PAGE TWO THE BENNETT BANNER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1985 Semester begins with bright omens Campus events and an act by the state legislature bring good news for the spring semester and an indication that a revival of interest in black culture is occurring. To a certain extent, the speaker on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, Dr. Durley, may have been the harbinger of many of these good tidings. For it was Durley who offered a living portrait of King- the man as opposed to King the demi-god. The guest showed the connections between King and today’s students and maintained that through preparation, we, too, can affect the world. In addition, Durley’s candor and his willingness to tell a story on himself won many friends in the chapel. It was no accident that an impassioned “We Shall Overcome” was sung at the service’s conclusion and that people joined hands joyfully. There’s good news in our curriculum, too. A much needed and sorely missed course in Afro-American history has returned after a too lengthy absence. It is being offered by Mrs. Landa Addo, a resourceful scholar and teacher. This change answers one of the main student complaints during the last year and brings the college more in line with its mission. We welcome this turn of events and urge students to capitalize on the opportunity. On another front, the college is celebrating Black History Month with sub stance and style. There will be a major presentation every two days. Our excep tional choir will be giving two performances, and^ our scholars, speakers and actresses will be highly visible. An array of splendid guests, including the pop ular Pin Points and the political trailblazer Shirley Chisolm, will be appearing. The terrific news from Raleigh is that the state has committed itself to a memorial for Dr. Charlotte Hawkins Brown, a guiding light in black education and a woman with close ties to Bennett. All of this news points to enlightenment, the proper business of our lives. Basketball needs college-wide commitment If you woke tomorrow and found that the student center had disappeared, you’d probably be shocked, and you might inquire about the causes of its absence. You might even get mad and want to do something about it. An institution about as important as the student center has closed shop for the time being, and no one beyond the physical education department seems especially ruffled. We’re talking about the once-proud and flourishing basketball program which has shut down for the season due to student indifference and insufficient funds for athletic scholarships. What’s worse, the program may be gone for good. Bureaucratic credit lines do not wait for resurrections; the money flows in new directions. What seems to have been forgotten is that sports are crucial to the identity of any college. They are a unifying force. Under their influence, sometimes dis parate elements on a campus—students, teachers and administrators—come to gether and celebrate the life of the institution. People forget their special in terests and merge in good cheer. In short, sports add humanity to the academic existence. These matters are well understood at other small colleges in this area. Guil ford, Greensboro and High Point boast lively sports traditions that foster alum ni interest in the alma mater and may do more for finances than every sip-and- chat and wine-and-cheese party ever given. This is to say nothing of the change that took place at large, but poorly unified UNC-G when the soccer team won the national championship. Sudden ly, people had something in common. Suddenly, the media were paying attention. Unity and attention equal money. This college finds itself in the grim position of having but one varsity sport left. Subtract volleyball, and you’ve got a gym used exclusively for P.E. classes. Only a few years ago, our basketball team was nationally ranked—a source of pride to the players and the community. It is time for a college-wide commitment to the regeneration of the basket ball program. Students have got to make greater sacrifices of their time and energy. The administration has got to keep basketball in the budget and increase funds so that Bennett can recruit more competitively. The faculty and staff must support these measures as well as future teams. It’s for the good of the institution. Key to a child^s school performance Want to make sure that youngsters around you and the children in your future are successful at school? No, the answer isn’t a home computer. Reading to children is the best thing you can do to create agile minds, ac cording to author and educator William F. Russell. This theory may not seem revolutionary to sisters and parents who have been following this practice for a long time. But Russell has added a new no tion that makes great sense: it is important to keep reading to children long after they have learned to read. Whv? Because children like the attention and as a recent AP story claims: “The languaq-e and vocabulary a child can understand orally are far greater than what the child could read by him or herself. So even older children can profit . . . from parents who read adult-level classics aloud.” We feel another important factor is the presence of newspapers and mag azines in the home. When children see family members reading the paper, they want to do likewise. Their introduction is gradual; sometimes the comics lead to the entertainment and sports pages which, in turn, lead back to the front section. One thing’s for sure. Any child who sees his family slouched perpetually in front of the television is going to have limited horizons. TV implants opin ions; readers discover their own. Christmas visit creates comic adventures in Germany a column by Pamela Gary A simple visit to Germany during the holidays turned into a comedy of social gaffes. There is an old cliche that says “there is no place like home.” Most Americans don’t appreciate their own cultures until they experience every day life somewhere else. Europeans frequently say that Americans are the most arrogant people in the world. They base this statement on the way that we seem to think that wherever we go our lan guage and customs are or should be dominant. It all began when the plane arrived in Frankfurt. The airport was huge, the weath er was freezing, the steward esses spoke less than perfect English, and most of the peo ple that got off of the plane seemed to know where they were going instinctively once they clear^ customs. By the time I found my way through customs to the passenger greeting area and met my party, the baggage claiming area was almost empty. It really didn’t make that much difference because my luggage was not there. After being on a plane for six hours and traveling all night, the worst thing that people can tell you is that your lug gage didn’t even get on your connecting flight and they think that it is still in New York. At this point you want to either swear or cry, espe cially after the baegage offi cials tell you to check back with them in a day or two, and if it isn’t there, then it is lost. After recovering from the minor shock of having none of your clothes vdth you, you would think that the worst is over vdth, right? Wrong! Unless you are a professional race car driver nothing pre pares you for riding on the autobahn. The only way to de scribe it is legalized insanitv. The autobahn is Germany’s major highway that appears to stretch from one side of the country to the other, con necting all of the towns and major cities. At first glance, it seems innocent enough until you realize that everyone driving must have secret fantasies of breaking the sound barrier. There is no speed limit. It isn’t unusual to see a car whizzing past you doing 110 mph. By the time we reached our destination, I was a candidate for a mental hospital. There are several things that are taken for granted in this country as common am enities that are considered luxuries in Europe. For ex ample, in order to get your driver’s license you must pay $300. Then you have to ob tain permission from the gov ernment to buy a car. The phone system is commonly re ferred to as “Hitler’s re venge” by Americans. It is a major accomplishment every- time that you get the operator to answer the phone. One of the hardest things to get used to if you are a black American is the open discrimination that is em ployed throughout the coun try. Not all Germans treat blacks as though the Civil War is still going on, but there is still enough blatant racism going on to make vis iting blacks feel uncomfort able and angry. Luckily, Germany has enough charm to more than make up for its negative as pects. The countryside is beautiful in the winter. Ev erything is covered in snow, there is little or no pollution and the architecture is very modem technology. Despite some of the cus toms like never bringing roses to your hostess if you are a male because you are expressing your love for her, or not indulging in all of the alcoholic beverages that you are offered during the course of a meal, Germany is a place that is well worth the trip. Letters to tlic editor: NAACP refutes To the Editor: Through the years, the history of black society has ben distorted. We have been told that we came from the trees of Africa. This theory has been assisted with proof from Tarzan movies. We swung from trees like apes. According to a German news paper, the black man’s brain is the same as an ape’s. It is strange that people with these so-called “ape brains” were the first hu mans to use tools, paint pictures, plant seeds and worship gods. These people created such art pieces, wrote such stories and lived in such a way that arche- ologists, historians and contem porary writers find these ape-like beings fascinating. To go back farther in time, black people played a significant role In the development of the Egyptian civilization. They found ed great empires like Ghana, Mali eind Songhay. Yes, these were our black ancestors that are not mentioned in our history books and are not shown on Tarzan movies. No, we were not naked savages who sat under trees, filed their teeth and weiited for fruit to drop into their hands. More than one scholar has paid tribute to the “legal genius of the African.” The Bennett College Chapter of the NAACP Safety is questioned To the editor: Campus safety is a big issue that needs to be brought out in the open. There are certain un necessary risks right here on Bennett’s campus. Dormitories with insufficient lighting in the hallways, easy-to- open locks on the doors and un barred basement windows are a few risks that Bennett students are subjected to. These risks should not be inflicted on the stu dent after paying such a high malicious images tuition. Along with the unsatisfactory dormitory conditions, there is very little lighting on the campus itself. When I come from my 8 p.m. evening class over at A&T, I feel very frightened when I have to walk through a dark deserted- looking campus. There are times when I am in the security of my own dorm and feel insecure. Many times I have stayed up late to wash a few clothes and was so scared that I came running up the stairs only to save myself from the man out side the basement window Who stares in at me. The window has no lock at all and no shade to keep the Peeping Toms from looking in. A person never knows if he is going to break in on them or not. Another risk which needs to be looked into is the failure of secur ity guards to make sure the cam pus is secure. Many times I have walked to the student xmion after dark to get a snack or play a video game and have looked around and seen no security guard at all. Finally, when I get to the student union, I see all the security gusirds in one comer talking, playing cards, shooting pool or flirting with the girls. This is not security that Kennett students are receiving. It is one risk after another to endanger the lives of students. I know that no one can make any campus 100 percent safety- proof, but it doesn’t have to be left wide oi>en to strangers to come in and do as they please either. Kim Liseanne Romeo Black History Month: time to honor heritage; support upcoming slate Editor-In-Chief Dee Evans Associate Editors AvantI Allen, Alaina Cloud Vicky Dunn, Tricia Hairston, Karen R. Taylor Reporters Chandra Austin, Yvonne Breece, Karen Exum Margo Qllmore, Shonna Luten Ellesla McCracken, Bemlce Scott Adviser Michael Gaspeny Opinions expressed in columns and letters to the editor belong to the author, not to the staff of the Banner. Send Mtars to the editor to Box 2. All mail must be signed by hand.