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OBJ (Application/Pdf) Voi.. L ---- No. 4- r’ebruary 15, 1996 Cosby Center Generates Excitement By Dorlisa Goodrich ing room. Editor-in-Chief The third floor is home The days surrounding to the Department of En­ the opening of the Cosby glish, the Writing Center, a Center will be jam-packed faculty meeting room, and with events in order to pay classrooms. As one jour­ tribute to the Drs. William neys to the fourth floor, and Camille Cosby. check out the Department of On Thursday, Feb. 22, History, international Af­ Ms. Nettie Washington fairs Center, the Depart­ Douglass, heir ofBookerT. ments of Modern Foreign Washington and Frederick Language, Religion and Phi- Douglass, will speak at Con­ losophy, and the Study vocation. At noon, all stu­ Abroad Program. dents are invited to a ribbon cutting ceremony at the Cen­ ter. Tours of the building will be conducted by desig­ students will be able to meet facilities will be used for nated tour guides and that with them in Sisters Chapel. educational and cultural pur­ evening a student tribute will A Dedication and Celebra­ poses. be held. Entitled "Celebrat­ tion Program will immedi­ On the lower level, ing the Humanities: TheTalk- ately follow at 4 PM in the one will find the Educational ing Tribute," students will Cosby Center Auditorium. Media Center, Foreign Lan­ be treated to a night of enter­ guage Labs, a museum lab, tainment and refreshments. lecture rooms and class­ Friday will be devoted What’s rooms. The ground level to "Celebrating the Humani­ houses the auditorium and ties: A Map of Life Long museum. The Archives, Learning" which will show­ which contains research ma­ In It? case panel discussions, gal­ terial on Spelman, women in lery talks and tours of the By Jennifer Kelly higher education and Center. At 2 PM, Dr. Darlene Staff writer Spelman alumnae is located Clark Hines will speak on When the Spelman on the second floor along "The Humanities & the Afri­ community returned from with the Women's Research can Diaspora: A Vision for the holiday break, the newly Center. Here, one may find the 21 st Century. At 4 PM, a completed Camille Olivia material on women of Afri­ closing ceremony will be held Hanks Cosby, Ph.D Ed. Aca­ can Descent, community and the Jazz Ensemble will demic Center greeted fac­ outreach projects, and cur­ perform. ulty and students alike. This riculum targeting Women's When the Cosbys ar­ Center is a refreshing uplift Studies. Students will also rive at 3:30 PM on Saturday, for Spelman College. This enjoy the comforts of a read­ Spelman Spotlight • February 15, 1996 Spelman Spotlight Around the World by Gia Washington 1995 • 1996 STAFF In Short Editor Dorlisa Goodrich, Editor Going my way? Delta Air Lines is offering its Mary Blotch, Co-Editor Student Select Savings Certificate to college stu­ Ayo Williams, Co-Editor Wandra Hunley Business Manager dents between January 4- March 4, 1996. The Jennifer McZier, Student Advisor Extra Credit fares are valid for travel January 15- Madeleine Picciotto, Staff Advisor March 31, 1996. Tickets are nonrefundable and Vicki Williams, Staff Advisor must be purchased at least seven days before depar­ Section Editors ture. Ticket prices are available for as low as $138. Perusing Campus.............. Jennifer Haile Call 1-800-9DELTAO for more information. Limi­ BEYOND the GATES............ RaShell Smith InShort........................................... Gia Washington tations apply. OnSite Info.........................Allison Taite Spotlight.....................Crystal Slade Y MISCELLENOUS Health Vibe................ Patricia Banks At Your Leisure .........Tameika Miller&ChristieGrays ♦Friends of the World Teaching announces that VOICES........................... Saptosa Foster hundreds of teachers are still needed to fill existing vacancies vent.........................Tasha Smith in oversees English -speaking schools and colleges through­ On a Lighter Note............. Robin & Curt out the world. Foreign language skills are seldom required. Jaguar Spirit...... Leslie Wingard Qualification requirements are similar to those in the United Slates. For further information, contact: Friends of World Committee Editors Teaching, PO Box 1049, San Diego, CA 92112-1049. Photographer..... ♦Minority college students who are interested in pur­ Art.............. Erin Davis suing medical degrees may apply for the Honors Premedical Copy Editors........... Wandra Hunley Tameika Miller Academy, a six-week summer program at Baylor College of Medicine and Rice University, both in Houston, TX. Stu­ The Spelman Spotlight welcomes all submissions. All dents earn nine undergraduate credit hours and tuition and submissions (artwork, vents, letters to the editor, car­ housing are free. Applicants must have a 2.75 cumulative and toons, articles, etc.) will be reviewed and considered 3.0 major GPA. Additional information is available by as space permits. Submissions will be subjected to the calling 1-800-798-8244. scrutiny of the Senior Editorial Staff only. Any work containing slanderous material will be rejected. This is the only criteria for the submission. There will be Arts & Entertainment no censorship. However, words that may be consid­ ♦The Atlanta African Film Society will premiere, ered offensive to the readership of this paper will be altered by replacing all vowels with a dot or asterisk. Embrace the Rainbow, and Middle Passage-N Roots on Editorial opinions expressed do not necessarily rep­ Thursday, March 28th, 7 PM at the Georgia Pacific Audito­ resent those of the Spotlight or Spelman. Submis­ rium, 133 Peachtree Street, as part of their Black Women sions should be sent through Campus mail via Box Make Movies Around the World Celebration. 1234 or placed within the folder on the Spotlight ♦The Discovery Channel will show an encore presen­ office door (Lower Manley Rm. 104). All submissions tation of The Promised Land, Monday, Feb. 19 through should adhere to the posted deadlines. Spotlight Friday, Feb. 23 from 10-11 PM and 2-3 AM each night. The reserves the right to retain a work submitted. mini-series, which made its world premiere in Feb. 1995, The Spotlight is published monthly and has a circu­ chronicles the oddy ssey of two generations of African Ameri­ lation of 1,000. The Spotlight staffmeets on Mondays cans through documentary, music and storytelling. at 6:00 PM in the Spotlight office. Signs will be posted ♦Experience the intimate side of classical music with for meeting dates. the Atlanta Chamber Players on Sunday, Feb. 18, at 3 PM at Next Meeting: February 19 the Walter Hill Auditorium. "Ghosts & Fantasies, a mini Beethoven fest, will be free for students with valid ID. For more info, call the ACP Hotline: (770) 242-2ACP. Spelman Spotlight *February 15, 1996 page 3 ______ Perusing Campus *1* TtCeftoiy Oui glicini Kelly A. Il row u (February 17,1975- January 28,1996) Kelly Huu Qnowu wai- et wouden^ul -Lpinit who touched euauy lived, aud headti duniuy lien dtay ou eanth, Idle ^iud il di^icult to- day yaad hye to duch a woudenfjul youuy lady who tnwly epùtouùyed the tnue leyaoy o^ Spehuau Waeuau- bood. Kelly, we thauh you fan the lauyhten, the joy, aud boppûuedA, the didtenhood aud loue. 'Ijau wene tnuly a liyht who wad deut to Iniyhteu each day. Without youdph^pdical pnodeuce, the liyht id dûu. dloweoen aud wiewtonied aud yood toned will heep, it lit faneuen. With all oun Ione, tjalauda Kldtid aud /lihhi ^iudley Young Entrepreneurs Breed Success for Others By Tameika MUler sel students on how to start busi- zations with the state codes and At Your Leisure Section Editor nesses, license these new organi- buy proper insurance. Through Contrary to a more tradi­ tional thinking of the time, young A. people in college are investing in - the stock market. Thanks to a new group, students in the AUC are now given the opportunity, c through a hands-on experience, to learn about the stock market Feb. 1 while investing. Students Anwar Feb 16-1 iel Young and Tarik Patterson are the two young entrepreneurs of this new organization, dubbed MITC, and are dedicated to edu­ cating young people about in­ vesting. Begun last year to pro­ vide not only an investment op­ Chapel portunity, which is rare among y y . : : African American college stu­ dents, but also to fill a void in financial and investment training in the AUC, MITC aims to coun- Texas. In 1976, she was the first working on the budget, and hop­ Political African-American woman to de­ ing to reduce the $200 billion-a- liver a keynote address at the year federal deficit. The govern­ Pioneer Democratic National Conven­ ment proposes cuts or reductions tion, riveting her audience on na­ in funding to several vital pro­ tional television as she spoke at grams such as Medicare and Dies Madison Square Garden. Medicaid, the arts, food stamps, By Erika L. Ford During her years in the leg­ Aid to Families with Dependent Staff Writer islature, she helped introduce Children (welfare), Housing and Former U.S. Representative and pass legislation dealing with Urban Development (HUD), and Barbara Jordan, scholar and po­ welfare reform and minimum- most importantly, to college stu­ litical pioneer who captured the wage. She was also a leader in dents, Pell Grants and subsidies nation's attention with her elec­ the difficult and successful fight for government backed loans. trifying call for the impeachment to block legislation that would These budget changes will greatly of President Richard Nixon, died have effectively disenfranchised impact the poor, the elderly, the January 18, at the age of 59. African-American and Latino environment, and education. Jordan, who had been ill voters by tightening requirements President Clinton and the Demo­ with multiple sclerosis for sev­ for registration. She also served crats are struggling against Newt eral years, moved about in a as chairman of the U.S. Commis­ Gingrich and the Republican wheelchair or with the aid of a sion on Immigration Reform.
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