I ing to get things t a reasonable price. Later we tour the former capitals of Grand Bassam and Bingerville, living relics of the French colonial pas . Especial­ ly noteworthy is tfte Ecole D'Art de Bingerville, a school training young Ivorians iJ;l wood carving and scuiptering. The Africa that many didn't think existed. Wlth its skyline of com­ mercial buildings and high-rise apartment developments, Abidjan symbolizes modern wealth and social stability for Black Africa. It h the hustle and bustle of a e York or San Francisco, and the gentilly and rese of a Paris or Vienna. We e the Hotel Ivoire, con- S1UC� the m famo hotel Africa. It's a 75()..room • am' theater, ice bowIing.alley, su­ permar et, tennis-sports com- plex and casino. Thelma's impressed, I knew she would be. Our room provides a spec­ tacular view of downtown Abid­ jan d the lagoons that flow in • and around the four peninsulas th t form the city. Meet Adri t An ExcelieDt Gul • We were lucky to have the services of guide who provided a well planned and in­ formative tour, the best we have liad during this trip. Adrien is a tall, slendar, dark-skinned lvorian with intens eyes. He's Baoule, and his command of English w competent enough for him to understand the nuan- . ces of the language. But he has never been to the state , and hat he kno s of America is from the movies and American television re-runs. He i shock­ ed by my telling him that there are home people sleeping in the streets in the states, and he . asks me over and over dover if I am certain about this. We visit the human laundramat in the Pac du Banco, where hundreds of men earn a living by washing clothes in a small stream, using large stoees em- -bedded in car tires as wash- for homecooking, the chances are excellent that they'll find it here. We went native. One eve­ ning we took taxi to a Togolese re taruant, Keurama, for din­ ner at 7 p.m., the only folks there. The diminutiv and af­ fabl w iter told that folks here ate their dinner round nine 'or ten in the evening. We're the early bird. We have drinks, fried bananas, tuffed crab , poule m' fe (chick n in- a groundnut uce) with rice, Ire h pineaple and bottled water for about S 19. The waiter gracious and efficient, and the price right! buffet lunch can be had at the lakeside tel (Hotel du Lac) .. Across the lake is the village of Togoville, where in 1884 the na­ tives signed a protectorate treaty with the Germans which resulted in the eventual colonization of the country. We rented a pirougue for the trip across the lake to the village. With his long pole braced on the bottom, a young boatman guides the craft over the water. Not that much to see in Togovillc, with the exception of ' a Catholic Church, which h be utifully painted mural, and the meeting hou e of the villag , sitting chief, who works in Lome .: giant wood carvings on displa;y there must be among the best found in Africa. At H : The 1> ctures we too reinforce the p ticuJars of this trip. But they cannot convey the adventure, the h enge, and the symboli m th tour memorie provide in the recall of this exciting and educational West African journe . boards. We inspect the city's two newest Catholic cathedraJs, explore the plush re idential section in Cocody, and do a walk-through the National Museum which exhibit the dress and tools and art facts from the various parts of the country. There's also a . it to the Treichville Market, . I itable in its size and vari ty of T 0 and Togoville: About 15 mile from Lome i . Lake Togo, a ercne body of water, no more than seven feet deep, which beckons 1 rge ero ds on the weekends for wind-surfing, can cing" and swimming. Good drink and' Finally, It' Abidjan, Cote d'�voire: This jewel of a city dis­ pelts the many sterotypes about Africa. It presents. a face ,..of African goods and wares, and where it takes serious bargain- amibia Co tJ rro 2 ized by Zimbabwe Ambassador Kennedy Manyik a member of t e Frontline State observer mi ion here: "T e e people have no right to determine the future of the amibian people. Namibi can n also go to South Africa d vote in ep­ t mber. Why should South Africans come here to vote." UNT AG officials y there's . no chance the law will be reversed or altered. Glorv Co dou from P S ere slaughtered. It flew from � p blic buildings -which were segrega ed by law for decade . The flag carried into illegal and immoral military oper - lions fro V' etnam to Grenada. There' no glory in Old. Glory for those ho have been deliberately' denied the American Dream. And as long equality and justice are il­ lusions for miIlio 0 people, the: 0. ill be an ironic 1\ rFl inder of ab ence of real democracy in tho country. . Protestors who burn the ag. . however, do not adv ce the s�rugglc fo democracy, be- 9lU5e they create y and e 0- tiona! t rgets for pu lie outr e. led of burni the flag, we need to challenge the political ystem' represen in order to chieve economic op- . pertunity and social justice (or