VOL. XVII NO.5 An Informed People is A Free People DECEMBER 25 - 31. 1994 BY JULES LOH vie irrevocable, Ku Klu Klan obitu- ary em beyond pecul tion. There re- PU ,T nn (AP) - C 11 it y r- nd pilogu to t 30th nni ry o vance of F om Summ r. Or call it a final belated triumph of the Civil Rigb Movement: Or call it im­ ply longed layed funeral no ice: The Ku Klux Klan' d d. Twice before over the past century the Klan med to ha vanished from the national ne, missing and p umed dead. Both tim its hooded head rose from the cold as of burnt l"'W'IAJUWIl and returned to burn and flog and kill again. This time, owing to chan in the UTCERT th m t wide- P d agent of terror, e ily th most cognizable, urely t most endur­ ing and, according to uncounted thou- nels of i victims, by far the most frightening organization ever h tched on American oil, the Ku Klux Klan, is no longer. "Yes, we have or to do," says Stuart 1.0 ngrub, chief of the ADL' Atlanta office, "but not becaus of the Klan. The Klan today nothing left, no influence at all, political or eco­ nomic. What's left of the Klan, if any- thing, is no more than a nui " course, vari­ ou raci t group, na­ tivists, If­ styled militias, neo-Nazis, enough in­ dependent nds of zealots to keep the GRAND RAPIDS, Mlch. (AP) - Some tudents at Calvin College are threatening to picket a lee­ tur by Charle Murray, the controversial author of "The Bell Curve." ·We want to let the Calvin community know there's more potential for problems than they realize," said B.J. Shipman, a lS-}, r-old ophomor from ila i ho h d th [ac udent On a h Grand Rapids university. He aid h' group has col­ lected about 150 ignatures on a petition that demands the Jan. 17 peech be changed to a ques­ tion and answer session. "Problems wi1larise, if) tenns of racial and ethnic tensions on this campus, as a result of Mur­ ray's speech," Shipman said. minority students are black. Murray aid much of the criti­ cism against the book were ba ed on distortions by the press. "If people come and listen to me, they won't hear what they're getting all excited about," he told The Detroit News for a tory Friday. B of' nee m place to deb te urray's vi "Tbi is about the market­ place of ideas," aid June Hamersma, who invited Murray to speak for the annual lecture program. "We have widely di­ vergent scholar . It's a pot­ pourri." HAMERSMA SAID she made the invitation IWlt winter after reading abou Murray's welfare reform proposals. Neither Murray nor Hamersma would say how much Murray will be paid. Rhae-Ann Booker, a univer­ sity administrator, is worried Murray's visit will rna e it harder to attract minority stu­ dents. "Here we are nd i ng mes- sages out that we want to in­ crease minority enrollment and we embrace diversity. Then, we invite Charles Murray," said Booker, who coordinates mul­ ticultural student development at the university. "To me, it's a definite etback." BYSOHY ROSS ,#Ire �.rvlc» Report WASHI GTO (AP) - Th Congre sional Black Caucu ' new ch . rman said Thursday that if ral money for ur n . hift tq st , will work on pth dolla The Skillman Foundation of Detroit h. sward d full chol r hip to attend Interlochen Art Academy, Thl year's Skillman schol r r: (back row l-r) Donald Dixon, on of Donald and Ann Dixon of We t Bloomfi Id, junior vi ual art ; Roy Harcourt, on of Ellen Harcourt, ophomore, voice; Maia McKinney, d ughter of H rold and Michelle McKi - ney of Detroit, senior, visual art. (seat d I-r) Naomi Millan, daughter of Ju to Vinale and M rlen Cruz of Southfield, junior, creative writing; Afua McKinney, d ughter of J ni Braxton, junior, vi ual art; Christina Dixon, d �ghter of Donald and Ann Dixon of We t Bloomfl Id, fre hman, voice; Shani McKinney, daughter of Kenn th and C rolyn McKinney of Detroit, junior, piano: and Roy Harcourt, on of Ellen Harcourt, ophomore, voice. . - PI e CBC. � - - � � --- �- - - - _- � - - -- - - -- --