JANUARY 20, 2010 1801 Fayetteville Street North Carolina Central University Campus Campus remembers political science profes sor, Jeffery M. Elliot a iong-time mentor to students Page 2 VOLUME 101, ISSUE 7 919 530 7116/campusecho@nccu.edu WWW.CAMPUSECHO.COM Sports Opinions Durham’s Finest A NCCU athlete Chi asks if receiving Local public schooi student exudes talent on government aid artwork on dispiay in and off the field makes a person truiy independent NCCU’s museum Page 11 Page 12 Page 6 - 7 Campus Echo Quake hits home Haiti has local ties to NCCU By Jamese Slade ECHO STAFF REPORTER Two first-generation Haitian Americans with ties to N.C. Central University are strug gling to come to grips with the scope of the tragedy. Haiti is a poor country; more than 50 percent of its citizens live on less than one dollar a day. Rony Camille is an NCCU alumnus who graduated in 2007. Camille first heard that an earthquake had struck Port-au- Prince on Jan. 12 while at work at his job as media program director for Tyngsborough, Mass. • “It was horrible. My mom is one of 10 kids and I have very few immediate family members here in the U.S. and the rest ' live in Haiti,” he said. “We have been trying to call but to no avail,” he said last Former Campus Echo editor-in-chief Rony Camiiie Echo file photo ■ See QUAKE Page 5 HAm’S APO(»U.YPSE Water, food and medical care finally arriving to a shattered city An eideriy man walks throfrgh'tfteTfibbie of the coilapsed Nationai Cathedral in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Sunday Jan. 17. Destruction grips Haiti five days after an earthquake rattied the country. Patrick FARRELiVMjami Herald (MCT) * By Joe Mozingo and Ken Ellingwood LOS ANGELES TIMES (MCT) Port-au-Prince, Haiti — Thou sands more Marines and airborne troops joined the struggle to provide desper ate earthquake survivors with food and water on Monday, while Haitian offi cials sought to move people to the provinces to relieve pressure on the relief effort. Four ships carrying 2,200 Marines anchored off the coast and started ferrying supplies and personnel to Haiti's capital. A total of 1,100 troops of the Army's 82nd Airborne Division had arrived in Port-au-Prince by late Monday, about a third of total deployment planned. Troops are airlifting emergency supplies and the injured, providing logisti cal support, managing the Port-au-Prince airport and standing by to help provide security amid scattered reports of looting and gun fire in the capital. The Haitian government mobilized as well as it could to remove the dead, clear debris and move sur vivors. On the road west out of Port-au-Prince, public buses were filled with peo ple and luggage heading to the provinces. The government, weak in the best of circumstances, was trying to function from a yard outside a police sta tion near the airport. Many government buildings in the center of the city, including the national palace, the parliament, ■ See HAITI Page 5 Exile and trial of the Campus Echo A1973 federal appeals court reinstated student paper after a two-year hiatus By Ashley Roque ECHO STAFF REPORTER The September 1971 memo from then-Chancellor Albert N. Whiting was clear enough: “I am here announcing that all funds Centennial News the publi cation of the Campus Echo have been tem porarily suspended ...” The chancellor’s memo threatened to permanently suspend University sponsor ship of the Campus Echo unless a consensus could be reached with the Campus Echo editor regarding “stan dard journalistic criteria.” Another University-spon sored edition of the Campus Echo would not appear until the fall of 1973. During the intervening two years, the matter was tried first in dis trict courts and then in feder al appeals courts. When the dust finally set tled, the Campus Eiiho’s edi tor-in-chief, Johnnie Edward “Jae” Joyner, and SGA presi dent Harvey White were the victors in one of the nation’s landmark cases in student press law. The case, officially titled Joyner v. Whiting, ruled that the University had violated the First Amendment by cut ting funding for the Campus Echo. In a 3-1 ruling, the Fourth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Richmond overturned the Headline of the SepL 16,1971 Campus Echo that began the exile. Courtesy of NCCU Archives lower court’s ruling in favor ofWhiting with the following: “We reverse [the lower court’s decision] because the president’s irrevocable with drawal of financial support from the Echo and the court’s decree reinforcing this action abridge the freedom of the press in violation of the First Amendment.” Joyner, recalling the ver dict, said his first reaction was relief “I just sat down in the stairwell and cried,” he said. Since the verdict, Joyner v. ■ See ECHO Page 2 Finding the finest Picture Postcard,” by Mark Srippp, drade 11, Jordan High School. By Diane Varnie ECHO STAFF REPORTER The blinding flash of cam eras on Jan. 11 might have left the random bystander mistaking the event for a photo shoot. On that night, the N.C. Central University Art Museum hosted a reception for the premiere of "Durham's Finest." The exhibit showcases student artwork from all Durham Public Schools. "Durham's Finest" is the only district-wide art show that displays the talent and artistic development of 240 students, ranging from kindergarten through high school. Four two-dimensional and three-dimensional art pieces were chosen to repre sent each of the district's schools. The opening reception was a proud moment for families and a confidence- booster for the artists. The event provided a rare occasion for some students to see their artwork in a real museum setting. "When a student gets the opportunity to display their artwork, it allows their self esteem to be built and also allows them to see that their creativity has a voice," said Artrianna Garth, an art teacher at Bethesda Elementary School. "When they go into art class, it gives them a chance to get away from the book work and [they] are able to ■ See FINEST Pages 6-7