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Hilltop Highlights
})()\\! ' / (( ) / ) (('('f '\ 7J1 1tlx1/X1\\'(!,' /\'l Vol. 59, No. 24 Howard University, Washington, D.C, 20059 8 ·April 1977 Howard Submits Elections Runoff Set . Budget Requests ·- by Regina Lightfoot I h-e pol ic y B ·o a r d and Fred Hines questioned t he elelt1uns committee about the Aprrl 3 To Congress 1·hc H oward Universit y Stu· rnee t ing. and wos given a By Brigette Rouson U n1ver:.11y's fJr1mary goal:. dc11 t Associa t io11 Policy Boa rd ver bal rep ort by A nge(a Bur r1ett A ccord ing to W ood s, Hilltop St,.ffwriter for 1978. 1-t ow evt>r, t ho \ go.ii las t r1ight voted to sus tain the ha :. p ro1np ted r1 0 SJ)ec 1f 1c elec t ions l1c ld on 1\l\ arcf1 28 and the vote was t hree 1n favor rt.-q uests t or fu11ct' t u hire of d isqu al ificat ion, and th ree !)1 ldrtil' '> L C f1et• k. vo ted tl1u l Moncl;1y's (April 4) r11o re fa(·u lty 111 1he G ra rJl1a te absentions. 11re,1 cf(•t11 of 1-lu\varcl LJr11 · n1 ceting w as invu lid, accordir1g Sc h ool. w hi c h l1as the When ask e<.l why 'she did v 1 · r~ 1t; , a1.)J)e,ir t•cl be10re a to John Gree n, p residerl l of t!1c h1 ghe.,1 c!e11 c 1<.' 11 (·y of al l the riot have a written repo rl l,OLl'l' '11ti cu rnrn1ttt'l' la !. 1 Sc!1 ool of Bu sin ess Studer •. Ange la Bu rnell c ha irpersor1 \V(•ek lu reque .. t u vt·r $99 sc hools ar1cl co ll eg<.• s To create a td\' orablt' stu d e11t- of t he Elec t ions C omm i t~ e e , m1 ll1or1 1r1 l t> deral ru11d '> tor Tt\e runoff w il t be hc!d 1ea c her rat io 1n t he G radua te replied tha t sh e ''never 19 78 11 .. ca l Yl'dr U r11ve rs 1ty Wednesda'Y'; April 13 bet \veen Sc h ool-- a cert.-i1n ra1 io is k new, prior to b ei ng as ked ou dgel Denise Miles/· \Varren Sibbles re c ommended i o r ac for a rep or t. that one \Va s The requ es t rep re'> en ts an ...... and Adebole Ajayi/ F ran ci ~ c red itation purpos e'>·· t he ~ui r e d . " 1r1c.re a ~e 01 al most seven ' McGee. - '' Any fool w ho is called to m1l!1or1 tl ollars ove1 the ac U n1 ver!:.1 ty \v ould r1 e~ 10 h1rP lBY add1t1onal faculty a meet i ng befo re their tual Cor1gt€''>'>1onal a1Jp ro In a meeti ng last r1 1ght. nie m be 1s None \v e re superiors should k no\v !hey ~) 1 1 .i t1or1 d'>\ ard ed the U r11- confu sion sti ll existed as the req ues tt>d Tor f 1s ci.I year need a rep orl '' sa fd Lu .ther \' er'>1t~ i or tl1e 1977 l•'>c a! Policy Board spent lw o Brown HUSA president y ea r Ir dJ)J)lfJved, th e 1Y78 hours to d ecide whet her or not a meet ing held was va l id g ov t'r r 1r n~ ·r1l 'uJJport \vii i rise No increase 111 lu nd s \\'aS I n l1gl1\ or !he various or held w ithou t a quorum. r1oi-n 50 IJ t'r 0 • • -· • . .8 . April 1977- • .·CA PUS/LOCAL • • • ·Black Dialect : Yette To Appea 'f'.ETTE from page 1 •• 1972 then took his case to sai d the appelate rt Vital Mechanism the D.C. Commission on decision which favorS Human Rights, which found Newsweek '·'speaks for itself, that Newsweek had particularly in finding that discriminated against him. Mr. Yette was unable to also to understand that we New York - '' It is natural But the District' s appellate produce proof of are in a society where sta nd to wonder whether the court last week invalidated discrimination. The fact is ard English is the norm." deepest and most persistent the original decision, and that Newsweek has had and ' Cooke also discusses ; division in American society, said Newsweek did not have will continue to have a se;veral examples of dif the gulf that has always to follow the Commission' s vigorous affirmative action ferences between white and separated Blacks from order to report to it program.'' Black dialects, the vestiges of whit.es, is al so due to a dif regularly on affirmative ac Yette said he is ''perfectly African dialects and lingui~ ierence in speech," BLACK tion efforts. pleased'' with evidence tic patterns that remain in "JOURNAL's host and execu ' ''This does · not preclude presented originally, ''if only Black American speech, and tive producer Tony Brown going to the Supreme the judges would look at the ~ the two divergent theories says on the ser ies' next ed i Court." said Yette. '' It simply evidence fairly and not argu.e ; on why Black English is dif· tior1, " Language in Black and means we would prefer get the case for Newsweek." ferent. The ''dialectical'' White." ting it reversed at the earliest hypothesis says that Black '' Pe ople sometimes hesi time and at the lowest English is just a currupted FUNDING from page 1- tate to consider thjs ques level.'' tion for fear that if differenc form of white English The It is uncertain whether the renovations, provide fur- "Creole'' hypothesis theoriz es are found, it will imply " Commission's legal com- niture an~ eq_u ipment for · 111at the speech of Blacks is es a'' pidginization'' process, - ponent. which argued the· th~ . U n1vers1t~ . Center . 1r1fer1or; and yet if we shrink whereby Black speech pat appeals case alongside the building once 11 1s com • 1rorn examining this subject terns were changed as they professor's attorneys, will pleted, ai:id settle a co~ , we run ·1he ri sk of ignoring became more and more >- 101n 1n this most re cent ac- tractural dispute· over some - the effect of the Black dia involved in the marketplace. ,r;i tion previous construction --: lect on the education of ·Dr. -Lou is F orsdale, of ~ Richard W . Barton, deputy The Beltsville, Md cam- Black children." Columbia University' s IP: f assistant to the Corporate pu_s, planned as an The '' Language in Black Teachers College, discusses Counsel chief in the Com- an1maVresearch center, will and White'' edition of the role body language plays mission's appelate division, get $500,000 if the request is_ in cultural differences, and BLACK JOU RNAL which The new Children's Hospital overlooks the reservoir with an architecturally innovative design. said April 7 he was approved. look at the differences in selections from O'r. Julius , reviewing the papers which Historically, actual '.v h tte and black dialects Fasrs book, The Body Lan are to be filed by James Congressional -: ap· charges that black dialec t is guage of Ex , Power and Dubkin and Paul Ryerson, • propriations have equaled 1nfe r1 or, the role of body lan Agression are read. the attorneys represen'ting the amount the University guage, and need for under: The BLACK JOURNAL Children's Hospital Opening in June Yette. He said he will asked for. Asked about th_~ I ~ tar1ding and commun1ca Poll, consisting of two sam respond to Ryerson today on Subcommittee session !1on betweer1 blacks and ples, Ebony Magazine's 100 whether the corporate where the appropriations whites o n the differences in Most Influential Bla c k counsel will participate. • request ,was presented last language styles. Americans and another 100 With Unique Architectural Design '' I think i(s extremely week, President Cheek said, I! will b e distributed Black leaders chosen by unlikely the (D.C. Court of '' It went fine." 11at1onally by the Public BLACK JOURNAL - fourfd ' Appeals) will take a case- -· B"toad casting Service to its that 54% of the Ebony sam- feels, according to McNeil!. pital. This facility serves as tween the ages of 18 months - ·I've never known them 10 Editor's Note: - member stations the week of ple believed that a distinct By Arlene Wailer The new hospital will pro an eight bed unit for and 12 years. do it before- - if the case Sunday, April 10, 1977 (lm '' Black English'' exists, as did Hilltop St.Jtiffwriter vide for 260 beds for children with emotional dis turns on individual facts," portar1r Please check local 74% of the BLACK JOURN The last is5ue of · The new 260 bed children and 90 parent beds abilities. Expansions in radicr • Barton said. l'BS for correct area AL group. It had received its in ~ tat1or1 Children's Hospital in the (for parents that have to stay logy are also featured. ''We don't normally l>roadcast time. In New Both groups, 81% of corporation on Dec. 5, 1970 city - the marrowed building the night), with private With the new expansions, pel ition the Court for recon York, WNE f / 13 will air Ebony and 97% of BLACK ad the third hospital in the The Hilltop wil be towering over the reservoir - rooms for children in the in McNeill said the old facility sideration unless we are fir BLACK JOURNAL, Sunday, JOURNAL, believe that United States that catered will not open until early in tensive care section said M s. will be kept as a ''satellite mly convinced that there is a .'\f)ril -10. 6:00 P.M .) society stigmatizes the Black ''exclusively'' to children, ac ' June, says Stephanie McN eill. This is in compari community -clinic." She also basis to do so," said Barton, April 15. H you have dialect Seventy- two percent cording to the brochure. l'roduced by WNET/13, McNeil!, coordinator of pub added that the clinic will be adding ''At the present time, of the Ebony group said that son to the old facility's 225 BLACK JOURNAL is made lic relat ions at the hospital. ' I'm not convinced, but I'm Black students should not be beds. free of charge for people of f)()Ssible with the assistance New features of the hos The hospital then moved going to keep an open reprimanded for u si ng Black McNeill stated that the ad the neighborhood. any announcemen 1 oi a grant from Pepsi Cola pital include 7 levels or to a rented house on BOS E min.d ... and i;io (morel dialects in the schools, as vantage of the new facility is Children's Hospital Company. stories, three of which will Street N .W . which had research... '' , - did 80% of the BLACK the fact that it will '' put the National Med ical Center be parking spaces located (the.. official name) first thirty-five beds, in 1872. In A spokesman for JOURNAL group However, whole complex under one get them in before BLACK JOURNAL underground to ac 1875 it moved to 13th and W Newsweek magazine said 90% of both groups feel thcit roof. " She added that pre opened on Febr'uary 11, 1871 commodate one thousand Streets N .W . The new ''We are confident that the Poll.· Black Students Blacks also need to be able to sently the hospital is spread with twelve beds and a dis ca r s. The old building had pensary. Then however, rt hospital cost $58 million decision of the Court of Ap April 13. speak standard American out in a lot of differ.en! Should Not Be five stories. dollars to build. peals will be upheld." He English, and the vast major buildings. The old ·facility is only catered to patients be- , Punished for Black The first twu above on 13th and W streets N.W . ity admitted to speaking ground levels are for am standard American English Dialect School bulatory, emergency, ad The new hospital also in when in predominately ministrative, d1agnositc and allows for program ex !Jr. Ben1amin Cooke, white'Settings. treatment services. The last pansion in the areas of in <:hairrnan of Howard U niver Both groups also agreed, two levels are devoted to tensive care. and the burn s1 ty's Department of Applied 75% of the Eb ony sample patient care, as stated in a unit In addition it serves as Communications, attack s and 70% of the BLACK Children's Hosp i tal a tea ching center for George charges that Black dialecl is JOURNAL sample, that the brochure. Washington University's ,, inferior'' in an interview trend toward incorporating Anothet f eature, accoru" Medical school. Currently in with Tony Brown fragments of Black dialect ing to the pamphlet is that the 13th street facility there ''One language is no bet into standard American E.ng- _is only one class room. TMe lish is beneficial. the rooms are '' large open ter than the other," he said move will allow for addi-- ''The ghetto chilcfs Ian- play area s'' with '' brightly '' All languages usually have tional classroom and teach guage is his most valuable colored rooms with glass the capacity to express the ing space, the coordinator possession ," Tony Borwn fronts to provide a cheerful_ culture and the values of added. that particular society concludes. '' It merits ad- · . environment rather than one of isolation." The emergency room has H1 sto r1 cally, we have been miration and love. It should There is also a 250-seat expanded, according to led to believe that our lan be encouraged to flower and d 't . . h ,, d . McNeill. This is in keeping .. guage is inferior, that there's bear fruit so that it might a~ I o r1um wit au_ I~, with the hospital's theme really something wrong w ith contribute its own speciallv1sual equ~pment serv1c~s which, she stated, is '' to · qualities to an English la _ and operating rooms which it And of cou r s~, i( s been keep the well child well'' .. said that a ra ce without a guage in which all Ame~i-- have ::closed ci rcuit tele- VISIOn ,o\nother feature which is knowledge of the history cans cou Id ta k e price. And not found in any other part in the context of race rela- A skylight an inner-court ar1d culture is like a tree of town, McNeill said, is the without roots. Sd. we have tions, the quest for com- .and large mirrored windows are added architectural ef psychiatric unit of the hos- to understand that our lan munication is an atternpt to guage is linguistically valid relate to other human But'' tie added, '' we have C'\ beings." ' \ A \ I ' News Briefs ' .·' \ . I ' Thought'' He was al s·o active ' I By Brigette Rouson ' I Hilllop St.Jtiffwriter in the civi-1 rights movement • i~ the U.S. a"nd India, Dr. ' I ' COLLEGE DESEGREGA- ...ie lson died at age 81 in I \ ' TION must be quickened as Hyattsville, Saturday, March ' I I I a re sult of a recent federal 2bL , • STUDENT LOANS GOT It depends on what ''life'' means ... , ' I \ l court ruling. the Washington I TWO BOOSTS RECENTLY. fur most of us, life is a good job, a good house. a good Post reported this week. The car ... and if we're lucky, a good marriage. On the local level, the O.C. • decisio n, which affects For some (and perhaps"for you) this is not enough. The student loan program is on co lleges in six states in ''good life'' somehow is not enough. Life must mean some· its feet again. said a recent • cluding Virginia, urged that thing different: the attempt to live in union with God, to serve Washington Star report The p·lans consider the ''unique others, to give as totally and as generously as you can. federal Office of Education irnportan ce of black The Paulists offer a way of life which can satisfy young,men ITH U has agreed to operate the DINE colleges." Th~ Department who seek more than the ''good life." As a small community program for 1977-78, taking ( of Health, Education and of Catholic priests, we have worked for over a century the task from the financially • Welfare is c harged with throughout the United States and Canada-from Manhattan troubled D.C- loan program. developing guidelines to im to Toronto, from Greensboro to Houston, from Los Angeles RMET ERVI E -. The program came to a halt plernent the order. Within 90 to Fairbanks. Our mission? To speak the message of Jesus after local bankers refused days, Secretary Joseph Christ to this modern world: to communicate His shattering ·see JOHN GOODWIN universily clinlng hall any further student loans Califano must submit guide love and overwhelming forgiveness in a time and world where unless they received $2 .4 lines to Virginia, Arkansas, He so often seems absent. 232-1400 million in repayment for or call Ffor ida, Georgia, North To do so, we are actively involved in parish work, preach defaulted loans. Over 1,700 Carolina, Oklahoma, and the ing, adult education, campus ministry, publishing and mass District residents can benefit court judge John H. Pratt communications. We are missionaries: we are bridge· from revival of the program. made the ruling Friday, April builders. We seek to serve the Gospel in ever new ways. Nalionally, more students The Prices for the summer Meal Plan are as follow s 1, nearly seven years ,after The Paulist life is not an easy one. But one who dares will wilh 2 meals Saturday and Sunday. will be eligible for the 19 Meal Plan - 3 meals per day Monday through Friday the NAACP Legal Defense find rewards beyond expectation, satisfactions beyond federally-subsidized student· 6 Week Price - $139.56 Fund filed suit to force dreams. But not complete satisfaction, for we are constantly loan program thanks to 10 Week Price - $232.60 college desegregation in 10 searching to make the Gospel real to more people in today's legislation passed last yea r states. No ruling was made world. Meal Plan - 3 meals per day Monday through Friday. which sets a higher limit on 15 on four states in the case: Don't let your idealism die. Discover what our community adju sted family income of 6 Week Price - $132.24 • Maryland, Louisiana, can mean to you. recipients. The government 10 Week Price - $220.40 Mississippi, and Penn 10 Meal Plan - Any 2 meals per day Monday through Friday. ' will pay part of the bill for Fiii out !he coupon below for more infoTmalion aboul !he Paullsts. 1 sylvania. Week Price - $121.44 student whose parents make ------6 up to $25,000 in adjusted in Dear Father DeSiano: 10 Week Price - $202.40 FUNERAL SE RVICES were Pluose send me more Information on the wotk 7 Meal Plan - 1 meal per day Monday through Su nday. held Thursday, March 31 in come, increasing the likelt of !he Paullsts and 1he Paulist Prieslhood. Rw. Frank OeSiano. (" !. P 6 Week Price - $73.50 Rankin Chapel for one of hood that banks will lend to those students. Many DiTff'.lor of Vocations NAME ------ 10 Week Price - $122 .50 Howarcf s own. Dr. William PAUtlST FATHERS The Meal Plans listed above may be purchased in the Food Service office beginning April 4, 1977, Monday through bankers have been less than Dept. 0 117 STREET ADDRESS.------Stuar l Nelson wa s a Friday from 9:00 a. m. to 4:00 p. m., • willing to . provide student 415 W"l S9!h S1ree1 CITY ______STA TEO__ theologian, dean, and vice New York. N.V. 10019 All MEAL PLAN PURCHASES FINAL. NO CHANGES AND NO REFUNDS. loans due to inefficient ad "'- 1)r ...' :· d~f't at H oward Univer COLLEGEAITENDING------si ty, and founder of the ministration and high default CLASS OF------,.Jc,ur nal of Religiou s rates in some places. • • 8 April 1977 THE HILLTOP Page 3 • • • • • • NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL .• Racial .Tension at • ._ ~ · Mixed. Couple _Refused ' Rhodesian University ' ~Wedding Permit · ' ' By Marazere C. Uban1 During the session, Prest- by Ollie Johnson attempting to breakf the bail. Hilltop St•ffwriter dents Kenneth Kaunda of . . Tension mounts daily at Zambia and Samora Mac hel country's lmmorality1 Act ''Witho ut Bubbles, I Plans by a top Black the U niversi!y of Rhodesia in of Mozambique, along with and are free on S1 ,700 bail would have nothing to live model and her white Salisbury between the senior officials representing • Jannie said that he is for... She is my choiCe and Afrikaner boyfriend to get university's White and Black Angola, Tanzania and Bot related to Gert Beetge, a driving out of South Africa married have triggered a member of South Africa's ex studen1s. swana with tw o top Zim- to neighboring Swaziland major controversy in South . treme right-wing Herstigte Sources c;lose to t he babwe nationalists, worked every time, was like a flight Africa. Twenty-three-year National Party. University auth o rities out ways of intensifying the to freedom. We could forget old Bubbles Mpondo -and ''Bubbles and I planned to quoted a Bla ck political Zimbabwe guerrilla war. the ugliness of a beautiful sc1ent1s t·teac her, Don Observers see the in body- builder Jannie Beetge marry o n April 9 by Moslem announced last weekend cou ntry," said Jannie. Mothobi, as saying. '' tension creased t empo in the nation rites. We had the approval of that they had every intention has always been there bet- atist surges as a result of the a Moslem priest. " he added. Bubbles, who has been of getting married in spite of ween the races. recent visit 10 Africa by the Both have indicated that offer~d several modelling South Africa's ban on mi¥d '' You can never get fruitful Soviet President Podgorny they want to continue living jobs in Paris, said that they marriages under the I discussions going in tutorials and Cuban Premier Fidel hl in South Africa. would get married in the morality A ct and there is no shifting in Castra It was repo rted that Miss French capital if they could Love ac ross the color line racial stances." Zambia's foreign minister, .,. Mpondo took him to the not d o it here. Jannie let it is also illegal and carries The Bla ck lecturer, like Siteke Mwate, told rep o rlers southern coastal city of Port be known that he would prison terms. Bubbles and other Bla ck rn tellectua)s out- that the Quelimane meeting Elizabeth last week to meet never again vote for the Jannie have set a precedent side the confines of Z1m- came at a crucial time b~ her parents. But the two ruling Nationalist Party. ''N ot in South Africa. They are were arrested soon after over· my dead body'', he babw e, ha s come to the cause, according to him, ''of Podtt.-.rnv in Maputo: Tom~toms and a fly i:;watter in return for increased Soviet aid . . currently awaiting trial for arrival and later on said. ' conclusion that ''t/1e univer the efforts of Prime Minister · r i l eas~ • si1y is bound to reflect the Ian Smith of Rhodesia to situation outside. I believe reach an internal ement with ' that only by changing the what he regard s as moderate Leftists Capture Village regime in Rhodesia can the Blacks." ' by Salwa Salman have been the fiercest since situa!ion change here." In Moscow, talks are cur the cease fire last Novem ews OCUS .According to reliable sour rently going on between LE BANON: Palestinian ber, of the Lebanese C ivi I • ces fron1 Salisbury, the Black Premier C astro and the and Leban ese Leftists recap By Moses Pinkston War. Students of the university Soviet Kremlin lead ers on tured the southern Lebanses Foreign News Editor · · The Palestinians and Left • have been infuriated by the ways to aid Black nation billage of Taybeh, according ACCRA, GHANA (AFP) - \·. • wing Lebanese have also act's of Smrth's security for'\ alists in crushing the white to News Agency WAFA. Th e The U.S. Administration succeded in repelling the ces on 1he defenseless mrnority regimes in Zim fighting involved heavy ar will review the American Conservative Forces who populace. babwe, N am ibia Azania. tillery and is reported to stand on the international tried to launch a counter In some instances, the • ' cocoa agreement. visiting report wen! on, some of the attack. But eyewitnesses said U .S. Congressman Charles st udents have been recalled ''111 egal Guns'' in that the Rightist made no D iggs said in Ghana Mon by ' their parents to witness D.C. progress, despite an intense day. the ·, bU'fial s of their slain suppo rt bombardment by The Michigan Democrat . sis ters arµj brothers illed by By Marazere C. Ubani came from Russia, France, the I sraeli s, who ha ve also said the United States was the trigger-happy, gun tot Hilltop St.iffwriter Germanv and Viet Nam. been an ally of the aware of Ghana's concern ting rebel soldiers under An estimated 400,000 Sgt O'Neil said that only Rightists during the Civil about American failure tol Srnith's o rder~. ''illegally- held' guns of all ab out 62,000 guns have War. sign the accord, negotiated Confirmir1g the state of · descriptions are still on the been registered w ith the Correspondents i n the in Geneva in 1975, but he ·' uncertainty at the insti·tution, st reet s of Washington, D C., . Police Department since area say that Israel cannot_ did not say how soon the thf' Vice Chan cellor, Rev. according to an official of 196B, leaving a greater num deny the i r active 1n- U.S. might initial the agree Robe rt Craig, told the the Metropolitan Police ber of unregistered guns volvement in the fighti ng, as _ ment university's 1977 in-takes ''it Departmenrs Firearms D ivi- numbering over 400,000. His they have tried to do, Ghana had earlier ap has been at times rough and ' s1o n. department he said works especially. since l sraeJi. pealed to Mr. Diggs to use hazardou s going for both The official, John M . on tips and information weapons have been fou nd, his influence to ge t the U.S. students and staff during O'Neil, told a Howard about those possessing guns in add ition to pictures in the It;_> sign the cocoa agreement these years, and there is little Universi ty investigat ive illega lly. When the guns are Washington Post. The Congressman is Chair rea son to assume that the reporting cl ass, on a visit to collected, O'Neil said, the man of the House Fo riegn showing Israeli and immed iate future w ill be any the police headquarters, that bulk of the work involves Affairs Subcommittee on easier. there are '' only 60,000 legal photographic identificat ion Lebanese Rightists together. African Affairs. Correspondents al so repor Jhe Black students, ac gun owners in the District. When the captured and D iggs said the Carter Ad • ted that the w ounded Con- -:: ording to well informed Showing the students a stolen guns, including the ministration was sensitive to sources, have engaged 1n a number of confiscated guns, ''Saturday night specials," se rvat ive Fo rces are being African Affairs and was war of words with the white Sergeant O'Neil said one cannot be identified and taken to Israeli hospitals. . following developments on third of the guns were re claimed the guns are turned the con tinent students a number of times Pier re Gemayel, leader ot covered by p olice officers over to the police storage Rep. Diggs flew to Ghana, and are now in a state of the Phalangist (Con on patrol duties. area for a two.year duration Sunday night. from London near explos101l. se rvat ive) Party, held talks Mea11wh ile. the five Among ihe con fiscated After this period, ' if not on his second official visit to actionagainst''imperalistag- dent Human Rights body UMTATA, TRANSKEI (AFP) with king Hussei n of Jordan, African Frontline Presiden ts, guns are thbse made over iden tified and cl aimed by Africa in the past five ssors'' arrived Tuesday to said, ''Persistent use of tor discussing the possibility of mon-Jr have ended their seven hour seas as wel I as in the cou n- the o w ner, the p olice ths. He spent three days in ntinue medical treatment lure is institutionalized in Vice·Admiral Aurelio greater military and political top priority talks in Q ueli try. destroy the guns, he Ghana and flew on for visits n speci alized clinics, the Nambia. It is employed Maldo·nad o, Head of ar1 cooperati o n. mane, Mozarnbique. The foreign made guns d isclosed. to Ivory Coast. Senegal, Mali East German News Agency, almost on a routine basis by Ecuadorian mission to Trar1- and U pper Volta. ADN, rep orted. sec urity police during inter- skei,. said recently thar his , l "he agency added that rogation of political d~ delegation's visit · prov idc~d CAIRO, EGYPT (Reuter) - these soldiers had already ~ tainees ." the necessary basis for the The Middle East News undergone ''extended South Africa administers • estab lfshment of - relatiur1s Agency (M ENA) quoted medical treatment in their the vast former German bEitWeen the two counlries. African sources this week as country." colo ny io defiance of the Transkei, a former South. saying that the 14th Summit AON said that last year, United Nations. African Bantustan gi'len its O Meeting of the Organization more than 200 wounded NDJAMENA; CHAO indep·endence last Octobe1 of African U nily (OAU ) w ill sold iers of Liberation Move- (Reuter) - 26, has so (if been re- be held from June 3 to 5 in ments from Angola, Mozarl'I- Four people convicted of cognized only b)'..-South Librevi lle, the capital of bique, Guinea· B issau, trying to assass inate A'frica. --The visit indicates Gabon. Rhodesia (Z imbabwe) and President Felix Malloum of that t~e South Americar1 The summit willdiscuss the Palestinian Liberation Chad last year were ex~ country of Ecudar will be the developmer1t of con- Organization were treated in cuted by fi ring squad Mo~ the second nation in the l- ditions in African territories East German hospitals. day. w orld to recognize and esta- • still under ''rac ist regimes, Their hospitalization costs Six people had died and. blish diplomatic relatic>r1s • and South Africa'' MENA ad· were financed by donations 70 people injured on April with Tra nskei. getting cleaner lately. We've obviously ded. latest developments in f r om the East German 13 last year when a grenade UNITED NATIONS - Environmentalism st ill got a lot to do. But as we do it. Plain talk about th~ Middle Ea st and people. was thrown at the President Lesotho needs su bstantial I qUe tions relating to Arab- as he was reviewing troops. emergency aid to strengthe11 we need to study carefully the costs and -will It muddy POLI.UTION CONTROL A · an cooperation w ill al so MOSCOW, U.S.S.R. (AFP) its fragile ,econpmy and benefits, to keep environmentalism be taken up, the African PRETORIA, SOUTH reduce its dependence 011 the job pool? from tying America up in kn()tS. So far. Armco has spent S260,!XXl,(XXl for pollution control systems. Running sources were quoted as AFRICA (Reuler) The just-concluded visit South Africa, so as to be- Some people think America will have sayinS South Africa's Chief by Soviet President Nikolai come less vulnerable to that equipment costs us another to spend 11 trillion dollars by the mid- MENA said that the OAU Deputy Commissioner of Podgorny to Tanzania, Zam- deliberate pressur~, a.United 520.o:xJ,CXX) a year. We've slashed o ur 1980's l>tl more pollution control. Could Summit will be preceded by Police, Lieutenant-Genera l bia, Mozambique, and N ations Mission reported air emissions But now we've this hun your chance of getting a j ob 95 ~o. a meeting of the OAU's Mike Geldenhuys, has Samolia has given ''a new this week. passed the point of diminishing returns. you want'! We hope not- but it's a Council of Foreign Ministers denied alleVtions by Am- impetu s to the bilateral The mission was sent by Cutting into that final 5% can cost pos.~ i bility. which will • draw up the nesty l ntel-national that relations of the USSR wilh the UN Security Council to more-and waste more electrical America simply doesn't have a agenda. police interrogating those countries," Soviet Lesotho at the end of last energy-than it took to stop the enrir e detainees in South West News Agency, Tass, said last ,J anuary to check on the trillion dollars to spare. Shifting so vast 95%. What's worse. generating the EAST BERLIN, E. GER Africa (Namibia) use torture. Tuesday. economic and social con- an ;1n1ou11t from other uses will disrupt MANY (AFP) - electricity to reduce industrial emis· In a report rev 1ew1ng Tass particularly stressed sequences for Lesotho of the nea rly every other national goal. Fifty-five Angolan soldiers sions further often creates more Human Rights in Namibia, that the Treaty of Friendship closing of its borpers with A dding costly environmental '' seriously wounded'' 1n pollution at power plants than industry the London-baseq indepen- and Cooperation signed bet- Transkei. eq/Jipment doesn't inc rease industrial .. w een the Soviet Union and The clos ing was ordered removes. As a nation, we need to prtxiuction. So once the equipment is .------~----.,,M o zamb i que ''sh.ows the by authorities of Transkei; carefully examine environmentalist in place. the h;1ndful o f new jobs African countries encounter- which Lesotho refu ses to demands and balance them against created f(>f pollution control is more Free-Armco's plain ing the provocations and in- recognize. their social, as well a'i economic. th~n offse1 by pr(xiuctio11 jobs that trrgues of the imperial ist I n New York the Am talk on how to get consequences. year don't ·l·''.. g· c·4------·T·H-EHILiiLiiTiiO .. P ______..,s_A_p.. ri,.1.1 .. 97·7~ ··. i ' EDITORIALS/ LETTERS ( -- ~- - .. -- .. - -- First Amendment Farce • With two legal decisions and evidence Further, NEWSWEEK "coincidentally" ' aired on both sides, peculiar ironies exist in c hose to exercise its discretion after the current Yette-NEWSWEEK matter. publication of Yette's book. This not only Samuel F. Yette, presently a jou rnalism rai ses another question, but appears as a professor at H oward, filed suit against bitter irony. NEWSWEEK apparently ter NEWSWEEK when fired "coincidentally" minated Yette for excercising the same in 1972 after publication of his b opk, The liberty that it enjoys, freedom of the press. Choice which deals with Black genocide. Journalism as a profession has a civil Yette, the only Bla ck reporter working at obligatio n which is extended in investiga the Washington bureau of the magazine. at tive reporting the time,. wrote the book on his personal This obligation, included within the time, an exercise of his first admendment ethics of objectivity and fa irness should right He reportedly filed suit for two impel journalists to seek racia l, economic,· ;;> • reasons: he c harged discrimination in their and political parity within the American • decision to release him; and that his 1 • system. Editors, writers and anchor persons ~ release was also an ant~first admendment often complain about court decisions (e.g· action. In 1973, the D.C. Commission of The United States vs. Earl Caldwell, Miami •• ~~ Human Rights awarded him $1 ,000 in • Herald vs. Tornillo) infringing their first . "'' - • damage s (and a $20,000 compensation for I admendment rights. But NEWSWEEK main Attorney's Fees. I On Monday, March tains an unsubstantiated cla im of in 2S, 1977, the D.C. Court of Appeals, ofetterJ. • • ofetterJ. • • ofetterJ. • • ofetterJ. \- • competence against a fe llow journalist for . W,,tshi ngton' s highest court reversed the exercising these same rights under which it ' 1 ~3 decision. publishes weekly. In b o th instances, the defense's /Jlack Wo~IJ !Jn • . . • 8 A 1lril1 977 THE HILLTOP 1-' agc 5 . • COLU POINTS Human Interest • Despite The Administration,, Racism' Is Still Amongst Us . By Ro y Betts Jlrcib lt~111 tl1at 1.... 1111 r,11 110111 a In letter l o J)ol1t1cal society or 1he l31a ck llrl''>'>· ''reverse d1scrimin.itio11'' 1n th e Hillltlp Milnilging Editor 'lCJl ut1011 l1t•ft', ()r ,1ny\vl1('rc I 11 l're~1dt" r11 iror11 •'VIit< l1t•ll, d,llt•c! It was re1Jorted 111 tht' ()ct. 8, hands of N ixon--or1ented Suflrerne t\ rncr1 c,1 Jlar11c Llli!rl) , thc· grJl)f'' 01 \'larch-, 1Y 77 lfl('~l' ''cr1t1cal niat J 1 arid \Va' 1tirr;r1s1 {/ 10 see thf' fJat·ht•t1t. AJ>.lth) '-f'1·1n., rri !if' tf1<· co nflict, the Cornmun1st seeks to '>tudt'Tlt!> i'l1v1r1i'l th(· 1Jerrormer J rult• rutht'r tl1Jn tht' l'X< ••1)t1 tJ11 J h(• 1ust1fy violent revolution ancJ So, 1r1 uncJersta11d1n8 the' dn>\v,t>c _ goor lcl \11ti{' 1ilat1~e . l\r1(j "G H E HILLTOP • 8 April 1977 ~'.ll.!~ b • ' • ·- \ , Spirit of 'Black World' Revived. in 'First World. ~ r- 'Reflections on Blackness' refutation of the infamous ''Moynihar1 Repbrt'' in the By Vance Ha\vthorne mid-sixties that blamed the problems of the Black race or1 the disintegration of the Black family. 11 \Vd\ dJ) !Jrux1n1.11 1,ly a y<>ar ag(J that j{Jhn !-l . lohr1son, Other permanent section ~ t)f First W o r/(J include On the PULPITS of my masc eS!eemed Dreams. . , ~Jrt•-.1(lc•11! 0 1 1o hr1 son l'ublicat 1o ns (\vl1ic l1 in clu By Peter Harris citedly. ''We have the power to communicate with, to, 'Find Yourself a Dream' and abou t ou rselves. let's do that; knowledge is a A deterrn1r1ed comrnit1ne11t to honesty mos! aptly powerful tool. It is a tool that can lead to who knows ( h.ara cter1z{'~ th 1~ generation of Black communicators what." Speci•I lo the Hilltop theC'hi!dren's' Theatre reper tory com pa ny (Playrn ake rs) ·- one that rn1n 1rniz es the historical paradox of prac That knowled ge has already led to a diversity of ticality vs. artistry. themes, captured by the thirsting cameras of in The Howar d University to perform under his direc- In fil1nrndk1r1g. the commi tment ha s become in Children's Theatre and the tion. • dependent Black filmmakers; cameras which are held creasingly t'\' 1dent Nurtured 1n the volat ile period of Department of Drama in by a breed of communicators bound by at least one Roger Hogan of !he Music the late S1xl1f~~ w!ll'Jl art was rneas ured by its message, creative association with the commonality: Honesty. Department has written the today's f1lrn1n ak ers are consciously making products Howard Players and the '' Films made by young people today range from ' music; Kirke Harris, a music dep1ct1ng life fro111 a Black frame of reference. Playmakers will present T.G. roaches - I' ve seen a fl1m on roaches - to love, st ude n t, 1s the M usical Cooper's musical d rama, Michelle Parker .. 011: 24, a poet, a technician at local revolution, welfare," said Tony Gi ttens, director of the Director, and LaVerne Reed lY 5ta!ion WTTG -5, 1magir1ative. But much more than Find Yourself a Dream, 'the Black Fi!m Institute, wiich features films not con of the D rama ·Department that she 1s a filmrnaker wh o typifies the seriousness final produ c tio n of the sidered ''commercial'' by the status quo in the film i n had cho reographed the that underscores today' s crop of Black i ndependent season, April 20 May 1, 1977 dustry. In a telephone interview this past Wednesday, musica l numbers. Set in the Ira Aldridge Theatre film artist<; he added, however, '' I do find in the content of the Designer, Ron Tru itt and •• 1 think that f)eriod - mid 60s to early 70s. - was on campus. films, (that) the people on the sc reen are Black. There Costumer, S.t Clair Christmas phenorncr1al for Black people. There were changes, This sensitive and moving are Black settings ... ( that) tend to be in areas familiar to have cap tu red the 1·88 4 rearrar1gements, renr1aissance.,, especially for sel f, " she play, written by the Depar t Black people. period and the d ream con said softly over the pho ne from the station Tues da y. ment of Drama's Chairman, ''I think," he elaborated, ''that most Black in cept of this fantasy hand ''It gave u~ a sense of po\ver that had been sleeping dependent filmmakers tend to naturally draw from 1s based on the life of somely. not unkr10\vn - but sleeping. and had a great im their cultliral and historical background." Colonel Charles Youns, the pression on all of U!>. Parkerson offers a simple answer to the realism por third Black man to be ae- - The, premiere of thi s ·· 1 became cor1s c 1ou~ or a responsib ility; not only to trayed by today's filmmaker: ''The truest picture of cepted to West Point production, designed for' the er11erta1n, but .. " she pausecl, searching for a phrase ourselves comes from ourselves," she said. '' Tha t is .i._ Military A cademy. It calls at- entire family, is set forWed that w ould say 11 all. '' Blit to be ab ou t somet hing... " the vital role that Black filmmakers should play. But /111le1>e 11de11t jil111 111akc!r 11ficl1ctlc /'ark erso 11 tention to an early Black - nesday, A p ril 20, and w il) l "hat res1)011sibility has cu lmir1a!ed in her lates t everyone is not al l positive or negative. I think it is irn hero, considered to be a fine run for tw o w eeks, Wed pro1ect. · a docurnentary on 1azz si nger Betty Carter. portant to show both aspects or we'll get a jaded pic groups, and Temple University in 1970. Acting didn' t gcntlcma11 and sc holar. nesdays throu gh Sundays. A She is JJre1lar1r1g to shoot Carter's live Blu es Alley per ture." seem practical, so she majored i nitially in stage design Colonel Young entered third week of performances formance 1n Wa~h1ngtor1 on May 2. There is a tangible frustration associated with being and, lighting. Bu.I because there was ''sornething about Wesl Point in 1884 and com- i~ scheduled to begin May14 The f1lrn, shr '>a}'S, !'> tt1e reslut of her r1eed to share an independent Black filmmaker. Gittens sees it and film that enchants me," she switched her major to pleted his stud ies, despite and close M ay 20. \Vi!h peoplt.•, give exrJo~ure to relevant Bla ck people, blames it on the lack of Black input on the distribulion Rad10" T.V. and Film. having t o fa ce <1nd hone lier skills as ar1 artist and exhibition levels of the fi lm industry. The meshing. of those media has given Parkerson a discrimination, in 1889. 1-iis The troupe is then ex pected to depart for Du,n '' Life touch(:S ... crea 1ir1g 1r11ages," she said, explaining ''There is no distribution network for consistently fresh sense of motion and rhythm. qualities which, career as ar1 act ive army of dalk, I re land, where the the ~)ersonal , intense 1n1eraction that is the ca talyst for putting out Bla ck films:·· he explained. '' In exhibition, she say s, are vital to her films, and i nherent to the iicer took him to Mexico, production will be entered her film idea~ . " It filters through self, the camera, the BFI is the only theatre that shows Black films on a con medium. Haiti, Liberia and Cuba in the I nternational Maytime film, arid people reac t to th at ... negatively and tinuous ba sis .. We · hope to establish a Black movie ''There's a rhythm and movement in film - a visual where he rode w ith Teddy pos111vely; that's beaut1iul. . house." music - outside of the music you hear through the Roosevlet and his Rough Festival Competition ears, " she s. aid haltingly''A diss olve is mu sic, and so is '' Here·., a lady, a pcr1orrner w ho deserves more ex· ''Most of the arts in America are government sub Rider s. Roosevel t com It is a signal honor for this a fade; a cut is an other beat. .. so slow motion is posure. not that I an1 that great an advertising sidized," he summarized. '' I see no rea son why Bla ck mended the young officer, award- w inning group and rned1urn. But a lot ot f)eOf)le's lives will be er1riche " a11other ... the music is there. films cannot be subsidized alsn A film can cost $1,000 stating that had it r1 'b t been will mark the second time '' Particularly to Black people, music i ~ such an irn she says hu1nbly of t"ier tl ocumentary. It is a depar re a rninute to make' somebody has to pay the lab costs." for him and his Black troop, that the How.ird Players from her r1r st 35rnrn f1lr11 , So1our11, .a warrn, cative portant :part of our live s and history," slie said, almost BFI is funded with a grant fr om the National En the United Stat es '' would have performed overseas. ten rn1nute i 1lr11 about d man' s travel across in awe. ~ ' It is an other way of accomplishing that com dowment for the Arts. Last \veekend it held a festival have lost the battle of San The last time was in the late Ph1ladelph1a \vh1ch ·· relates to how I view life through munication·· of Washington-area Bla ck independent filmmakers at Juan H i1t" 1940' s when the Players For Michelle Parkerson, her audience is paramount an urban ~ett1ng ." the Martin Luther King Bran ch of the O.C. Public Professor Kel sey E. Collie, toured Norway and Ge-t '' For rnysf'lf, I get 10 \V<>rk 1n an area I love and it's But it is an enti ty which is as shifting as the rhythm Library. Jn addition to the film exhibiti o ns-' which in Acting As sis tant Dean of The many under the direction of g1v1r1g me orl-har1ci ex1Jer1ence; I'm w orking and lear embodied in her w ork. ''For them (audien ce ) to have College of Fine Arts and cluded Parkerson's So1ou rn - cliscu ss ions were held Owen Dodson and Anne ning wh1ct1 is helpir1g r11e,s tefJ toward my next film - so me emotion about a film - that they see what you between each showing. ''We ri ever show a film Producing-Director of the Cooke Reid. • and I hOf)e there will b(• - which will be longer and without discussing iL'' G1tter1s said. •ee - and beyond - is thrilling." Children's Theatre, has more 1ntr1 cate. Other than what she says is her '' real obligation - gathered a talented cast of The invitation to perform Parkerson was an only child, and attended Parkerson, a srnall-1ramed woman with an in to be honest and clear," she offers no highbrow, stu dents and community in the International Maytime Washington, D.C. Catholic elemen tary and high cl1nat1on to\vard 1ntr G.1ye cont. from pg. 6 _ By Be rna rd Gavin nine ot its cuts and arrange- strumentals. what IS oftentirnes Hillto p Sl~ffw r iter men ts are o r igi nal. The To try to pick the real win- mus1c 1s fres h and ners on the album is to sim- meaningless dialogue. ~e · d . I · ply point the whole admits at o ne point on t e It is comrnon 1or a group innovative, isp aying 10 album that he is''nogood at iust corning on the market to remarkable creativity. album, but one i;an say '' This that sort of thing.'' arid one produce ar1 album simply to The gre'te" t of co•e was Must be Heaven," ''Wake ~ would readily agree with see! copies and prove their exercised to include many Up and be SomPbody," • · h · ''S tormin','' and ''We know a him. • marketabilit y t o \ heir instruments, yet eac is One of the few sparkling · producers. Once 1h 1s was playing distinctly to add to Place" are Ol1tstanding. cuts lhis album ha s to offer accomplished they sett le the ·t 11·t of the totol Brainstorm takes a little bit at1ona Town eet1ng vi a Y is an eleven minute filler sou nd. of New Birth, a little bit oi down into the bus1ne<;s of called. ''Got to Give it Up." Storm in' is characterized Tower of Power, a little bit developing their own style. This would be a decent • But every now and then a by ari unusually heavy but of Stanley Clake, and just a sono but after the first five group con1t· ~ alcJ11g that c ut~ sweet bas s line. They have a trace of Taj Maha l and rolls it ~ . . , i ·nto •weet lo.ttle boll of or six minutes one 1s prone , an alburn thal make., a horn section t h at on I y can l ~ musi cal and creative be described as hellified. something new. to stop listening to it lrs that monotonous. sta tement It 1s of these 1 Rerrwkable ·for a new group, .------I-lo\\' \\'O t1ld natio11al poliL·y N;1titi11;tl ·1·t) \\·11 \lccti11g, agree? Ol·L·asi 1i113Jl)·, bt1t performe,rs that the su per its electronis extra s are ex 1 Ji111iti11g CC1ll1 <)11lil· gr1)\\1t!1 \\1 l1i ct1 bcga 11 i1l 197+, is our th3t S 11c 1t i111purt311t. ~""o r stars are borr\ en ter B rairl pertly timed so the effect ;. nff ec t ;\ r11c1·iL·11' s a111biti<1 r1s ~ \V;l\' (Jf p1·i> 111<1ti11g upe11 N ati c1 11a l T0\\1 n Meeti 11g, storm w ith their new album goes over very well. Th~ She has the Stormi n'. band is as adept at hand ling disl:t1ssiur1 • THE HiblTOP 8 April 1977 SPORTS l .. .•• t'"' - -- ·-- ••• 3rd Annual ·Howard Bison.Top Seed In Relays Tomorrow • J.C. Smith Tourney· • By Joseph Saxon came up behind first place By Peter Harris ' and Steven Jones winners, and defending ' NCAA outdoor champs The Howard tennis team, ~ "j' Hilllop Staffwriters Arizona State(3 02) and Texas in its first home game this ' Southern and University of season, gave Xavier ;i rude ' With the mile relay team f exas. I~ 1 r coming off i1s bes! per welcome in the cold yester- ... As the weather gets war day, scoring a lopsided 7-2 ' formance of the season in mer, Howard seems ass ured ! I ' !he Texas relays, H oward will victory at wind swept Turkey of topping it best ever time Thicket recreation center, ' host the Third Annual of 3:05.87, ith which they ! Howard Relays in Howard raising its record to 5-6. captured eventh place in Howard is in Charlotte, St ad ium starting a: 9 am the NCA outdoor cham· ' tomorrow rnorn1ng. E N.C. this afternoon com· pionship last spring at ·2 .. Howard will probably be , ' ' peting in the Johnson C. ,I P hiladel 1a. "' ~ J;;<:-. the favorite in the college di • Smith Tournament. The .., vision after running a 3.07 1 1977 HOWARD e Bison are seeded first and .=. I . !' • mile for fourth place in the RE LAYS • have a first round bye. On o ~ : ~ f Texas relay s last week ORDER OF EVENTS Wednesday, H oward ~ • Richard Ma ssey ran his > , defeated Lo~·o la of Baltimore ~ 6-3 at Loyola. lifet1rne bes t 440 split at 44.9. TIME: • > ' " •• The Bison overpowered • • Other team s competing 1n 9:00 .t .m. Mike Banks makes putout as. Gene Fleet l1clps ?Ut last week agai nst AU. It's Howard-· • Xav ier, wh ich plays o• the college division are Nor • Delaware today . • Maryland and George Mason folk State, Federal City Col EVENTS : ~ today and tomorrow. They J lege, Maryland Eastern 440 Y.trd Rel.ty (cli1ssified) Jost one match each 1n Sho re, M organ State, a nd Slow He.tt Mike Anthony s.erves i n his doubles match w' liile Bison Nine Stumble Against singles and doubles. In h is Gallaudet College. 120 High Hurdles - Tri.tis Phil Janifer gets ~t on -adjacent court. - singles match, lethargic Jesse Although 11 ra ined earlier 100 Yard Oi1sh Tri.tis this week, the tra ck shou Id 440 Yard D.tsh - Fin.tis (on Holt lost a 5-4 advantage in thony took two straight sets, almost all their matches in be ready. If 11 isn' t. the meet time) Md., Face Delaware Today- the first set and fell 7-5. He 6-3, 7- 5, to complete a per- bad weather. It snowed in \v iii be shifted to Gallaudet 120 High Hurdles - Semi then lost the second set 6-0. feet day- both p layers won Baltimore during W.ed- at Florida ar1d We st 100 Y.trd 0.tsh - Semi He and Gray Bryan were in the singles portion. nesday's match. defeated 6-7, 6-0 and 6-2, in ''l(s real important'' An- ''They' re pretty. tough," Virginia Ave. NE. How.trd Special By C. K. Smith The Bison were never in Some of the players With the Bi son tra ck team the G.W. game as the doubles. thony sa id of today's• Janifer said smiling con- 220 Yard Dash - (Final on Hilltop Staffwriter believe their success on the as the top draw, the Howard time) Colonials pounced on star D'Juan Cotton and Phil Carolina tournam ent 1n fidently before the start al road was related to the lack Janifer, after losing the first CIAA country. ''We' ve got a his doubles match. '' Bui Relays ha s. lhe potential to Sprint Medley The Bison ba seball team ter Bryan Nichols for & runs beco rn e the area's most will entertain the Blue Hens in last Sunday's match up. of acad emic pressure. Since set. 6-7, st6 rmed back 6-0, 6· big ma·tfh · Tuesday with with the conditions out prestigeou s meet However, retu r ning to school lh"e 2. G W . - whose number one here, we are more used to ii 1:30 p.m . from the University of The team la ck of a quality tra ck is its academic strain as well as The lean Cotton blended in the area - so a win than they are." Delaware today at 2 pm on seems to going through ma1or drfwback. ~e hi s solid, methodical style would get us up for that '' lrs hard," Anthony said 880 Reli1y the Banneker Recreation some cha ni;:e s. ·rhe B1 so r1 have run on the athletic competition with the sprightly Janifer' s match. " of playing in the wind and 120 High Hurdles - (Fini1I) field The two teams played The once se veral excellent tracks this seems to be affecting the mecurical approach to form The Bison handled the cold. '' It takes a lot of cor> 100 Y.trd D.ish - (Fin.ti) a doubleheader earlier this electrified bats that sent season, but a! h ome these players performan ce. what proved to be an un- windy conditions well centration.'' 2 Mile Reli1 y season \V ith the Blue Hens lightning bolts through th e world class runners must 440 Y.trd Rel.iy (Ch.tm beatable com bination. yesterday, u si ng the ex- The Turkey Thicket court snat ching both games from air in Florida are now treated Hinton realizes his team's set tle for a b oys' club fa-· pionship) ' Smooth Izzy,' Israel King. perienct/, team members say, is located in northeast. just the Bi son {6-5, 5-1). with a c hemical which morale is dowrt ''You can' t c1l1ty. One PO\iible answer 1 Mile Rel.ty and his partner, Mike An- gained as a result of playi ng beyond Catholic University. Yesterday, Howard lost to causes them to elude expecl them to be fired up is a 1ar1an track. ' ' ' · -· .- i: ' ' '""~-('., }\. 1',;.,i_ · ~ -.:.t The site was used fina'lly, af- William Moultrie, head Maryland University 7-6, baseballs. when they are going bad," ~ ' ' • '"' '" ...._-i "'~ a'"'' c L _," }~ ter some uncertainty, about 1977 Howard Relays yieldir g five unearned runs, On the trip to Florida, he said ''The guys realize tra ck coach believes that a 1 .s' .. '.' "'' .,.., -;;;... . ~~ x ,~£'f: -'~"'' "".. f .' .~' ', t.'!,~"': -...; both location - and game Participants as Gene f leet fell to 4-3. Howard collected 83 runs their position and what they tartan track for H oward is • .. • .-: " 1 "·J ct , ., '{J .A-.: time. , The Bison led 5-1 in the on81 hits. In their last seven '' 25 years overdue." He really can do, its just a mat ' '\ l ,. 11.: .:....i. ' t. ··:" i. ~ 1 :fl ~ f""" '"'They go't here late, they likened the Bison track team fourth inning On Mike Banks' outings, it has 59 hits and ter of time. " " ...,. , ~ ·"' ~ ~ ' "l - '~ ~- were su pposed to get here at three- and Don Freeman's' scored 34 runs. The team Time rs running out, to an old tru ck rolling on a HIGH SCHOOLS ~ 'r.f: eleven this morir1ing," tw o· run homers. Their batting average of .360 has however. If Howard expects dirt road. Bell Voc.ttion•I :.- , ,_ · Howard head coach Eddie dwindled to .310. an invitation to the Regional "" Runr1ing 1n the mud McKinley defen se and hitting ceased at Davis said. Howard, plays itJ ''We were definitely hot NCAA post season tau r rnakes you work harder Cardozo the same time, however, home matches either at th.e when we were in Florida," nament it must have a bet becau se it suck s at your feet. Anacosti.t ·dropping, the tear11 's record Carter Barr.on courts at 16th to ·8-1. said coach Chu ck Hinton at ter than .500 average against Wher1 we leave the dir! road Roosevelt and Kennedy N.W. or Ban a recent workout ''But now, D ivi sion I (maj"Or' colleges) and get on the highway we Spingarn The Bison are in a rut neker Recreation courts, ins tead of just one or two schools. fly." Wilson. They had lost their last two w here they also practice 1n players falling in!o a slump, Their ! n a m or~eriou s mood • outing~, 3-2 a~d 10-7 to good weather. we have one or two players record against Division I Moultrie said,· e uniVersity COLLEGES, Vi rginia Teeh ar.id George must make a mrritrrcnt '' Washington respectively. · who ar.e doing th j' hitting." sc hools is 5-5. ::: Fed'eral City College this summer 1f the track team is to receive As the season progresses, · : ~·. Norfolk State · • we'll give you the the quality faci lity that they Morgan St.tte U'niver.sity .A .ss·i·stants - ·. Var·i edlBe- easierthe sche. duleFollowing.doesn' t get anythe :1-.~~ . deserve. M.tryl.tnd Eastern Shore 0~~;t~ .,J !n Austin last weekend, G.tll.tudet Delaware game, Howard O ~"':a-' Shirt off OU the Bi son competed in o nly j ·. faces Catholic, (tomorrow at if ~. ...~~ · lwo even ts: Sprint medley CLUBS: • d s A t' 'ty Catholic), Virginia State, Tern- "' ~ ~ _ --··-··· - . back ... and the mile., Reggie So .Peninsul.t Spikes Tr.tck & hIn - ce._,ne c IVI pie, and Penn State next Gray Bryan grimaces as he return s from t he baseline. and extra cash, too journer ra ~ a 46.1 on the Field Club week. sprint medley and Michael D .C. Striders Inc ~ ------~~~~~~------Archie anchored in 1:49 .1 Concerned Athletes In ~c- .Steven Jones ''Coach Williamson will flat. But it was only _good By tion Hilltop St.oiffwriter, usually be talking to the enough for fifth place. South Atlantic Associ.ttion players and J will study the Despite running its fastest H.twks Track Club '' Whenever a team pulls ·half-time statistics and then time of the year, th e milers out a great. victory becacrse point out to him who is in of a master St{O~e of foul trouble and who has coaching ·genius, it is often been hurting for the other quariums:Only For as"su'med ·that' ·it was the team. ,Also if we have a brainstorm ·. of an · ail-wise complaint about the of· head· coach. But there are ficiating, I will tell the cap oihers who contribute -tain to tal k lo the official Imaginative Few heavily to the success of a about it before the start of By Steven Jones team-·the assistant coaches. the half," he added. Hill top St.tffwriter · But though all assistan't Alexander also has several '. coaches are importan t to off-court responsibilities: Have you ever seen those beautiful undei"sea scenes their teams, their roles and on television and dreamed that you were a ski·n-diver? . responsibilities vary from And while still in your fantasy world, have you suddenly sport to sport . c: had the urge to buy some scuba-gear and dive into your. Cyrus '' Cy'' Alexander, -; Howard s as sis tant basket- • • local river? . • Then you realize that the only thing that moves iri the ball coach, is an example of ? dirty urban waterways are treadless tires, rotting drift one who is intimately in- - ~ Independent Repair Shop wood, and discarded beer c11;ns. valved with the team's :; m But fear not aqua-fans. There is a way for you to enjoy management He has a great Columbia exotic marine scenes in your own home and satisfy your deal of responsibility and _..o In The District Of has .specific duties. Or:ie of~ --- them is to help develop the·.c • team's ballhandlers. . • Also Available: Body Work & Painting ''Sinte I played guard in • college; I conc~ntrate on Here s a great idea. on'ce working with the guards you quality for a temporary Cy Alexander • • durin.g · pre-season prac office assignment we 'll give QUALIFIED TECHNICIANS~-- ' you a FREE Tl T·sh 1rt Wear • t.ices," he said in a. telephone '' I will u sually scout the 1t--wherever you go Let the inlerview. team we will be playing in world know you have an In his playing days, the upcoming game and exc1t1ng _iob and great wages. too Al~xander was · a guard at then dj.scu ss strategy with (.atawbae College in Salis- ~illiamson ," he ex Handle ALL Your Reg ister now lor !he To great summer fun fund bury, N.C., where he was plain~ ''Usually, i_f ~ave a ·named · :'Most Valuable · t someb y on Get up !ront where you game aga1ns belong and get a free Defensive Player." Friday I will go and see hem T·sh1rt. 1us1 for th e fun of it During Howard' s regu la_r .. . pay1 . s.eason, Alexander works '' I also help with the MECHANICAL PROBL~S With head . coach · A . B: recruiting.' I will take one _, ------W i lliamson· in deVeloping part of the country and the Tero.poraries. Inc . reps will strategy for the games. coach will take the other NOW WE HAVE IT be on campus on ''We ex_c;ha nge ideas on p~rt of the country, and try offensive and" defensive · I LET US KEEP IT ,tN D. C. ' to sign the p ayers on our strategy," he Says. '' I may put recruiti ng lists." •. 10 .t .m. - 3 a.m. in a couple of plays from my Alexander says he has no , Savt_JO% on Labor APRIL 19, 1977 coll~ge ; days. We also share problems relating lo the · Room 211, ideas on overall game players or . handling the • A-Building ' wildest fantasies. With This Ad! st rategy."• . . · responsibilities of his job. Fin.tnci'a.I Aid Office No, you do not have to soak your head in the bathtub Also,during the.course of ;'Whenever players come or corner the mark"et at 'Joe's Fish Store.' Nor d o ~ou the game, there • I I • 8 A pril 1977 THE HILLTOP - Page 9 ..._,------~ • • SPO Sfi eaker Hype (Stylish Stars and Stripes) Makes Picking The Right .One Tough . buy an expensive pair of basketball shoes, for example, if rubber (heel) the less shock to the feet from the ground. By Pete r• Harr!s J9 nger, making it a se nsi ble buy fOr lots of action. you are just an occasional player. You do not need a glass Tennis is sti ll popular, and partici pati t)n is not slack ELEVATED HEEL : If a slightly higher (not platfo rm) layer Thf' Arner1ca11 growth of the specialized sneaker is like slipper ii you ain't going to a ball! Opt instead, for of rubber is made onto the sneaker, there is less press ure that of any saleable produ ct's in t his country: p rom o ti on ..a either. Howeyer, if you are a player ma ke sure you wear put on the ac hitles tend on. which is the !hick l i ga ~t almos t to the point of absu rdity. sturdy, durable shoe that is able to adequately support the right shoe. Sprained ankles ond ligamen t stra in s, ankles weak from periodic play. resulting in court l ime are the alterr1a ! ives. ru nning from the calf to the heel. Here, the shoe- top During the past 10 yearS, when recession was at its\ lit ~ le peak, sneaker sales sho t up b.y JO to 40 percent. while \ / / Unfortunately, tennis shoes, as a rule, are low cul cushion is importan! too Selec l a pair of shoes, then, that offer considerable su p WEDGE: Simply another cus hion inside the sneaker, regu lar shoe sales declined. St at istics show thal 1n the la st ~ :(-)/ few years, the sneaker industry m ade $1 b1ll1on a yea r 1n port around the ankles. A shoe with a rigid ' heel cou f1ter' made of soft springy material (foam, te rrycloth, rubber). (the seam at the back of the <>hoe), supports best" Helps when runni ng on hard surfaces such as cement or sales for approximately 220 million pairs of sr1eakers an- • 11ually. · The seam stab ilizes the foot keeping the heel fro m asphalt a boon for lunch time jogger s on urban .~(, rubbing the shoe' s back. A soft l>ir1d1ng arour1d !he shoe pa Yem en ts. Promol1o rl, ..i11 1ndus!ry's assurance of confidence in a top, extending sligh tly ab ove the hel•I counter, gives ad FLEXI BI LITY : The runner .wa n ls the sneaker to bend produ ct. has gr own w ith equal fervor. For each snea ker ded ankle su pport w it h the natural roll of tht> fool at the joint where the rnade for use 1n a different sporl a big na(llf' athlete is • On more p oint: a quality heel count{'r a11cj binding are toes meet the ball of th e foot Rigid sneaker·s (soles made hired to ~toul su pporl arid genera lly make !he consumer partic ularly importan t tt1 you ~)l a ye r ~ wh o de> n(l\ wear of ·plastic, cheap rubber) jlrohibit such mob·ility, cau sing th ink su cess is pred icated on what coYers hiS feet. ,J socks while play ing tennis. I! 1s rt>co 1n1i1e11cll•d that you shi11splints, a pa infu l inflam mation of the shin· bone area, And 1n America, where syrnbols are th ou gh! to be a wear either socks o r hali-cu t tt•rrycloth 'iootsies' for ad· ROUNDED TOE BOX : Make sure the sneaker allows sure sign of'mak i ng 1l ' Woody Allen esco rtet1 forml'r firs! lady Betty Ford 10 a re ci t.il ir1 a f)air oi P.F. F.lyers. A! !he ded cushion and as a s1>o r1!(e ior 1 i !·1 ~ 11ir at io r 1, which can movement for .i ll toes arid no t just the big toe. Here, the - make the sneciker sti 11 seco 11d toe, usually thf' lo11gest, should be the comfo rt U 111!Pd Na1io11i., 1t1t.• ! lLO'~ Va ssar Arafat MaY <' a SfJCech • But tf you still w o11' t w e11r ,111y ~cJc : k ~, at lt1i1 st tt1c cour1- yardstic k. If it is fricliot1-frctl, the others will be to c1 wf'ar i r 1~ 11 1>.1ir, rl f bla<·k baskt•tball ~ht1! 1 ~!1io tt 1 sign s t'Jf 0 ter an cl b inding w ill fit c lc1~(·. • • .. • • .. . . ' Su1•n \I. C•lhoun W•yne Kend•ll Denise Gwynette Speech Arts Anitnce Seni or Nursing Junior • Freshm• n Aries Leo Ac:iuaril!S • 1. More important than too 1. The survival of preJominantly many Black people realize the Black colleges in the U .S. is ex key word here is su rvival To me, tremely impor!ant to . the future tha t requires the unification of a of Blacks. It is the key factor in people. Black colleges provide determining whether or not the base of such a unity. Stem Blacks will succeed in life. Blacks ming from that base is a pecu liar tend to exceed more in a Black opportunity to equip black stu· institution. They also have a dents with an education that wider range in which to s pec i a~ would absorb the educational ,,. deficits inflicted on us by a 2. In 1ust about any election sorely inadequate public school there is going to be some con system. White institutions are in flict To avoid some if note.ill the sensitive to that fulfillmeni. Aslim Abdull .ah Seni or people at the top mus! attempt Being a financially stagnate Zoology llbr• to s lop ii before it starts by im people in a status oriented plement ing strong enforcive society, education is our alter' -1. It is important that we keep rules. Furthermore, the people at native to surviva~ if survival Black Colleges alive so that the the polls should be more could be considered as an students can have an opportun competent Also the HU elec alternative Bearing that in niind, ity 10 experience the proudness· toral process tends to be more of students as well as faculty and of being educated among i ts a political scru ggle instead o( administrators need to look at own race We should be able to HUSA Student Gov. Debo°f•h A. Cow • n l the institution's role a little more touch our children that they can Accounting SeriouSly. How important is the be equally educated at a c ollege Junior survival of.Blacle colleges? As im that understands their needs as S•gitt•rius portant as the survival· of a func well as our O'Nn. Black colleges 1. The survival of predominantly tional, prosperous Black People are stepping stones for us to be- Black colleges in the U .S. today coming a united ra ce. Without 1s a definite musl Bla cks now Black colleges some of us might QUESTION 1: have available to them some op not be able to come to college, portunities that once w ere clos How important is and most of all be an individual. .. ed to them. But, the catch is, that 2. The e!ectora! system at the survival of they must be exceptionally Howard is faced with a basic qualified And, I do not think any problem. This is poor atten predominantly Blac school could better prepare or dance, both at campaigns and relate to a Black individua l better voting polls. To solve this prob colleges in the U.s.? than a Black institution. lem, I would suggest that: 2. I see room for vast improve Campaigners should use QUESTION 2: ment in HQ\oVard's electoral pro school lecture halls to campaign . . - grams For the last two years, instead of the dormitories. This is What improvemen there has been some disc repenc because not every Howard stu· ies in choosing the offices of the dent lives in the dorms, besides can be made in most dominant roles here at campaigne(s are generally Howard, mainly HUSA and ignored there the HU electoral SPEAl Discussion , Disco Re search Meet' The Queens Back Alley's Friday April 8 Join One, Join All • WHFS-FM National Town Meeting EASTER SUNDAY DISCO. at Gil Scott Herron Benefit Concert Poetry Contest., Project Morehouse, Dillard, Tuskegee, Production of The ''Tradewinds'' of HO'Nard presents a leading soci al the COCONUT GROVE 908 7:00 p.m, Cramton Auditorium. Howard, Edward Waters, Lane, University, Mike. Ron, Darryt . psychiatrist and a well-known Thayer St S1lver Spring. April Professor A.W . S1ngham, of ''Short Eyes'' Lincoln, Xavier, Winston-Salem, Darnel~ and Dale cordially ex· columnist in a discussion of this The deadline for entering the 10th. Startlng 9:00 pm. Co the Department of Political Jackson State.; Morris Brown, Spring Affair Ball and Queens tend their invitation to al t in timely subject entitled '' No WHFS POETRY CONTEST is May Sponsors Caribbean Student Science, has been 1nv1ted by the to Lorton Elizabeth City, North Carolina A Presentation 10:00 p.m.- 2:00 terested persons to join ''The Growth and Sacrifice: Limits on 1st Throughout the month of Assoc. and the I nterna11onal United Nations !O evaluate a . · a.m., Sheraton Parle Hotel & T, Miles, Florida A & M, Cen The Ba ck Alley Family ha s Tr adewinds Fan Club." There the American Dream?'' They are April, entries will be aired over Studenl Assoc Howard U n1ver· research pro1ect sponsored by tral State, Hampton, D .C. been honoured with a request will be special events planned Dr. Robert Coles, Pulitzer-Prize WHFS on Weasel's all-night 51 I y. U .N. Environmental Program. Teachers, during the Black from the inmates and staff a1 for all the members, so hurry and winning author of 24 books, and show; and in May the w inning join the ''club" as soon as poems will be published in book Thirty distinguished ex1Jer ts College Queens Unity Weekend. Lorton to bring the flit show, Announcement George Will, political and social possible Deadline is Monday, form and w ill be eligible for 1St Art Seminars from all over the world have Apri16 -9 on Howard University's SHORT EYES, ·10 the central 'analyst April 11, 1977. 2nd, 3rd and~t.h--J) la ce prices. been invited to Bridgetown, Bar Campus. facility at the reformatory on President James E. Cheek They will appear on Wed A series of Seminars for the will be the gue st of the residents nesday, April 13th, at the Ken HO'N to enfer.-send no more bados between April 1 to 6. 1977 Wednesday, April 6th ar 8 PM. For further information please Exhibition of African Contem of Carver Hall on the evening of nedy Center Concert Hall at than two unpu blished poems, to evaluate this project Migut.•I ap1nero's, SHORT contact: Pamela 636-0603, Marla porary Art are being coordinated April 13, 1977. The event is part 10:30 a.m. Moderator is Doublas typed, with name, address and EYES, had its Washington 636-0973, or any member of the by Howard University's Depart Professor S1ngham is currently The National premiere at the Back Alley 0f the dormitory programming Kiker, NBC News. phone number on each page to: "T radewi nds. '' POETRY, WHFS-FM, 4853 C0t; ment of Art and the Institute oi involved in a research project for Playhouse (Uptown), 136.S Ken set up duri ng this semester. It is Black dell Avenue, Bethesda, Maryland Arts and Humanities with visiting the United Nations on the New nedy Stree~ N .W ., and is on particularly designed to establish Motherdust · 2001 4. artists from Africa. lnternat1onc1I Economic Order.· Communications stage Thursdays thru Sundays commur1ications · between the Howard On April 26, 1977 Papa l!Jra President and students. Judges: Rod Jellema, Director, . . . until April 17th at 8 PM . Taal from Senegal will conduct a Society . Topics, such as the structural University DYNAMIC, ELECTRIFYING, Creative Writi.ng Program, seminar on "'The Role of Art 1n !Atte ntion! as well as . the functional COMMITIED IN THE TRADI- University of Maryland. Social Development"' - N BCS- development of the University English TION Doug Lang.. Director, Folio On April 27, Kamala l shag The Howard University Bad invites you all to its " FIRST AN will be considered in terms of a Poetry ReoJding Series from Sudan will conduct a minton Club would like to invite NUAL FUNDRAISER & MEM short range and a long range Department MOTHERDUST A 12- member ta net H•mer, Creative Writing Death Notice Instructor, Montgomery College. seminar on '" The Role of Women all interested student s and BERSHIP AFFAIR'' planning syste m announces Female Acapella Vocal Ensemble Prices: 1st prize - Nikon Artists in Sudan".. Both seminars faculty to come to a participa Monday, April 11, ·1977 The OHice of the Vice Prest THE TWENTY-S IXTH ANNUAL camera with all attachments. w ill be held in thE' Department tion clinic 1n this fasci nating at the dent for Student Affa irs ha s CHARLE S EATON BU RCH Vocal s, Directed by Bernice 2nd prize - Port.able electric of A rt at 1 P.r.-1 game -FOXTRAPPE- receive"'d notification of the MEMORIAL LECTURE Johnson Reagon typewriter 16th & '' R'' St NW unexpected death of a student, by !his clinic will JJr!;'sent a uni- . Te nne s~ean s!! Movement, Directed by Kenneth 3rd Prize - $250.00 worth of The For those interested in member· Mr. Wendell C hambers Jone s, ID THE RMAN B. O 'DANIEL que opportunity for students of ship, there will be a- program Daughtery new boks. No. 916 781, Sophomore, Liberal All students from the State of.,,Professor of English, Morgan the game to learn the real art of from B:OO pm • ?:00 pm. Singing Black American Tradi- 4t~ Prize - s1so.oq worth of Swahili Arts, on Saturday, March 19, Tennessee should attend a St ate University efficient Badminton strokes and From 9:30 to 2:00 am - DISCO. tional and Contemporary Music- new books. .... 1977, at his home, 1349 Girard meeting at Cook Hairs Lounge and Experienc e . gain a truly competitive edge 1n NBCS invites you all to Disco· Street. N .E., Washington, O.C He Saturday April9 between 3 and S Editor, ClA JOURNAL 11t this fast-paced game. interes ted Faculty, Students, Two Performances:l Chama cha k iswahili cha is survived by his mother, Mrs. p.m. This meeting will give us an Room 105, Locke Hall Saturday, April 9 Professionals, come support this A Benefit for the U jamaa Taifa La Weusi (The Swahili Soc The clinic w ill be free to HO\oV Theodora Jones, of the home ad opportunity to meet and greet University Campus 's ociety dedicated to the intere'st Nyumba (School) cover charge iety of Black People's Nation) of ard University students and dress, telephone AC 202, B32- each other before the end of the Friday, April 29, 1977 of Bla ck Communicators Picnic on M ain Campus • Howard University presents: A faculty and will take place at the 3284. school year. Also, plans will be 4:00 P.M . Continuation of our dedication Mr. )opes was funeralized on Saturday, April 9. 7:00 p.m. lohn H. Burr Gymnasium, April made to organize a party in the No Admission Charge Howard University Relays to our people .. . 12, 1977, from 1:00 PM to 3:00 March 21, 1977 in Arlington Chemistry near future. 15S4 8th St, N .W . at Q St Afrikan music PM. National Cemetary. Spring Disco Poetry A film on African culture from The club also welcomes new Society It's Gonna Be A The Support Com mittee for Tel: 265-0965 CLASSIFIEDS one of the Afrikan E.mbassies members and wishes to extend the Exhibition of African Con Place: Cook Hall Uounge to the Howard University com The A.CS. - student affiliates ,•, Spring Affair'' Easter Services temporary Art. scheduled to Smithsonian Museum of H is tory Date: Tuesday, Apfil 12, 1977 mu:nity, the opportunity to play of Howard Uni. presents, ''The open at Howard University on and Technology; Admission Free------The Episcopal Church at 2nd Time: 6:00 • 8:00 p.m. every Friday afternoon from CrO'N ded Crystal Bait How to The happenin' is gonna be April 30 in the Department of IMPORTA N T~ ST l.J PY A N· and U Streets, N.W. which serv For an experience that will 12:30 to 3:30. Become Famous By Being Wrong the ··Spring Affair'' this Friday Art, College of Fine Art. is spon Sunday, 12:00 noon NOUNCEMENT: es the Howard U niversity com . ' touch the hear~ come see what In Science"; a topic to be dis from 10 p. m. • 3 a. m. at the soring a SPRING DISCO on Fri - I munity cordially invites students Taifa la Weusi is about At no cussed by professor Irving M . Sheraton Park Hotel! Featuring day April 15, 10 pm to 2 am at 14th St and Constitution Ave., APPLICATIONS NOW BEI NG and faculty to Easter Services - charge to our people. MSUH Muslim Klotz. April 22 at 4:00 p. m. in the live music by First Lile Produc the Seafarers Club 1n Southeast Mall Entrance ACCEPTED for Summer 19n Easter Even , Saturday 9 April at Chemistry b ldg. lecture hall tions, Door Prizes, A Cash Bar, Washington, D .C Q md Ac•demic Ye•r 19n·78 few 9 pm. Meeting All students are cordially invit etc.. Ten Beautiful Black College For ticket information cal l the For further information con MOSCOW, LENINGRAD, LON· Disco The Crearer Vig il Liturgy wilh ed Queens from such schools as Exhibition office 636-7075. tact Elizabeth Whitfield at 381- D O N, PARIS, DIJON, NICE, SA· The men of Alpha . Phi 1rumpets and timpani. The 6781 (day), or 423 - 3961 The third general meeting of Morehouse, North Carolina A& T, LAMANC A, VIENNA, FLOR- Omega, Zeta Phi chapter invite preacher 1s rfle Right Revd Black Theater (evening). the Muslim Students of HO'Nard Florida A&M, Xavier, etc. will 1ENCE, PERUGIA,. GENEVA, COP.. you to a jam you won't forget The Howard Alpha f. Mohamed, Suffragan University, sc heduled for Wed, also be present for this evening ENHAGEN, AMSTERDAM. All Come to 5921 14th St N.W. on Bishop of Central Tanganyi k<1 . Festival . A Production of Bernice Johnson Apr. 13, 1977, will be post paned of enjoyment. subjects for •II students in good Friday, April B, 1977 and get Easter Day, Sunday, 10 April, The African American Studies Reagon Studios until further announcement. For Place: Sheraton Park Hotel, st•nding. Accr·edited uni\lersity down from 10:00 p. m. until you University Festival Eucharist at 6 am. Pro Program and the New Afrika any information. please contact: 2660 Woodley Road, N.W . courses . 4, 6,8- week 1ummer get tired cession and Sung Eucharist at 9 Players will sponsor a Black M .S. H.U . Date: April 8, 1977 terms Of quilrter, semester, full Chess Tournament am, Procession and Solemn Theatre Fe stival: Speak the Truth 1st Congress Howard Univ. Adm. Bldg. Box Time: 10 p.m. - 3 a. m. ye•r terms. Summer from $710. Eucharist at 11 am (with trum to the People during the months 824 Tickets may be purchased of E.P.l.F. Ye•r term from 51590. CON ROTC Awards Day The Howard University pets and timpani) of April and May. The festival Wash., D.C 20059 from Cramton Box Office, the TACT: C ENTER FOR FOREIG N Chess Tournament will begin on Preacher - The Revd Prof. J. will consist of four productions ' Office of Studen'l life - Room under the faculty direction of Program STUDY S/AY Admissions - Dept. The Howard University Army Wednesday April 13, in the study 280, or at the Door. Semi-Formal Carleton Hi}-den, PhD. Howard M 216 S. St•te/Bo11: 606 Ann Ar Mrs. Eugenia Collier, African -Speech: by delegates to ROTC Awards Day will be held Tutor room of Meridian Hill at 7:00 Attire. Univ. bor, M ichig•n 48107 313-662· p.m. It is emphasized that you Champagne and wine and American Studies Instructor at EPLF 's Congress on April 22 at 1:00 p.rn at the the University of Maryland Balti 5575 main quadrangle in front of Fine must be on time. University cheese parties follow each ser -Slide Show - Cultural Show Counselor vice! more County. -Filrn " Heroic P:eople'· Arts. A lour round sw iss w ill be All the performances include (Emergency) On the victory of Kam· EDITORIAL SERVICES More than SO awards will be played to determine the best ten actors and actresses from the" presented by the members of Positions puchean people COPY EDITING players. Then those ten will play loans: African American Studies course -Date: Sun. April 17, 1977 the Corps of Cadets, the U niver each o ther during the consecu PROOFREADING • W RI TING The Upward Bound Program entitled Studies in Black -Place: G.W.U. sity and the community. All are tive weeks following. Trophies • ED ITING at HO'Nard is looking for tutor All University Loans of pro American Drama. Through the Marvin Center, ball room invited to join the Department will be awarded to the top 7 Attention FAST, PROFESSIONAL RESULTS counselors for its Summer '77 spective graduates, dS well as medium of drama, the per -Time: 7:00 p. m. of Mili/ary Science 1n honoring Program players. If you have not pre other delinquent University formers hope to express the CALL: (202) 488.3474 the awardees. viously signed up or have any Loans are currently being trans truths of our world ' Tutor counselors live on cam Apply Now questions contact Robert Davt ferred to Student Accounts. Such If you have any questions, The Graduate '' Europe at Europe.tn Attention pus w ith high school students son at 636-0330. transfers will be reflected on please contact Mrs. Eugenia Pric e s'' from the D .C area for six weeks. Collier 455-2158. low cost flights to Europe, The H.U . chess club and clinic your account in the Student Ac· Chicagoans counts section as a ''Code 42·· For Hilltop is still meeting on Tuesdays from Students MIO East. Africa, and th e Far Tutor counselors should have transaction. Effective date April Black Girl 7:00 to9:00 p.m. in room 115 of East Let's get ourselves together a major or minor in English, April 14, 1977 B:OO p. m. the Office of Student life. 4, 1977. Call Eu rope/ I n le r nat i o n a I to meet and greet the homies. science, mathematics, sociology Editorship 306 Fine Ari s Building · UMBC Council Presents Toll Free. 1-800-223- There's been a gathering plan or -psychology. Other majors will Ltd Federal loans: Ricky ned, and your prese nce will be be considered, however. Juniors, Seminar Appli c a t i o n s are n o w 7676 April 23 and April 24, 8:00 p.m an asset to ea ch and everyone of seniors and graduate students All prospective gra'diJates a vailable f o r e ditorship Theatre - UMBC CA RL T. ROWAN ~ us here and maybe to those at are eligible to apply. There will be a Seminar on who have National Defense'Dir p o sitio n s with the Hilltop. SESSION IN (of Agronsky and Company) SUMMER home planning to choose How PO ISON CONTROL. Seminar ect. or Health Professional (i.e. All p er sons intere sted in A men Corner Date: Tuesday, April 19, 1977 PHILAl 3-room apt, fu rn, ard as their institution of higher Applications may be picked will cover most common House Medicine, Dentistry, Nursing b ecoming . the Edilor-in April 30 and May 1, 7:00 p. ro. Time: 6:30 PM priv. bath, share kitch en. education. up at 2213 4th St, N.W . (next hold Poisons. and/or Pharmacy) loans should Chief o f the Hilltop or other Lecture Hall Ill · UMBC Place: School of Social Work Near Univ. of Penna. $160. Come prepared to convey door to the Bison office). Only PLACE: Room 207 College of contact the Student loan Office sub-editors should pic k up Ceremonies of Dari< Old Me 'l Auditorium monlh Call or write: Vin your ideas on ob;ectives for the qualified individuals w ill be Pharmacy and Pharmacal at 636-6080 to sc hedule an ap an applicatio n in the Office May 14 and May 15 LECTURE club. The meeting will be held in granted an interview. Science Buildi ng. pointment for an Exit Interview. of Student Life. All ap Cel)t Jubitee/4312 Chestnut Theatre· UMBC B:OO pm. QUESTIONS Cook tl alr ~ .,... on Friday, WHEN : Tuesday, April 12, Graduation clearances will be plic ation s are due b y 5 p.m. St. Philad. 19104/ {215) EV 2- All performances are free and AND ANSWERS April 8, 1977. , , .JO p m~ Be Tfie dead11ne for .tppl ications 1977; at 11 A.M. issued only after the Exit Inter Apri l 11 in the Offic e o f 5195. open to the public. there!!. tS ":pril 12, 1977. COME! LEARN! SAVE LIFE! views have been conducted Studen t Life . PR IVA"TE RE~N \, ' - .. ... - "' -