1S-TKS CAROLINA TIMES
SAT., SEPTEMBER 19 1981
September Song
By Laura Parks
Tall, courteous, kind
ly, elegant and incredibly
. shrewd United Nations
- Secretary General Kurt
Waldheim was forced to
interrupt his vacation in
his native Austria. He
went home, perhaps for
the last time, before his
expected re-election to a
well-deserved second
term as U.N. Secretary
General. The immediate
cause for his return to
New York was due to yet
another South African
invasion of Angola.
On the eve of his ex
pected second term, Kurt
Waldheim of Austria
and the United Nations,
fears that the world is
heading for a prolonged
period of crisis without
precedent in the 20th
century. At stake is the
very survival of the
human race. At the
center of the world crisis
is the rapidly
deteriorating relation
ship between the in
dustrialized West and the
developing world.
Waldheim fears that if
this aspect of the world
crisis is not resolved to
the satisfaction of the
developing world then
disaster is sure to follow.
The developing world
wants to develop. Jt
wants and needs money,
technology, friendly and
honest advjce. It wants
to feel free from super
power power plays. This
is the hope.
The reality is far dif
ferent. With conser
vative governments in
power in Britain and the
United States neo
colonialism is enjoying a
revival. Britain in the
midst of a deep -economic
crisis is re
arming and is taking an
uncompromising at
titude toward the situa
tion in Northern Ireland.
Now the United States is
preparing to re-arm and
with British support
plans to keep the
developing world in line
and destroy the forces
opposing neo
colonialism and its deep
ly entrenched powers.
Bankrupt Britain and
increasingly ? : ailing
United States need the
developing world, but
the conservati ves see this
Anderson Named-,
Administrative Director
need in terms of a Master
and Servant relationship.
inc Europeans ana mc- named director of ad
Japanese, while enjoying, ministrative services and
Durham , banker W.'; Ge?e'af Assembly. . '
Hnit Anrfrnn he h,m. ! Anderson has been an
an the fruits ot neo
colonialism, are fearful
that Britain and her
faithful ally the United
States intend to treat
them, slowly and steadi
ly, as rivals to be pushed
down at every major op
portunity. With Britain
and the U.S. re-arming,
this possibility becomes
frightfully real.
The European
response to the British
American challenge is
slowly developing. Euro
pean industrial leaders
know that as much as
sixty per cent of their ex
ports go to the develop
ing world. They now fear
that an armed America
may force them to yield
on the economic front.
The Europeans fear,
and this must be em
phasized, that the United
States intends to
dominate the economic
and military destiny of
Europe and through
Europe that of the
developing world as well.
The Europeans, to
counter the American
challenge, are increasing
ly committed to finding
ways and means of
developing an equitable
relationship with the
developing world. They
feel that only through
such a relationship can
the world economic
prder hope to achieve
stability and this also in
cludes the United States
and Britain, if only they
could be made to listen
to reason.
If reason does not
prevail, then a bellicose
United States will be
perceived as the bully
boy of the world driving
Europe and Japan into
the arms of its enemies
or becoming engaged in
an international
economic war that will
certainly doom the con
tenders. Secretary Kurt
Waldheim sides with
reason. He believes that
reason will prevail once
the conservative heart
and mind perceive the
abyss before them. But
this will require
superhuman effort. It
Five NCCU Graduate
-
Students Get Awards
Five graduate students
at North Carolina Cen
tral University Have been
warded National
Science Foundation
Minority Institutions
Graduate Traineeships
for the 1981-82 academic
Phillips of 1691 North
40th Street, Baton
Rouge, and attended
Capitol High. School in
Baton Rouge.
Trotter is an August
graduate of Tougaloo
College, where received
year. Two are sociology th bacheior 0f science
majors and three are degrec in biology He is
biology majors. the son of the Rev Jesse
The awards were a.HL- Trotter 1702 Weed
nounceqoy ur. (viaryivi. ctrppt
Townes, dean of . the
Graduate School of Arts
and Sciences at North
Carolina Central, The
traineeships provide an
nual stipends of $4,500
in addition to tuition and
fees.. ' - .
Award recipients in
biology are Ms. Linda
Kaye Bass of Mount
Olive, Ms. Tamara Ger-
maine Phillips of Baton
Rouge, La., and Melvin
M. Trotter of Ocean Spr-
ings, Ms. Sociology
award recipients ; are
Daniel .Mallison of;
Washington, N.C, and
Ms. Bridgette Hopkins
of Williamsburg, Va.
Ms. Bass is a May
graduate of NCCU,
where she received the
bachelor of science
degree cum laude in,
biology. She is the
daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Benjamin Bass of
417 E. Franklin St., Mt.
Olive, and a graduate of
Southern Wayne High
School, Dudley. Miss
Bass was a student
librarian's' assistant at
NCCU and has worked
as a research assistant at
the Environmental Pro
tection Agency. She is a
member of Beta Kappa
Chi Honor Society.
Ms. Phillips was a
University Scholar at
Dillard ' University,
where she received her
bachelor of science
degree in chemistry (pre
medicine) in May. She is
the daughter of Mr. and
.Mrs. ' Jesse - Theodore1
Springs,
Ms. He received
Tougaloo's Cogit Phi
Cogit Academic Award.
He has been a project
assistant at prookhaven
National Laboratory. He
has also worked at In-
galls Shipbuilding in
Pascagoula, Mississippi.
Ms. Hopkins
graduated cum laude
from Virginia State
University in May,
receiving the bachelor of
arts degree in sociology.
She is the daughter of
Mrs. Anna G. Hopkins
of 303 Pfccahontas St.",
Williamsburg, and
graduated from
Williamsburg's
Lafayette High "School.
She has worked at the
Colonial-; Williamsburg
Foundation. Ms.
Hopkins is a member of
Alpha Kappa Delta Na
tional Honor Society.
Mallison, received his
bachelor pf arts degree in
sociology at NCCU in'
May. He is the son of
Daniel and Mrs. Rosa
Mallison of 131-49 225th
St., Laurelton, N.Y.,
and lists his hometown
address as 607, N. Market
St., Washington, N.C.
He is a graduate of An
drew Jackson High
School in Cambria
Heights, N.Y. He has
been employed as a
counselor in a mental
hygenic camp and as a
gamcroom attendant at
NCCU, and is a member
of the National
Sociology Honor Society-
secretary-treasurer for
the nonprofit,
university-related
Microelectronics Center
of North Carolina
(MCNC). A. $24.4
million appropriation
for-MCNC was approv
ed in July by the state's
will require an end to
them, the arms race and
a long term vision of
hope about world
economic cooperation.
The hard road to these
objectives must
necessarily include the
fight of all nations and
peoples to independence
and freedom and mutual
cooperation sometimes
known as peaceful coex
istence. This September, as
never before, Kurt
Waldheim senses a
supreme danger to world
peace and stability. He
calls upon all the govern?
ments to reason. He calls
upon the peoples of the
world to join the crusade
for peace and plenty
before the peace is shat
tered and economic
chaos engulfs civilization.
'officer of the Wachovia
; Bank for ten years and is
currently a Durham vice
president of the bank.
He is the first full time
executive, of MCNC,'
which has been staffed
on a part time basis by
faculty members from
.N.C. State University,
Duke University and the
University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Anderson's new ap
pointment, effective Oc
tober 1, was announced
by MCNC, chairman
George R. Herbert, who
is president of the
Research Triangle In
stitute. The Triangle
universities, N.C. A&T
! State University in
Greensboro, UNC
Charlotte and RTI are all
participating institutions
in the microelectronics
center.
MCNC was created in
mid-1980 to operate a
central facility which will
be shared and used by all
the institutions in their
microelectronics ac
tivities. In addition, the
center is intended to
stimulate a rapid expan
sion of education and
research in the fields
related to integrated cir
cuit technology through,
... 7 ; if
1) ) M Vi
S nil
h WW
LOS ANGELES Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley cuts the 300-lb. birthday cake during a Los Angeles bicentennial
celebration on the City Hall steps. The city is celebrating its 200th a nnlvesary with celebrations throughout the
city- i . UPI Photo
support and coordina
tion of new programs,
provision of equipment,
and graduate research
fellowships.
Center temporary of
fices are RTI, and an in
terim laboratory facility
will be established in
Raleigh at North
, Carolina State Universi
ty. The General
Assembly's appropria
tion included funds for a
permanent MCNC
building in the- Research
triangle x Park, and
A Duke University
graduate, Anderson is
vice president of the
Duke-Durham . Alumni
Association and of the
Blue Devil Club. He is a
Chamber of Commerce
Herbert Said planning task force chairman, and
for the structure should has served five years-with
begin early next year. the Durham United
Way, is the loSal district
' secretary of Rotary In
ternational, and is a
member of the Sales and
Marketing Executives of
Durham.
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