a(e 1erestto>d students should report to room nl()Vt'd up 10 11 :00 am. All films \Viii be -! nounces its Second Semester Speed • 11,_...,.,. ..- ligilile fnr !l1f' '" l r1, !1lutr> (Jf C.uvlrn; 344 of the Biology Greenhouse on sho\vn ir1 ~he Browsing Room of Foun­ Re.icling Course. The Class will begin 111·· \t\t•r{ tlj 1t1t Al11ha Pt11 Alrlha Zimbabwe Speak r lllt'nl l11Tt'r!l'>h iJl" • , der ~ library. S1)ecific dat<"s and titles are Satl1rday, February 7. It will rneet at 10:00 1-riday, Jatiuary 23. 1976 for a ve ry i1npor­ . ' r •.11i•r111tv Irie ,j l.it 1 ta Cha1)tt>1 WIJulcl like 11 I' ar1 to l1•ve11 \\' t·t~ k 111ugran1 l!u11 ·1- listed belo•v . and 12 :00 for ten weeks. The fee of ta11t meetir1g of the Howarcl University I 1., .1 ,.\ 1,1ur1tt' t ~ 1t ' \')7 6 Aif)ha '.:> rn (1 ker 10 Augu>t 11) ar1rl 1Jayo $124 .q FebruarY 1. soine vf'r,· important issues will be dis­ Oust or Destiny the Office of S!udent life. Lo6k for more 1 1976. For furtflP! 1r1f(Jrfl),1t1on ~1·c College ·~'''" '" I \\ r1rk A11tiitoriun1 (lot•111 1' rll') Jilli. r1 .ur 1t•alurelJ ~pt·aker wi"ll P1a cPr11P11t Orf1t1' (2n(I l~i1J1 oi '"~v1ll1rig 10 listen rhe warm atmosphere as well as the ROTC. For more informatibn contacl "' Unii 1c<1 l 1un fur Progrl'ss" 1s 1t1e pr 111- I 1he ! I() l l If\. [ 1••l1•µ l1<1!l•' 111 Jm lli'r 1~ 616- delicious refreshments. To top it all off Capta ir1 Needham· N. Kelly Jrl' Room 20, r;1 plc r11t-n1c l or this yeat's 1rt>sl1rn1•n Wine Psi Phi Lives • (,8711 - Rt•J(I\ \V1l!1 r1g ar1(f. Ahle whf'rl there' s LIVE ENTERTAINMENTl-·Music. D ouglass Hall. 636-6784185 1 or GSFC t.. la5~ . rH1~ ex1lrcss1o n of ynity \va s r{·cfn· 1 <>t l1Pr ~ ar pr1·1 Poetry--you name it. Marilyn E. Bridgette. 302 Cr~ndall. 797- • tly .,\1tiwr1 by 1pe 11rgar11 za tion of a Fr e!;h· Some members of the Howard Univer" . It happens at the Newman Cen1er, 9455. ~ - 01 1.ir1 ( . !d' ~ Cri<1lit1 011 The Coalit1or1 wa> . ' . ~i 1y Community are ~til l ur;awarf' that . 241 7 1st St., N_W. at 8 p.m. . 2) f(> c1rgar1ization is in e ~ is ten ce at Howard 1J I llf' 5t~ !uJul 1-•11 cl1v1ded /or 100 long, and ch1 5 is 111 111 R<1Vr11 lllU, L K 011 We ~lnesday. J.inuary 21 , tht• So don't be fooled,l Wine Psi Phi is rnusic, dance, and narra 11op, the all­ !a11t1: 1r y 14, -197h. Welcome · B'''' r11rlg I I.i ll. '>< 111 .. il ' '' • (r1g111t•t•r1r1g 1 bla ck Cast of talented profess1onals con­ [)1,(0. - . ~ lit.>era!ion of Zimllabwe". slurdLWI IS Mr f'1< ar

  • re~er1tl)' ~eatl of the w on1e ! 1~ detach­ ~r1lif lrl•a l '~"l<·r1> '' 11 1( ti 11 1·' ', change of times. I · business personalities w ho l-i11ve a l te ~ ed • i\llee11ng; D ou_gl.i s ti.ill N"u 116, 7 JO 11 rn n1er11 ll•1111 '1•t ~·1! 111 1111' ~' rl ~1c)ri' S<)I eigh!ee11 .Amt•rica11 anll Br i!iSh films ()f In this coming pledge period check us and enriched the artistic life of America free R ef (eshrner1t ~l! - ' .it 1L>11al Un1011 L1berat1on A my). tJu 1ld 111g 111 Cl11{Jgi1 r\ ll ~ tL1 t lt•11t s, 1.1t ul1y mys tery and detect100, r.inging fr om out! and most of the world. February 5, ·1975. l)r Cheek SpPak 'i. t to For information contact: Tickels oo sale in Cramton Box Office be .1nn1lti 11c('(i, 7·".JO pm , 11beratiBn gr our) eris.iiecl n armed p(J JlUlilr titles of recehf years. \viii be J_T.-462-0343 from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Gener.al Ad­ -Ft•bruary 16-20. 19 7fi, Si ck!•· Cell struggle aga i 11 ~ t · chf' 1r 1r1or1ty regime of f,,, ll1r1l1l'I 111l