1 ere accomplished, Afiicu America became • aDd . . t aDd na . P 1 fiw selected JWDe$ to start iIl­ terviewiDg April 6. Hou e is however, a ominated candidate · . · P" plicaDt, be said, d' be's ....... � the first two .. The fir two are CbrismaD d Adell P ttoe, Chrisman' a •• profes- lor at. the U nivenity of Michigan who is also the editor and publisher of the "Blac Scholar." DAY for the pu · will be Monday en Chrisman will lecture 0 -rhe Diacip · of Black Studies: Charaderistics and origin of various ap­ proaches from W. E. B. DuBois to the present," t 2:30 p.m. ill 106 S te Hall after . ch will with attend in 314 St te HUt ut 3:45 p.m. P tton is an African H' ory pecialist hom Howard Uoivu­ sityin W hingtonD. C. H' in­ terne tarts Wednesday April 11. The order in which can­ didates are interviewed is . no reflection on ho they are faYOl'eci, Jay said, ddiDg they e interviewed fir or ac- cording to the ccessibility of eir schedules. "NothiDg hould be hinted (such as ran'king) by their order," e explained. I IAL CA • DID� are scbeduled to be intemewed for the positioD, 'I . - wiD atriYe to TOU UPO the mea of the Black South Africa r cIua, hom a1armia&I1 are paid $10 a month for 18-hour days of labor. WIleD aod children they are n paid "a • permy," said. WIleD Black South African children are born they are deemccl laborers for life, she said. "It' DOt that • ea are rich aDd B are poor," said. "The laws made have been made to preserve a itu tion ere the control of whites . perpetuated." � UviDa aWl is so strict that if aD iDfaDt in dire need of medi­ cal care whose heri e could not be immediatly determined will baYC to . until it i iden­ tified a . e or nOD- hile, said. Nelson Mandela ha been . released after bei imprisoDed for more than 20 years for politi­ cal the same evils still exist. One thing still remains, bil­ . us ill the f ce . . . that . Apartheid and all of its ten- taclIIJ_IUl· ... in ." the total o 0 o colonizatio in· ferior education for the ia­ digcno people, Mandela said opening up the . of South African Bantu education. The 70s South AfricIIl Stu­ dent Moycme encom�..,..� the idea of equal education DOt integratio Mandela said. , "Blacks should be afforded the opportunity to equal educa- tioa," she . d. "S • m remain in place until the goal. . " B ck South Africans lint citi2e is the desire aDd only will be accomplished throop upgraded education. A TU EDUCATION eeps South African children in a cycle laborers. They are taught that people of African descent haven't made any contrlbutio and an white South African are responsible for everything posi­ tive and important, Mandela said. U ud nt to an y for annlv By n . R extended negoiatioDS on the .-# propo ed department, a ' S""'LRqoi1er result students aid they will DBI1l0rr Africana build their de� right in Studies will be taught &om a the middle of camp shanty soon 0 be erect on "WSU offici reneged 0 WSU's campu until the the contract, we're going to proposed Department of create our own department," African Studies· created said said Chris Rutherfo � -former former w&tudy-inera" study-in. "The �p� they The shanty will sene the created we don' chowledge. departmcDt agreed upon ill last They're doing things th · own spriDg's "study-in" until tJDftoer- ay." . sity officials I progress in the Building the shanty further pecified implementation in- demonstrate the students' cl . inpu hom the student committment to take part in the leaders as far selecting a development of an Africcntric chair, recruiting African department, Rutherford said. American stude and hiring more tenured African AF CE C C:J.A:SSI;S AmericaD f cu1ty. � be taught out of the shanty WStud�-in" pokespersons by students it is manned 24 eed to leayc the occupied hours. Helen Newberry Joy Ad- The group also plans to hold . ministr live Services Builaing a rally the first day the shanty . in exch'nae fo a signed co - set up. . tract from the uniYCrsity agree- Raising the students ing to establish a full-fledge ness of the lack of progress on Department of Africana ,behalf of the university i Studies star ing the Fall primary purpose for the ty, semester of 1989. said Leigh Smith. Last eek several group Smith said! $472,500 w members started building the agreed upon by both the univer- shanty scheduled to pop up on ity and "study-iners" the camp in time for an anniver- budget for cbaDges, b so far sary rally. the department's . the Por aim year university , only thing that ch.nV.d. offi· and t de ct ary Evel¥ D \'\e Talk D rover A ThOusani' About A Loan. \'\e8 Like 1> Thlk 1> i>day At � Bank make Cans b every- � &on tone improYemens to lone notgages, edlntm to aukmDIes. Plus, � offer goverrunm klan programs with spedaI aOO terms that are sure to fit aJrj bOOget. WhaIeYer yoor txmMring needs, talk klour Cooswner Loan Departmeri (at 222-2826) (I' our Departmeri ( 222-5325). Or .. MarIJfa1urers Bank today b ban infmnml. �'U urdeIstud why so many ptq'Ie , 11W's my bank� B.n wheft business (-� - - ---..... I \ 4 \.\ I I \1 • I • - - -