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NOVEMBER 4, 2009
North Carolina
Central
U N I V E R S
1801 FAYETTEVaLE STREET
Durham, NC 27707
Campus
Opinion
VOICE
GAME
Campus
13 1
Beyond
4-5 1
E-mail, Facebook,
Here’s Willie again.
More stories written
Eagles soar over
NECD Voice
6-7 1
Twitter — why you
And now he’s going
for the Northeast
Marauders 53 - 22
Feature
8 1
should use them wisely.
after the media...
Central Durham
in Homecoming
A&E.
9 1
VOICE by NCCU stu-
game.
Classifieds.
10 1
dents.
Sports.
Opinion
11 1
12 1
Page 3 1
Page 12
Page 6-7
Page 11
VOLUME lOU ISSUE 5
919 530 7116/campusecho@nccu.edu
WWW.CAMPUSECHO.COM
Campus Echo
1959 alum
brings past
and present
into focus
Centennial News
Mattie Giles, 1959 alumna,
at Friday’s convocation.
Brandi Myers/
Echo staff photographer
By Amarachi
Anakaraonye
ECHO STAFF REPORTER
June 2, 1959 was the 45th
annual commencement of the
N.C. College at Durham, now
N.C. Central University.
That year’s
class complet
ed its second
ary education
in an era of
legalized dis
crimination,
and without
the efficiencies of modern
technology.
Most students cannot
imagine life without cell
phones, computers, iPods
and Facebook — but past
alumni paved the way with
out these “necessities.”
Among the graduates that
year was Mattie Giles, convo
cation speaker of NCCU’s
62nd annual Founder’s Day.
A major in sociology with a
double minor in education
and library science, Giles is a
retired professor of social
work at the University of the
District of Columbia.
“I am grateful for all the
University has done for me
and countless others,” said
Giles on Friday.
She said NCCU graduates
were stronger and wiser and
more educated because of
our founder. “Dr. Shepard
made it possible, no matter
the school’s name.”
Giles’ convocation speech
connected the rich past of
NCCU with the present state
of the institution.
She recounted her fresh
man year at the N.C. College
at Durham with pride. She
recalled the humiliation of
wearing “beanies,” or skull
caps, to signify freshman clas-
sificatioH^ and witnessing the
vocal gift of her classmate,
Shirley Caesar, at the fresh
man talent show.
“What a difference time,
need and resources make,”
said Giles.
Under the guidance of
Marjorie Shepard, daughter
of founder James E. Shepard,
Giles earned 55 cents an hour
for work-study in the James
E. Shepard Memorial
Library.
She told the audience
about a Mr. Alston and his
dog, who constituted “the
one-man, one-dog, one- night
stick” campus security force
from 1954 to 1959.
■ See SPEAKER Page 2 .
Crime rattling U.S. campuses
Recent violent crimes upset sense of refuge on college campuses
By Mara Rose Williams
MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS (MCT)
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Tuition
may not be the most trou
bling concern for parents
sending sons and daughters
off to college.
A disturbing pattern of
violent crime has erupted
across the nation’s campus
es — from Yale University,
where a female graduate
student was strangled, to
the University of California
at Los Angeles, where a
chemistry student was
stabbed repeatedly in a lab.
While saying that campuses
almost always are safer
than their surrounding com
munities, Jonathan Kassa of
Security On Campus Inc.
acknowledged that the
headlines can create the
opposite impression.
“This has been a very
uniquely deadly and brutal
first semester, so there is
■ See CRIME Page .4
HOMECOMING 2009 I
Two Washington, D.C.-based alumni, Anna Joyce Newkirk Pratt, Miss NCCU Alumna 20084)9, with Gerald AngeloPeeble^Mr. NCCU Alumnus, at thep^d"
Kanisha Madison/Ec?io Staff photographer
By Carlton Koonce/echo editor-in-chief
reunions of the week brought featuring comedians Kevin The newsest Ms. NCCU,
in alumni who have not seen Hart and Benji Brown fol- Chavery McClanahan, and Mr
the campus in years. lowed by entertainment at the NCCU, Tremaine Holloway,
The 2009 homecoming Eagle Jam and the traditional were crowned during the coro-
kicked-off with a comedy show Pre-Dawn dance. m 500 HOMECOMING Page 8
C entennial homecoming
events for the N. C.
Central University fam
ily have come to an end.
The fun, festivities and
Historic leaders on display
Former chancellors, political leaders subjects of centennial art project
Biology freshman Marion Grant admires a
portrait of Annie Day, James E. Shepard’s wife.
Jerry RoGERS/Ec^^o staff photographer
By Ashley Roque
ECHO STAFF REPORTER
LeRoy Walker. Mickey
Michaux. Annie Day
Shepard. WG. Pearson.
Julius Chambers. C.C.
Spaulding. Alphonso
Elder. Jeanne Lucas.
Charlie Nelms.
These are the nine new
portraits of leaders in the
black community now dis
played in the lobby of the
Farrison-Newton Building.
Each leader has con
tributed to the growth and
development of N. C.
Central University over its
100 years.
Fine arts students con-
Centennial News
tributed to
the celebra
tion of the
Centennial
while learn
ing about the
past and
present
African-American leaders.
Each portrait was creat
ed by art students from the
art club, under the leader-
.ship of adjunct professor
Chad Hughes.
“The appearances of
these faces demands ques
tions,” said art professor
Achamyleh Dabela.
“We want to share the
stories of these leaders
with the whole student
body because we don’t
want students to spend
four years here and not
know who are our main
leaders.” ’
Though some of the por
traits are of former chan
cellors and presidents,
others depict civil rights
leaders and government
representatives, such as
Jeanne Lucas.
Lucas, an alumna of
Hillside High, became, in
1993, the first African-
American female to serve
in the state senate.
“I think it’s amazing
■ See PORTRAITS Page 2
Students rally behind public option
By Ashley Griffin
ECHO STAFF REPORTER
Theodore Roosevelt
tried it in the early 1900s.
Franklin D. Roosevelt tried
it three decades later. And
Harry Truman made a run
at it in the 1940s.
Today President Obama
is challenged by the same
task.
The United States has
been plagued throughout its
history with trying to find a
successful healthcare sys
tem for all its citizens.
On Oct. 23 a petition was
presented to N. C. demo
cratic junior senator Kay
Hagan signed by 365 N.C.
Central University students.
“We began to collect sig
natures at the cafeteria and
the student union and pre
sented in classes to explain
to students what the peti
tion supported,” said Emily
Littlejohn, public health
and business administra
tion senior.
Today, according to the
U.S. Census Bureau, nearly
47 million Americans under
the age of 65 do not have
health insurance.
According to the Kaiser
Family Foundation’s Web
site, a non-profit, private
organization concentrating
on national health care
issues and U. S. global
health policy, “health insur
ance premiums have consis
tently grown faster than
inflation.”
The Foundation projects
that by 2018, healthcare
spending in the nation will
soar to more than $4.3 tril
lion, or $13,100 per resi
dent.
■ See PETITION Page 2
Emily Littlejohn helped petition for a public health care option.
Ashley GRiFFiN/Echo staff photographer
Pj2^