Morgan State University - Promethean Yearbook (Baltimore, MD)

 - Class of 1979

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Morgan State University - Promethean Yearbook (Baltimore, MD) online collection, 1979 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 352 of the 1979 volume:

I 1 MOflRlS A. UBfUftr 00649 0f or like Prometheus. Life bringing, creative or courageously original. Promethean person in spirit or deeds. Promethean Promethean MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY Baltimore, Maryland University Volume IV MCMLXXIX LYNN KNIGHT-Editor in Chief MICHAEL SHEFFEY-Assistant Editor DR. BURNEY HOLLIS-Advisor tA Z 5 PI This edition of the Promethean is a very special one as it is representative of the class of 1979 which is the first university graduating class. We attained University status only four short years ago and the transitional period has been a complex one. Morgan State College is now Morgan State University and what are the under- lying implications? Are we a University in name only or are we an institution of exceptional quality dedicated to the ideals of academic and personal enrichment through educational experiences? It is our hope that we are the latter. Morgan has a proud past. The wisdom and acumen of the late Dr. Martin Jenkins built Morgan State College into a prominent and academically sound institution. Morgan has an extensive record of producing ex- ceptional alumni and had mastered the ability to transform mediocre or less than average freshman into academicians. Morgan has been a viable force in the Black community for years. In 1979. we. the Morgan Family, are faced with a particularly complex dilemma. That being the future of Morgan State University. Morgan State College was an excellent post-secondary institution but can Morgan as an university, claim that status? Did we put our foot in our mouths by demanding University status? Did we go over our heads? Is it the fate of Morgan to become a mediocre University? Was University status really that important, or did we stigmatize ourselves in the name of egoism? In 1979. Morgan finds itself in a maze of external and internal complexity. Internally, we are facing a qundary of impassivity among students and faculty, nonchalance toward academe and complacency in reference to the external dynamism that threatens our survival as a Black collegiate institution. Externally. Morgan faces the dilemma of the Maryland State Board for Higher Education's Master Plan and other varying degrees of institutional racism. We must face the realization that the State of Maryland seems determined to starve Morgan of the resources necessary to function as a quality institution. The facts are clear. Maryland State government consistently appropriates Morgan less money for academic enrichment and development than Towson State. University of Maryland Bal- timore County and other comparible institutions in the state, while some of these same institutions serve smaller student enrollments than Morgan. Additionally, from 1963-1977, Frostburg State College received con- siderably more money than Morgan for capital improvements while their student population is only half of Mor- gan. No to mention U. M. B. C.. which received twice the amount of money for capital improvement than Mor- gan. while they too serve a smaller student population than Morgan. Our attempts to expand University pro- grams are thwarted in the name of duplication.” We are given straw and expected to erect monuments. Under the title, University, we are now comparable to other Universities in the state. It is now our task to make Morgan worthy of the notability that was as- sociated with Morgan State College. We have accepted the challenge of University status and we will deter- mine the future of Morgan. As a people, we have overcome many trying times. Our capacity to endure is in- credible and our ability to produce in the face of equivocal odds has been our source of strength in the past. We as Morganites accept the challenge of building our proud alma-mater into a great University dedicated to cultural enrichment and academic excellence, thereby justifying Morgan State University as it now stands. } Administration, faculty staff p 8 Underclassmen p. 52 Black renaissance p. 80 Seniors p. 142 Organizations p. 192 Sports p. 250 Morgan media p. 288 Senior directory p. 322 6 Dedication In honor of Dr. Martin D. Jenkins Ph.D. LL.D. L.H.D. Educator, scholar, president 1948-1970 In memory of A great man And His qumtessent love For Morgan Board of Regents i 10 11 MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY BALTIMORE, MARYLAND 21230 orncc or tmc president January 19, 1979 Dear Class of 1979: Congratulations upon the successful completion of your studies here at Morgan State University. We feel proud to have had the opportunity to study and work with you during what we hope have been rewarding years. You carry memories that shall remain with you and with those of us who have shared the joys and sorrows of association with you. The world of work is demanding skills, talents, and productivity for which your studies and experience at Morgan State University have given you a solid foundation. I urge you to build on that foundation in the years that lie 3head. I urge you to make your choices of grad- uate or professional study and to creatively pursue your personal goals. We at Morgan State University are confident that as you choose your niche in life, you will also recognize and assume your responsibility to improve the human condition. We regard this diploma as a symbol of that confidence. We know from your sharing in the life of the univer- sity community that you may be counted on to do your part in the wider community and to do it well. We feel that you leave us well equipped to help change things from the way they are to the way they ought to be. Your strides toward excellence as a student must be matched by your excellent performance in your chosen field as a mature responsible citizen. As you go forth to meet the challenges of tomorrow, I hope that you will reach back to help those who follow you at your Alma Mater. They need your help, interest and concern in order to realize their full potential. Again, congratulations and may the best be with you as you embark on still another phase of your life. Andrew Billingsle1 President MR. VENKATRAMAN B SUBRAMANIAN ASSISTANT TO PRESIDENT COORDINATOR AIDP MRS TIAJUANA F MOSBY SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT REGENTS RELATIONS 14 Academic Affairs 15 College of Arts and Sciences School of Business and Management School of Education Center for Continuing Education School of Urban Studies and Human Development College of Arts and Sciences 17 Qj Dr Harry Jones English Dr. 8en C. Coleman Foreign Languages Dr Frederic A. Ritter Geography Picture Not Available Dr. Timothy Kim History Dr. James Hudson (picture unavailable) Dr Stephen J. Gewit International Studies Mathematics 18 Dr Julius Taylor Physic Pro-Engineering Dr C. Vernon Gray Political Science Dr Zola Boone Psychology PHOTO PHOTO NOT NOT AVAILABLE AVAILABLE Dr Wilbur Watson Sociology (picture unavailable) Mr. Clinton Johnson Speech Communications and Theatre Arts (picture unavailable) 19 OR. BROADUS E SAWYER DEAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS AND MANAGEMENT 20 OR WILLIAM L MALONE CHAIRPERSON BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION r I The School of Business and Management’s mission is to disseminate and generate business and economic growth of its students, alumni, and the community at large. The School of Business and Management offers programs in the Department of Accounting and Finance. Business Administration. Business Education and Economics. 21 Center for Continuing Education MRS. BERYLE WILLIAMS DEAN r 22 MR MICHAEL A. BRYANT DIRECTOR PROJECT UPWARD BOUND MRS. VIVIAN C RECKLEY DIRECTOR UPWARD M08ILITY COLLEGEOR Division for Continuing Education The Center for Continuing Education offers non-conventional study programs for students who are unable to attend classes during the regular day sessions. A. Evening Programs- Evening classes are designed to meed needs in the following categories: 1. Day students who may elect to persue some courses in the evening. 2. Young High School graduates who because of the necessity to work are unable to attend college in the day time. 3. In service teachers and other persons connected with the state and city school systems who desire to per- sue courses in education or in other areas for professional credit. 4. Mature citizens who desire to study for self-improvement and for the pure pleasure derived from such study. 5. Persons who desire additional training to meet changing professional standards or to prepare for new fields. 6. Students may apply who have been dropped for poor scholarship. 7. Continuing Education for women B. Summer Sessions C. Extensive Programs- 1. Upward Mobility College is federally funded program for employees at the Social Security Administration with a limited number in the Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. Public Health Service Programs. 2. MANDAT is a federally funded program for persons living in Prince Georges County 3. Social Security Administration Evening Program. Any student may enroll in classes in the S.S.A. Even- ing Center. D. Non-Credit Program- Community service short seminars. Way-up Programs and Upward Bound are avail- able. Education is a continuous progress Education is a continuous process and the roles of student and teacher are interwoven. We can learn from the knowledge of others and in turn we can teach what we have learned to others. School of Education VERGIAl S. WEBB ACTING DEAN SCHOOL OF EDUCATION t 24 I 25 School of Graduate Studies DR CLARA ADAMS DEAN 4 MR JOHN S LONG ASSISTANT DEAN MR RICHARD E MORRELL ADMISSIONS AND PROGRAMS OFFICER M.A. indicates the Master of Arts degree M S. indicates the Master of Science degree M B A. indicates the Master of Business Administration degree M.C.R.P. indicates the Master of Architecture degree M. Arch, indicates the Master of Landscape Architecture degree M.L.A. M.A.U.D.. M.L.A.U.D.. M.C.R.P.U.D. indicates the M. Arch in Urban Design the M.L.A. in Urban Design and the M.C.R.P. in Urban Design. Graduate Program of Study Degrees Awarded Architecture M. Architecture Art M.A. Business Administration City and Regional Planning M.C.R.P. Economics M.A. Educational Administration and Supervision M.S. Elementary Education M.S. English M.A. History M.A. History-Social Science M.S. Landscape Architecture M.L.A. Mathematics M.A. Music M.A. Physical Education M.S. Popular Culture M.A. Reading Specialist M.S. Recreation M.S. Science M.S. Sociology M.S. Teachers of Business Education M.S. Urban Design M.A.U.D.. M.L.A.U.D.. Urban Education M.S. School of Urban Studies Human Development DR HOMER E FAVOR DEAN DR HERMA WILLIAMS CHAIRPERSON HOME ECONOMICS DR JACK FEAGINS CHAIRPERSON SOCIAL WORK MRS MADELINE L DAVIS ADMINISTRATIVE AIDE SCHOOL OF URBAN STUDIES AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT MISS TERRY A JENIFER GRADUATE URBAN PLANNING PROGRAM URBAN STUDIES AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT 29 Academic support Mrs Chelsia Williams Admissions and Recruitment Mr Lawrence K Montgomery Alumni Affairs Mr James E Lewis Art Gallery Mr. Earl Banks Atheletics Mr Elmer S Patterson Capitol Planning Dr. Zola Boone Center for Curricular Improvement Dr. Quincy Cooper Christian Center Mr. Washington Green Office of Community Affairs Mr. John Wolf Computer Center Mrs. Lena M. McKinney Cooperative Education Program Mr Welford I McLellan Information Services and Publications Dr Ruth Brett Conselmg Center Picture Not Available Mr William E Anderson Instructional Development Mr. Richard Sandaal Data Processing Coordinator Mr George Grant Library Mr Houston L Stansbury Records and Registration Dr. Calvin E. Woodland Special Services College II Beyond the hallowed halls In memory of Dr. Maxwell Brooks Mr. Thomas Burke Dr. Charles R. Campbell Mrs. Mae Clayter Rev. Howard Lee Cornish Mr. William Haithcock Mrs. Mary Ruth Law Dr. Martin D. Jenkins Mr. James Jolly Dr. Theodore W. Maull Mr. Joseph Wilson t A. Remembrance Are there words that compensate for the Loss of those so irreplaceable? Are there rules that can measure the Extent of their impact? What song could tell the story of Their existence, though the tune Of their greatness lingers on? What house can be filled when that Which made it a home is removed? The question of life and its some- times unreasoned fallacies leaves A breath held and kept deep within the anatomy; leaves an emptiness which knows no name, no relief. Somehow the emptiness may be filled when Their dreams carry on. for they laid the Path, led the way. gave to the cause of enrichment. Though the questions may persist And the good may pass on. The memory of their aura shall forever fill our hearts and our heads. Faculty MISS FRANCES ALSTON Asst. Professor English DR. MICHAEL D. BAYTON Asst. Professor English MR. SIDNEY G EDWARDS Asst. Professor Education MAJ MICHAEL A DAVIDO- VICH Asst. Professor Military Science DR. OTIS D. FROE Professor Education DR ROBERT GILL Professor Political Science MR STEVEN GIBSON Asst. Professor Economics MR ERNEST C. HAMMOND. JR. Asst. Professor Comprehensive Science Science Education CPT. JOHN H BRANCH Asst. Professor Military Science MRS. GRACE COFFEY Asst. Professor English MRS JANE ENTY Professor Home Economics DR CLARENCE A. FAULCON Professor Music DR. AUGUSTUS A. ADAIR President Of The Faculty Senat© m t MS ERNESTINE C. HARGROVE Instructor Business A Management MR JAMES F MACK Asst Professor Health A Physical Education DR MILFORD A JEREMIAH Instructor Reading Program DR ROLANDC McCONNELL Professor History DR HARRY JONES Professor English MS CARLEEN S. LEGGETT Asst. Professor Foreign Languages DR SANDYE JEAN MclNTYRC. Ill Professor Foreign Languages MR MELVIN N MILES. JR Asst Director Band A Jazz Ensemble MR. SAMA A MONDEH Business A Fmanco DR BIBHA MUKHERJEE Assoc. Professor Geography MR JOHN NEWSON Director Symphonic A Marching Bands MR YUTH NIMTKITPAISAN Instructor Biology 35 OR. FREDERICK OLIVER MRS. ROSALYN T. PENN Assoc. Professor Asst. Professor History MS MARGARET A. REID Asst. Professor English MR. LEONARD RICHARDSON Asst. Professor English MR LESTER H. SHEPPERSON Instructor Psychology DR. RUTHE T. SHEFFEY Professor English DR RUBY F SHUBKAGLE Professor Education DR. ERNEST F. SILVERSMITH Professor Chemistry DR NATHANIEL K. PROCTOR Professor Biology DR SOCRATES W. SAUNDERS Professor Mathematics DR WILLIAM H. PROCTOR Asst. Professor Business Management MRS. NIRU M. SHAH Secretary Infirmary r i r t DR. GEORGE SINKLER Professor History MRS. ROSA F. TAYLOR Professor English DR. DANIEL T SKINNER Professor Foreign Languages MR FRANK S TURNER Business Management JR. Professor Chemistry Instructor Speech Theatre Arts MRS. ANN V. YOUNG Asst. Professor Foreign Languages DR VERNON GRAY Professor Political Science MRS. CLAUDETTE MCF WALDER MS. CAROLYN H. SUTHERLAND Professor Social Work MR HOWARD K. WILSON Assoc. Professor Health Physical Education DR. ELAINE BRESLAV Professor History DR STEFAN GOODWIN Professor Sociology 37 MR DARRYL HINES Counselor Counseling Center MR. JOSEPH PERCHES Commuter Residence Program MR. BENJAMIN SMITH Professor Education Mrs Jean Turpin Professor English The Morgan Family i 39 DR WRIGHT L. LASSITER. JR VICE PRESIDENT OF BUSINESS AND FINANCE MR WILLIAM S PHELPS 40 FINANCIAL AID DIRECTOR 41 42 MS MELVINA M. FOSTER ADMINISTRATIVE ASSITANT TO PRESIDENT FOR BUSINESS FINANCE DR CLAYTON C. STANSBURY VICE PRESIDENT FOR STUDENT SERVICES MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY COLD SPRING LANE ANO HILLLN ROAD BALTIMORE. MARYLAND 21239 OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS 13011 444 3326 Dear Graduates of the Class of 1979: I clearly recall, as the Director of the Lower Division, when I welcomed you to Morgan State on your first day as a matriculant. On that day, I said to you that you were a very significant somebody and your stay here would be short. I attempted to put you in the frame of mind for studying and learning. Your purpose in coming here was to learn. Your academic interactions should have changed you into a more signficant individual than the one I met on that first day. It is hopeful you leave as a better person academically, socially, psychologically and spiritually. On May 20, 1979, I will serve as your faculty marshal and lead the parade as you make your last journey as an undergraduate student at Morgan State University. Don't ever forget where you come from -- Fair Morgan, we love Chee, so tried and so true. Congratulations on this giant step, and much success as you continue the journey down the road to new and more challenging experiences. Sincerely, ' f ' Clayton C. Stans bury Vice President for Student Services 45 MS FRANCINE Z ASHBY ASSITANT TO THE VICE PRESIDENT OF STUDENT AFFAIRS MR. MICHAEL CRYOR ASSITANT TO THE VICE PRESIDENT OF STUDENT AFFAIRS 46 MR. RICHARD E ROBINSON DIRECTOR McKELDIN CENTER FLOYD E TALIAFERRO ASSISTANT DIRECTOR McKELDIN CENTER 47 DR EUGENIE E PHILLIPS COLLEGE PHYSICIAN DIRECTOR OF HEALTH SERVICES MR DWIGHT LASSITER STUDENT ACTIVITIES CO ORDINATOR University Planning and Development DR JERRY COLE JR VICE PRESIDENT FOR DEVELOPMENT AND UNIVERSITY RELATIONS 48 49 A secretary’s job is never done! 52 Class of 1982 President-Derek Anderson Vice-President- Michele Coleman Secretary- Yolanda Holmes Treasurer-Veara Tims Miss Freshman- Michelle Salter Senators-Nathaniel Hoff Michele Cockrel Valerie Cherry Tanya Green Ronald Gray Miss Freshman and Her Court Freshman 53 Class of 1981 President-Ronald Bethes Vice-President-Waiter Fields Secretary-Cheryl Harrison Treasurer-Denise Dunn Miss Sophomore-Dianne Parrott Senators-Sharon Dukes Fred Godette Pamela Ferguson Robin Mack Olivia Vaughes Miss Sophomore and Her Court Class of 1980 President-Reggie Landers Vice-President-Karles Jones Secretary-Patrice Little Treasurer-Anita Michael Miss Junior-Nancina Pope Senators-Anita Hackett Grace Green Rosita Doub JoAnn Foye Evette Lane ss Nancina Pope and her court Who’s Who Among Students In Dianna Allen Kim Allen Charles Alexander Robin Alston Stephen C Amiohu Donna Ball Carla Benson Delores 8iggs Vcnepia Boyd Marvin Brown Arlene Cain Cassandra Carter Daryl Cook Ethelbert A. Ebubcdikc Lambert C. Ezeala Edith M Fleming Gloria Florendo Sandra D Freeman Cathy Gibson Laverna Gist Mark G Glaze Wayne M Gunn Ivan Hale Brenda Harvey Peter Harvey American Universities Colleges Barbara Howard Jonny Irofuala Hubert Isler Felix Jackson Tyronne Jackson Margaret Jones Julie Knox Reginald Landers Gwenevere Moore Kay Moore Patricia Pitts Carolyn Powers Peggy Quinton Charles Randolph David Robinson Robert Scott LaVernc Smith Roycc C. Styles Robnat Taborn Yvette Taylor Sheila Tillerson Tyra Walker Maria Wilson Vcrnessa Younger P Baete E Bell M Bennettc 59 L. Dauphme D. Emerson J. Farr D. Flowers G. Folland P. Gabriel V. George A. Green A. Green A v J. Glover 61 K. Hunnaly E. Jackson J. Jackson L. Kelson 63 G. Orsi K. Payne D. Porderson G. Robinson S. Robinson M Scott i. 6 7 W Strickland $. Teasley m Tinsley P. Tomlis I I P Washington G Joyner T Mackle D Stokes 69 75 I 76 77 Gazing though the mirrors of time. ONE We see reflections of days and images 1 have but one heart of what shall be; 1 have but one soul Faces will grow older. 1 have but one mind minds more able - 1 have but one body able to grasp the reality So therefore my heart can of our being be content with only one other heart Time now stands, arms alimbo. to My soul can only dwell embrace those that preceed us. with one other soul Our eyes gleam in the light of 1 can only transport my their glory, gleam in happiness Intimate thoughts they leave behind a legacy. to a motivation to be emulated one soon our day will come. other time will hold us. and we mind . . . too will embark on that journey My body can be shared that many take but few conclude. with one other body To the class of 1979 we say: All this to say Sail on. sail on and follow 1 am but one that silvery moon. Woman or man and Peggy Powell 1 shall only have one 1 29 79 Woman or man Dannie Mellows ...him Rain long since quelled by the quiet We came stirring In the evening Out of the silence that precludes the end of youth Thirsting to fill of the water of life The world became a myriad of possibi- lities and realities With a spirit unending We questioned the answers and Answered the questions of all those Not realizing that a man is blind Only when he cannot see We nurtured and nourished and molded our dreams To perfection With the wind at our backs We have emerged from the cold To find strength and warmth We have arrived No longer children of the Night Now the ripened fruit of the sun And all its glory The road ends up ahoad Just beyond the bridge So let there be no stone unturned No obstacle unbeaten No dream deferred For we bring the Dawn of a Black Renaissance THE DAWN OF A NEW DAYI 83 We came stirring in the evening r We came «7 With a spirit unending 89 J We questioned the answers and answered the questions STASIS 91 We nurtured and nourished . . . ... and molded our dreams The road ends up ahead just beyond the bridge Once . . . twice . . . three times A fall cultural affair 99 Festiva! r, • • VV‘Lit' Shine on my little one. For the day quickly pats Bo someday the reality of a dream long held . . . Be brave and strong, Oh little one Your path Is clearly marked The sun shines on you My little one,' And the rainbow Is Your path . to freedom. BLACK WOMEN . . . We must First learn To love Ourselves. i : Guest speaker Marcia Ann Gillespie 103 Tony Brown 105 Salute to Blacks The Salute to Blacks in the Aesthetics came as an improvision of what was known as Black Music Week. The Harvey-Frasier Student Government Admini- stration felt the need to broaden the tribute of the African-American contribution to various aspects of the arts. Thus, instead of con- tinuing our tribute to just music, they de- cided to illustrate Black achievement in every facet of the aesthetics. The theme of this salute is ’The Effects of the Arts in Black Life.” Through this theme, they illustrated how the arts affected the African-Americans culture. Each day they chose ten African- Americans to whom tribute was paid for their influence on the Black Aesthetic phenomenon. Visual arts day Literature day Cinema day Performing arts day Music day In the Aesthetics a poem for my father how sad it must be to love so many women to need so many black perfumed bodies weeping underneath you. when i remember all those nights I filled my mind with long wars between short sighted trojans greeks while you slapped some wide hips about in your pvt dungeon, when I remember your deformity I want to do something about your makeshift manhood. I guess that is why on meeting your sixth wife. I cross myself with her confessionals. Sonia Sanchez It is midnight no magical bewitching hour for me I know only that I am here waiting remembering that once as a child i walked two miles in my sleep, did I know then whore I was going? traveling. I'm always traveling. I want to tell you about me about nights on a brown couch when i wrapped my bones in lint and refused to move, no one touches me anymore, father do not send me out among strangers, you you black man stretching scraping the mold from your body, here Is my hand. I'm not afraid of the night. Sonia Sanchez poem at thirty Rochester - Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies and Bucks Donald Bogle, author of Tom , Coons, Mulattoes, Mammle . and Bucks, appeared in a lecture slide presentation as a part of 'Cinema Day.” Entitled Blacks in American movies,” (Mr.) Bogle s lecture focused on blacks in films, from the beginning of film creation to the present. The aforementioned stereotypes limit the black actor and actress to roles of passivity baffonery, and eventually the over- exploited image of the black supersteuth superstud. The Bogle lecture served to allow insight into the psyche behind the American film industry His revelations prove this industry to maintain an attitude of racial bias as is sadly but frequently the case In American industry of any kind. James Baldwin Segment two, Literature Day, of the Salute to Blacks in the Aesthetics, presented to the Morgan State University community, a multitude of talented and and respected black writers. The last of those participating in the days discussions and lectures was the renowned James Baldwin. The son of a Baptist minister, Baldwin has authored a number of novels, which include the widely read Blues for Mr. Charlie. The discussion centered around the predicament of the black man as a participant in a free but white society. We as Black Americans must learn to demonstrate a greater love and respect for one another, he noted. This relationship should be the bonds of our blackness, which serves to strengthen and unite us. When you ask a white man what a black man wants, he says he does not know, but he knows he does not want to be black in America. When a black man loses his sense of reality, he goes to the crazy house. When a white man loses his sense of reality, he goes to Wash- ington. m I Miss Black Maryland Michele Denise Yates 1978-1979 Philosophy of life: If you sow the seeds of positivity you’ll reap the flowers of success 113 II II min lliiil!!,, cm cm llllllllll •mill iiiii III' III INI In llll I IIIH 1 ii lllll hi IIIH lllll lllll i|ll ll|| 'illimi' llllllll cm: I ■ . . . Captured moments at Morgan 115 Negritude in Essence The truth of our existence by Peggy Powell NEGRITUDE: The consciousness in Blacks of their cultural heritage, together with an affirmation of the distinctive qualities and values of this heritage. ESSENCE: That which makes something what it is; Fundamental nature or most important quality: the inward nature of anything true substance. The bonds of Blackness have been and shall remain a source of fortitude and spiritual fulfillment For all African-American people of this nation. Conscious affirmation of the roots from which our Blackness springs takes its form in procreation—bringing to the world life, generation after generation. Giving to the world another mind to inspire, another mind to uplift, another beautiful Black babe to embrace. Take this child, these bonds, that fulfillment, mix well, add the greatness of our forefathers, and we shall have the essence of our Blackness. Negritude in essence: the truth of our existence. 116 ) 117 m••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .............................................. •Mix Mttn •••• •••«- ••••- MM •••• •—■ ' •••— ••• •••- iiin •MM •Mm •••• •M •Mm •Mm • • M •Mm f M •mi Mss Morgan State University 1978-1979 |M« MUh |MM ••• •... Glynice Lynette Coleman :::: ••••§ •••• •••• •Mii •••• •••••§ ..... • «'; •••••••••••••• ne M2 Many moods of i 124 J 125 Youth The exuberance of youth Contrasted by the wisdom Of age. Happy- gleeful, unaged faces. Unmindful of the mean cruel world Beyond the horizon which They are so eager to see. As they look to the foot of their beds To see how much they've grown overnight- The young innocents. Being taught to deal. As they say. And one day. They will be delivered . . . Youth even has its stages; The post-teenage man In his halcyon-day prime About to be delivered. About to enter the real world- The one known as the 40-hour. Five-day standard- And about to leave The ideal world Of ivy-strangled buildings And academica. Examinations. And late term papers; About to leave utopia As compared to what The next phase holds . . . KC. The old sage. His years evident in graying temples. He could reveal from bygone memories An era the younger will never know. For which we can choose To be thankful Or not, Considering history's course. Experience. A word best defined By what has been felt. A word best defined By years of practice At a trade. He has felt. He has seen. He knows. Drink from the overflowing resevoir Of knowledge, impetuous youth; Depart from a probable collision course So that you may live to be as old. KC. J 127 It’s our turn now . . . (don’t let It get by us this time) by Peter Harvey As time drifts forward, it causes us to reflect on our days at Morgan and keeps us wondering what lies ahead in this maze that we call life. We. as African-Americans, will seek our destiny on new frontiers that will chal- lenge our very existence as people. When we face this hostile world that Morgan has attempted to prepare us for, we must constantly keep in mind who we are as a people. For some of us. this will be our finale, a last opportunity to share our lives with other Morgan- ites under such comfortable circumstances. For others, it will be one of many times when we will pass through Morgan and join others who have engaged in this same experience. In both cases, we will reflect on our years here at Morgan and the transformation that we have undergone mentally, which hopefully has made us grow from boys and girls to men and women. Now. as in the future, we constantly ask ourselves what we have learned at Morgan. What was it worth? Did we take advantage of all that we had here? Just how prepared are we? These are questions that time will answer. Our experiences in life will show us just how valuable the Morgan experience was to us. However, the time has come now when we must ask ourselves what our experiences at Morgan taught us. as African-Americans. Hopefully, they taught us self-identity as a race. Hopefully, they taught us about our struggle histori- cally as a race in this country and our need to know more about ourselves. Hopefully, they taught us the importance of nation-building and the importance of establishing our own functional institutions. And hope- fully they taught us what needs to be done in this society, which is determined to exploit and misuse people of color. Brothers and sisters, we are faced with a challenge which involves our survival and development as a people. Our challenge will dare us to be men and women and to take a stand against the conditions to which our people are subjected. Our challenge will dare us to be serious enough about equality of opportunity for all people to such an extent that we will not allow ourselves to be bought off by opportunity for personal gain, to compromise our dignity as men and women, while the cause and our people are left in the back of our minds. Our challenge will make us replace the passive leadership that perceives that we are doing all right and that Black people are doing better than we were twenty years ago; the same leadership that has pulled the Black bourgeoisie through to personal gain, but has left the masses of us outside the door, still under the hammer economically, politically and socially. 8ut if we were doing all right. then why are more African-American men in prison than in our collegiate institutions? Why is unemployment among our people at a rate that parallels that during the depression? Why have we been losing, on the average, two Black colleges per year since 1965. while others are being threatened by merger of loss of identity by calculated integration? Even Morgan is threatened with all of these possibilities by the notorious State Board of Higher Education Master Plan, which seeks to change the historic goals and functions of Morgan by preventing it from effectively serving the Black community as it has been doing. If indeed we are doing so well. then why were there more African-Americans in Congress during the Reconstruction than today? When faced with these problems, we see all the more reason why we must take a lead role in our struggle and replace the old ideas with some new ideologies and actions. Time for us appears to have gone back- wards. Don’t believe it? Then why has the Ku Klux Klan come out of hiding and manifested itself in various states throughout the country? Why has the Nazi party emerged so violently on the scene with its blatant racism? Why is there such an attack on Affirmative Action, while at the same time the phasing out of social services is disguised as tax-cut legislation? All of this is happening, while we sit by and wait on the next episode of Another World and The Young and the Restless. or we wonder what Good Times will be happening with The Jeffersons. All of this is happening right in our faces, while we fill our minds with the television and radio garbage every weekday and disco our lives away every week- end. All of this is happening, but don't expect to find out about it in Jet, Essence, and Ebony. NBC. ABC. or CBS won't tell you. nor will WWIN or the disco- madness of V103 fill you in on it. They won't because they are not designed to enlighten Black people; but some of us haven't realized that yet. You will only find out about our situation in the real Black publica- tions. such as Black Books Bulletin, First World, and Black Scholar, and of course, by reading history. At times it seems as though we have forgotten history. Have we forgotten David Walker and Nat Turner? Have we forgotten Garvey? Have we forgotten DuBois? Have we forgotten Malcolm? Have we forgotten King? Or is it that we never learned about them? Have we forgotten what the 1960's meant—how we failed to change this vicious society into a society that prac- tices all of the pretty-sounding words that it preaches, a society which has destroyed or murdered every leader we have had? It's our turn now. Morganites! How will we deal with it? Will we fail like those be- fore us? Will we leave Morgan and not give a damn about its existence and survival in the future—because as Black people we have had a history of not support- ing our institutions and of wondering why they are inadequate in certain areas and eventually fall? Will we become just like those half-stepping alumni be- fore us. who only care about Morgan at Homecoming? Just how will we act as Morganites? We are faced with a dilemma that has perplexed our people for decades, a dilemma which has caused our people much pain and sacrifices in the past. Our dilemma involves putting an end to the political iso- lation. economic deprivation, and social degradation and biases that our people face today. We will be the leaders of today and tomorrow. It is our duty to guide Black people into a course of action that won't just bring relief to a few of our people, but will bring relief to the masses of our people. This is what we face in the coming years. With the coming of the 1980's, we will be faced with new challenges and problems. The 1980's will probably be another turning point in this nation's history, where we will see a repetition of violence, marches, and racial tension. And it's going to happen because the masses of our people are not satisfied. The same conditions that produced the 1960's re- bellions still exist today. Our collective political, economic and social status have remained the same. We are still outsiders, struggling to enjoy the same equality of opportunity that has been promised to us since 1865. The 1980's are going to be violent because we understand, now more than ever, that America gives up nothing. Everything that we have attained from this country has been realized through a show of force on our part. You and I understand that oppressors never give the oppressed freedom, justice, and equality. In a situation of that type, everything is taken. This is why all of that action is going on with our brothers and sisters in Africa today. We under- stand this and must prepare to deal with it because our struggle as a people is not just a national one. but an international one. The sooner we recognize this, the sooner we begin to put our lives and efforts in their proper perspective. The sooner we realize this, the sooner we will begin to act in an intelligent manner that will produce the necessary actions, that will result in a more positive future for our children. With this in mind, our task is clear. Morganites. It's our struggle now! We can only hope that we have prepared ourselves adequately here at Morgan to face the challenge. Just how seriously will we face it? Very seriously. I hope, because the world is very serious about dealing with us. and we had better be just as serious about dealing with it. It has gotten by us so many times in the past, brothers and sisters. Don't let it get by us this time! II II i||ii min 31!! llllllll mi!!! mm mm ii ii mm iiiiiiii iill!!!!!i iimmii minin’ 1111111111 millmi l Mi I... | llllllll II imi mu (III Imi 11:1s:: ......1: iihHh 1 llllllll I I mm I mm I iiiiiiii II II II INI II 1.11 llllllll urn 131 112 1J4 1M. 137 Pockets .... Pleasure 140 and Osiris 141 Morgan State University class of 1979 MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY COLO SPRING LANL AND MILLLN ROAD BALTIMORE. MARYLAND 21239 To: The Class of '79 From: The Executive Board Class of '79 Date: December 1, 1978 Dear Friends: This is the end of a crusade that began four years ago. We have contributed to the development of the University with the knowledge that there is much to be done. However, as we leave Morgan University, let us remember we are no longer protected by the walls of such a small and loving community. We are about to embark on a journey into a world, where life owes nor gives us any favors. We must protect ourselves by putting forth the best that we have developed inside and outside of this great University. This journey is one from which there is no return. We will have many problems, many dilemmas to face, and our final decisions will determine our future and that of our people. Along the way, let us remember the past and be proud, think of the future with optimism and for today, live so that we can make a positive impression on others. Some of us may never pass each others' path again. So, as we travel life's many roads, let us remember that our dreams lie at the root of our success. And, on graduation day, let us take the National Alumni Oath as a personal mandate. Let us listen and hear ourselves. Without us there is no Morgan, and without Morgan, there is no hope for Black liberation. We must pledge to support ourselves and our University after our pilgrimage here. So, on behalf of the Executive Board of the Senior Class, and our Advisor, we would like to wish everyone farewell and continuing success. Remember that success only comes from GOD. Progress Through Togetherness, J r. Alvin Thornton Senior Advisor SONIA LIBURD President BRENDA HARVEY Vice President TERI LOGAN Recording Secretary DWIGHT GAINES Treasurer SENATORS Joe! Thomas Johnny Urofuala Greta Covington Michael DaviesSekle JULIE KNOX Miss Senior Dr. Alvin Thornton Senior Advisor 146 DEJUANA L. ALEXANDER WESLEY M ALFORD HENRY M. ALI EN Sociology Urban Planning and Human Accounlmg Development KIM M ALLEN ROBERT L ALLEN JONATHAN M ALSTON ROBIN B ALSTON Elementary Education Business Administration Elementary Education Biology STEPHEN C. AMIOHU LUKE C. ANDERSON MAXWELL A ANDERSON JACQUELINE L ANTHONY Business Administration Business Administration JR Political Science Art Education 150 1 i i r i TYRONE C BANKS VINNIE BAGWELL Psychology CARL H BALARK. JR Political Science Eft DONNA J BALL WILLIAM BALTIMORE Elementary Education Business Administration YVETTE A ARMSTEAD Urban Studies JOYCE A ARNOLD BARBARA A. ATKINS WILLIAM P AVERY Music Education Business Administration Mental Health SUWE N BADAMAS STEPHANIE L BAGLEY Home Economics Business Administration CALU R BARNES Sociology 191 KENNETH E BETHEA. II Biology PAMELA A BOLLIN Elementary Education PRISCILLA M BLACKSON Psychology Social Work GLORIA J BOND Business Administration ETSEGENET BEKELE FRANK E BLACKWELL. JR Biology WILLIAM S. BOOM Chemistry LISA W. BENTON Elementary Education THERESA A BLACKWELL Business Administration 1 jlfe 1 -i- ELLA R BOONE Business Administration 152 JOHN T BOYD Business Administration 8RENDA BROWN Sociology KEITH L BROWN Mathematics PRESSIE D BOYKIN JAN N BOYKINS Business Administration Political Science DEMETRIS B BROWN JANNIECE R. BROWN Accounting Biology SHEILA D BROWN Business Administration JAMES E. BROWNE History VERNA C. BYRD ARLENE D CAIN Business Administration Elementary Education ANNETTE D CARRINGTON CALVIN M CARRINGTON CASSANDRA J CARTER Elementary Education Social Work LEYTRICE R BURNEY Business Administration PAMELA CAMP8ELI Business Administration DIANE CHANEY Secretarial Science 154 VIVIAN E CLAY KAYE M. CLEGHORN CHARMAYNE 0. CLEMENTS LEEVONN CLOUD Business Administration Biology Music Education English JUDITH A COL8ERT GLYNICE COLEMAN KATHY P COLEMAN LELYA M COLEMAN Accounting Music Business Education Secretarial Science ALVIN COLES STEVEN COLLINS Accounting Urban Studies AUDREY COOK HARRIET T. CORBETT Biology GRETA R COVINGTON Political Science MICHAEL DAVIES-SEKLE Business Administration KAREN E OeMINES Chemistry JEFF DAVIS Philosophy JOCELYN M DeSHIELDS Music Education JOYCELYNA DALMIDA Psycology LYNNE D DAVIS Science Education ISAIAH DIXON. Ill Political Science JOSEPHINE J CROOK Elementary Education CAROLYN D DATES Business Administration WINFRED DAWSON Business Administration VALERIE J DIXON Accounting KAREN DOBSON Business Administration EUGENE M DONALDSON Graphic Design DARLENE M DORSEY Social Work DIRETHA DUMAS Political Science THF.A L DUNCAN Accounting SHARON A. DUNN Biology TERRI P DUNSTON Business Administration FRANK A EARL. JR Political Science KERRIE 8 FERREll DEBORAH M FERRIS ELSIE A FISHER French International Studies Accounting Psychology Elementary Education MICHELE E FLEMING Elementary Education TITUS O FOLAYAN Physics Mat hematics DELORES FORD Social Work JOYCE M FORD Home Economics 1 CLINTON B FRAZIER-EL LISA FREDERICKS LARRELL LEF FREEMAN SANDRA D. FREEMAN Urban Affairs Psychology Psychology Mathematics Business Administration ROOIRIGUS L FULLER JANET L GAINER DWIGHT O. GAINES MARGUERITE GAMBLE Urban Studies Business Administration Accounting Business Administration REGINALD GCARY Business Administration DOROTHY GHEE DIANE LORETTA GREEN Business Administration MARSHA A GREEN Business Education DARLENE GREENE Elementary Education ELIZABETH M GROOMS Business Administration TEENA M GORDON Psychology THOMAS W GORE Psychology DONNA LYNN GOINGS Business Administration MARSHA FAYE GOODSON Business Administration KATHY GIBSON RICHARD P. GILES Psychology Business Administration £ HENRY I GIVENS MARK GREGORY GLAZE Biology 160 WAYNE MORGAN GUNN Social Work CASSANDRA WENDY HARP Biology BERNADETTE H HEIGHT Science Education IVAN ANTHONY HALE Speech Communication ADRINNE MARIA HALL Business Administration DARLENE HANCOCK Secretarial Science RAYMOND V HAYSBERT. BRENDA CAYLE HARVEY PETER C HARVEY jr Business Administration Political Science Business Administration BRENLIN THERESA HICKS Social Work MARVIN NATHANIEL HICKS Business Administration MAX HILAIRE Political Science VICTORIA PATRICIA HOFF Psychology SHARON L. HUNTER YVONNE RENEE IRVING FELIX K JACKSON Biology Science Education Business Administration MICHAEL A HOLLIDAY Pre-Mod Biology SANDRA JOYCE HUDSON Sociology FLORENCE L JACKSON Business Administration 162 GREGORY M. JACKSON Business Administration ANGELA DENISE JAMES Business Administration CARTER JAMES MARIETTA JAMES Sociology tr' THERESA M JAMES TIJUANA A JAMES IF ROY ROOSEVELT JENKINS. JR DEBORAH JOHNSON Mathematics Psychology English Biology HOWARD K JOHNSON DAVID WILLIAM JONES JACQUELINE JONES OCTAVUS L JONES Social Work Sociology Business Administration Pre-Professional Chemistry RONALD L. KELLY Accounting c 163 GERALD A KESS. JR. Elementary Education LAVONIA KESS Psychology SHARON LAMPKIN History JULIE ELLEN KNOX MERCIA MARIE LACKS ELAINE SYKES LAIRD Elementary Education Mathematics Spanish ELEANOR LAWRENCE Music Education TONY ANTHONY LAV SON PATRICIA DELAINE LAWTON Accounting Psychology 1W GLENN E LEE Accounting THERESSA ELLEN LEE Sociology FAIDA L. LEGGETT Mental Health SHERON HELENA LEIGH English OENISE L LEONARD JAMES E LEWIS, JR MARVIN W. LEWIS SONIA MAYNARD LIBURD Sociology Business Administration Business Administration Biology CLAUDE M. LIGON. JR TERI L. LOGAN GEORGE D LOINES STEPHANIE LONG Geography Home Economics Science Education Business Administration ADEGBOYEGA AKANNI ANTHONY T MARCUS MAJOLAGBE Chemistry Physics JUDY A MARTIN Business Administration JUSTUS K MBUL Business Administration BETTY J MCALLISTER Mental Health Administration CORDELIA RUTH MCILWAIN Accounting CAMYRA L MCKINLEY Biology ELEANOR J MCLEOD LISA ANDREA MCMANUS Philosophy Accounting MICHAEL MCBRIDE Mathematics f- I pi JOSEPH KEVIN MCKENZIE MARY ELIZABETH MEDLEY Mental Health STEPHEN MEEKS. JR. Chemistry SHARON E MILLER Home Economics MARK A MELENOERS RHONDA O MELTON MYRNA C. MIL8URN Mathematics Mental Health RYAN J. MITCHELL MARY EVEOLYNN MORGAN CLIFFORD L. MONROE. JR Theatre Arts Social Work VALERIE BONITA MOSES Accounting ESTHER B MOORE Psychology GEORGE T MOULDEN Economics ROBERT D. MOSLEY Psychology A 2 ZENOVIA D MONROE Social Work ift? DENICE NEAL 8RENDA ANITA NELSON Elementary Education Speech Communication SHERYL L. NELSON DANIEL A. NOMISHAN AUGUSTINE O NWAEZE Social Work Science Education Business Administration ADEWALE A ONASEGUN THOMAS O. OPATEYIBO JAN OVERBY DAVID PARKER Business Administration Biology Pre-Med. Spanish VALENCIA PERRY ROSA R PHILLIPS EMMA-COLETTE PIOCHE VESTER PITTMAN. JR. Business Administration Mental Health Biology Accounting PATRICIA DENISE PITTS EUNICE W. POWELL Elementary Education Sociology CHARLES RICE Physical Education PAMELA D. RICE Psychology Elementary Education PEGGY CELESTE POWELL HOPE M. PRICE English Sociology RENEE M REDDING RHONDA E. REVELS Pysical Education Sociology WINNIE DENISE LISA MARILYN ROBERTS RICHARDSON Elementary Education Business Education 169 TANYA V RUSH Speech Communication ADRIENNE R08INS0N English CARLA J ROSS Speech Communication RENEE DENISE RYLES 8usmcss Administration DOLLITTE C ROBINSON Social Work DEBORAH A ROSS Social Work 170 DENISE INELL SANFORD Sociology DOROTHY ELLEN SCOTT Biology ROBERT B. SCOTT Speech Communication TERESA H SCOTT Psychology JURNICE H. SELLARS Secretarial Science BRENDA L. SIMMONS Business Administration DIANA MOREEN SMITH Chemistry NANCY L. SMITH Sociology NIRMALA SHAH Business Administration PANSY LORNA SHAKES Speech Communication IRENE C SHAVERS Political Science JAMES ROBERT SPENCER. JR DEBORAH R SQUIREWELL DENISE STANFORD Music Social Work Business Administration GRETCHEN STARKS CATHY M. STEPHENSON LINDA DENISE STEVENS GISELE S STEVENSON Home Economics Education Social Work Biology 172 GREGORY C STEWART Physical Education MICHAEL SYMONETTE Music ROBNAT TABORN Political Science KENNETH L. IABRON Mathematics SHEILA ORNETTA THOMAS Business Administration KAREN ANN THOMPSON Business Administration SHEILA RENE TILLERSON Psychology YVETTE E TAYLOR Political Science JAMES WALTER THOMAS. JR Physical Education JOEL L THOMAS Political Science VICTORIA D THOMAS DON K THOMPSON ELLA R THOMPSON Business Administration Business Administration HAROLD FRANKLIN TILLMAN. JR. Business Administration ELLEN J UNDERWOOD Business Administration LINDA MAE WALLER Elementary Education SYLVESTER J VAUGHNS. JR Accounting RODERICK ALEXANDER WARE Business Administration PAULA TOBIAS ROSEMARY TOLSON Accounting Business Administration KIM N ULMER JUSTUS C UMEBDLU Psychology PAMELA DENISE VESSELS DIANE E WALCOTT Secretarial Science Urban Affairs ALONZO WASHINGTON Psychology BERNARD 'WATKINS Mathematics DORIS WEDDINGTON DENISE LAVINYA WEEMS MARILYN YVONNE WELDON BETTIE LOUISE WELLS Music Education Music Education Business Administration Business Administration RE8ECCA A. WEST RENATA DENISE WHITE ERIC GEORGE WHITTAKER DELLA MARIE WILLIAMS Elementary Education Elementary Education Biology Psychology JANET L. WILLIAMS Home Economics SAMUEL LEON WINDER. Ill Accounting t 175 VERNESSA YOUNGER Economics ROMAINE D YOUNG Business Education JOANNE MARIA YOUNG Biology CYNTHIA GERMAINE YORK Biology Autographs Goodbye Yellowbrick Road” — And Also to A Way of Life So Goodbye Yellowbrick Road. Where the Dogs of Society howl . . Elton John “Goodbye Yellowbrick Road” (1973) Actually, to reverse the direction of Elton John's persona in his famed Goodbye Yellow Road lyric, we — the first graduating class to complete four years at Morgan State University — face the dogs of society. When May 20. 1979 arrives — O glorious graduation day. for so long a seeming eternity away — we will depart from Yellow- brick Road. i.e. Cold Spring Lane and Hillen Road, to take a journey into the real world of eight to five. It is a journey whose end is unpredictable. This is the long and winding road. On May 20. 1979, we will sever a link, a part of our lives that we will never again recapture. The experience of the college undergraduate is a way of life. To gaze from a third floor window at Holmes Hall on a rainy Friday in the Fall is to remember a very similar and very special Friday. September 6. 1974 — the writer has matriculated five years at Morgan for reasons none other than self — when he raced along the walkway leading to this same building to be on time for his first-ever college class at ten a m.: To gaze from this third floor window is to rekindle diverse warm memories of a beautiful half-decade of exper- ience; It is to remember Freshman Orientation Week, watermelon busts, parties, discoes in Hill Fieldhouse. being astonished by seeing so many fine women on one campus every single day. as a reputed 10 to 1. woman to man ratio reputedly grew to 13 to 1; It is to remember Funkadelic. Mandrill, and Betty Davis at Hill Field house in 1974 — do I hear some doubters out there saying that they never heard of shows at Hill Fieldhouse?: It is to remember all night studying for finals. It is to remember protesting students entirely blocking off the intersection of Cold Spring Lane and Hillen Road in 1974 and 1975 as part of a struggle against the state govern- ment to save Morgan State College s identity and to make it a University: It is to remember Miss Alston in English 102 telling you that you were to do two. not one. term papers and feeling the color in your face change from brown to blue, asking yourself Did you really want to come to college after all?”, and then grimly determining to deal with it: it is to remember the frenzied feeling of having earned a B from this most meticulous instructor; It is to remember a sardine can that passed for a collegiate fieldhouse on October 11. 1975 — Morgan's Home- coming — when Kool and the Gang. Grover Washington. Jr., and Donald Byrd played before an estimated 10.000 -plus tortured, crowded souls, many of whom were admitted on phony tickets to make up the largest crowd ever to enter the fieldhouse. It is to remember stepping on people and being stepped on. for there was no room at this inn which had a capacity of 7.500 as people sat in the aisles, stairways, on rails and wherever there was any semblance of space: It is to remember your first A after two and one half years of waiting: It is to remember driving to school for the first time after nearly four years of waiting on windy corners that could have well been located in Siberia or the Russian Front and praising the Mass Transit Administration for its sometimes late buses — by calling it com- plimentary names such as (§ !•?% ; It is to remember that about 95% of your instructors were a credit to their profession; It is to come back to the present and think of the future as to what awaits one particular five-year professional college student when he embarks on his oddyssey upon the long and winding road. Kenneth Clarke (K.C.) Morgan's next pre ? A warm smite turnoth away wrath We’ll never make it at O’Dells! I,io r A broken leg .. . take two aspirin and come back tomorrow. The Gang Goes To Delaware Who's That Behind Those Foster Grants? Just Funnin' R.O.T.C. Takes A Break STATCUy opit COW G 194 i K Student government president PETER C. HARVEY Tuskcgce institute. Alabama Political Science Major 19S Student government vice-president JAMES BOBBE FRASIER Baltimore. Maryland Politcal Science Major Rashid Salahu-Dm—Assistant to President Sheila Tillcrson—Assistant to Vice-President 198 Sherman Moore—Director ot Research State Affairs Ivan Hale—Communications Diroctor Janice Clark—Executive Secretary Jan Boykins—Student Court Robin Wills—Director of Productions Timothy Smoot—Assistant Comptroller Jessie Lyons—Communications Director Assistant 200 t 201 tUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION itciuw; _ SAM WEENlIt ter «• v r« KIM i r« M i ;a MUIM CMMATION ■GS JUNlOff eci n « ••UAH THE AUTOBIOCWPH T MALCOLM X K I JMJ MfN •ttltOOM ■ ■0 • c r it 7 JO m auour tot GRADUATE ANO PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL OAY feUIOOM M rn 202 203 Omega Phi Omega 204 Alpha Bear chapter The Omega Phi Omega Fraternity was founded last spring by four young men at Morgan State University. The Alpha Bear Chapter consists of 31 young men dedicated to the ideals of scholarship, manhood and the development of a strong brotherhood among Black college age men. 205 Council of independent organizations (l-r); Keith Butler, Rod Williams The council of Independent Organizatons was organized in 1968 to identify inde- pendent organizations who had common interests for unity, togetherness, brother- hood and sisterhood. The Council consists of eight organizations: lota Phi Theta. Groove Phi Groove. Pershing Angels. Pershing Rifles. Alpha Phi Omega. Tau Alpha Upsilon, Non Phi Non. and Yo Psi Phi. Each organization within the Council has two representatives whose responsi- bilities are to vote and promote all other plans needed for the Council to function suc- cessfully. Even though it is a council of eight different organizations, our goals have always been to work as one. 3 Alpha chapter lota Phi Theta Alpha Chapter, the first of lota Phi Theta, was founded on September 19. 1963. by 12 men who felt that they were too old and mature to go through a rediculous pledge season. It was originally called I Felta Thigh” fraternity, lota's purpose is to establish brotherhood and a sense of mature responsibility, while maintaining one's pride and confidence in one’s self. Alpha chapter Yo Psi Phi Groove Phi groove Mother bear chapter r— — - n ■ The Society of Pershing Angels was established February 9. 1965 by a diligent of freshmen women. They en- deavored to promote Morgan State University women and to establish a girl's drilling team at the university. The Perishing Angels strive to achieve perfection in drilling. With the help of all the Pershing Rifles, but espec- ially that of the late John (Stony) Burke. Jr.. The Pershing Angels made their debut on May 13. 1965. which was R.O.T.C. Day. Since that day. the Perishing Angels have been progressively moving forward. Pershing angels Pershing rifles The National Society of Pershing Rifles is an organization whose purpose is to foster a spirit of friendship and cooperation among the Military Department and maintain a highly cooperation among the Military Department and maintain a highly efficient drill company. The Pershing Rifles have performed on campus, as well as in many cities throughout the country. V v s The Pan-Hellemc Council is the governing body of Morgan s Greek Community The Pan-Hellenic Council has worked untiringly to promote and insure harmouious relationships among all campus Greek lettered organiza- tions. In the fulfillment of its goals, some of the Council’s activities are the Greek Sing. Pan-Hellenic Festival, all Greek Picnic. Intramural Sports. Pan-Hellenic Dance, with its main thrust in community and social enrichment. Pan-hellenic council GREEKS From whence wo came Across the seas Across the sands Ancestnal past of Kings and queens Of Zeus and Memnon Of Othello the Moor . In search of ourselves Of self love and platonacy The age old odyssey Of perseverance . Together we surface From Alpha to Omega We are the beginning and the end With goals set high We search in Unity The journey is long Our task unending We arc in search of Utopia 21S Beta Alpha chapter I Alpha Phi Alpha Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. Inc. is the first Greek Letter fraternity es- tablished for Black men. It was founded on December 4. 1906 at Cornell University. Beta Alpha Chapter was founded on Morgan State University Campus in 1926. Manly deeds, scholarship, and love for all mankind are the expressed aims of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. ilHiHiEiliiil Ate !; •ate ’ a 1 1 IS $:! ’ i !iiS: i ‘ S I 'L' l ? ?a Delta chapter Alpha Kappa Alpha Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc. was founded on the campus of Howard University on January 15. 1908 and is the oldest college sorority founded by black women. The Alpha Delta Chapter of the sorority was founded on the campus of Morgan State University in May. 1926. by Helene Hash. The standards of leadership, service, scholarship and character continue to characterize the sorority and its members in college and the life of the community. 219 Kappa Alphi Phi Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity was founded in 1911 in Bloomington. Ind.. by a group of inspired Afro-American scholars who sought to create better rela- tions among themselves. The fundamental purpose of Kappa Alpha Psi is Achievement, in all fields of human endeavor. Our organization continues to grow as we all build for the future. Alpha lota chapter was founded in 1931 at what was then Morgan State College. Since then A.I” has maintained an ongoing tradition in Kappaland and on campus. The worldly image that may be associated with chapter mem- bers is supported by the fact that the Brother’s homes range from North Carolina to New York: from Bermuda to Nigeria. “The diamond’s shining high, and it’s shining over A.I. By Brother E. Adam J-Hasan 221 Pi chapter Omega Psi Phi Omega Phi Phi Fraternity. Inc., was founded on the campus of Howard University in Washington. D. C. on November 17. 1911. It was the first black fraternity founded on a black college campus. The Founders. Ernest E. Just. Edgar A. Love. Oscar J. Cooper, and Frank H. Coleman sought to bring unity among the Howard Men and adopted Friendship is Essential to the Soul” as their motto. Manhood. Scholarship. Perseverance, and Uplift were their cardinal principles, and Omega Men everywhere still live up to those principles today. Presently, there are more than 500 chapters in the U. S. and abroad. Pi Chapter was founded on the campus of Morgan in 1923. Since that time men from Pi Chapter have gone on to make significant contributions as leaders in various communities. Among some of the more well-known Omega Men who pledged at Pi Chapter are Earl Graves. Publisher and Editor of Black Enterprise Magazine. Lonnie Liston Smith. Recording Artist, and Joe Black. Vice-President of Greyhound Bus Lines. Pi Chapter consist of young men who stress Professionalism and In- tellect” along with brotherly love for one another. The members of the chapter are active participants in the Student Gov't Association. Pan Hel- lenic Council, departmental clubs, and other campus organizations. To ful- fill the moral obligation of community service, each year the chapter initiates an unending list of social programs. Pi Chapter is one of the most prestigious chapters of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. 223 Alpha Gamma chapter Delta Sigma Theta Delta Sigma Theta. Inc., a public service sorority was founded on January 13. 1913 at Howard University. Twenty-two young women envisioned an organization of college women, dedicated to academic excellence, cultural enrichment and public service, as a necessary component in the development of the Black woman. Delta's aims en- compass the political, and economic, as well as the sociocultural de- velopment of the Black community. This international organization is compromised of one-hundred thousand members, and six-hundred and forty-two chapters, in the United States. Liberia. Haiti, and the Virgin Islands. Some of Deltas' prominent leaders include Shirley Chisolm. Verda Welcome. Patricia Harris. Roberta Flack. Betty Shabazz. Mary McCloud Bethune. and Nikki Giovanni. Alpha Gamma chapter was formed in 1926 by Alice Parham. Francis B. Hill. Ruth Waller. Gertrude Wilson. Eunice Hutchins, and Violet Anderson. The Alpha Gamma chapter is acknowledged as one of the hardest working and most productive undergraduate chapters in the region. Delta Sigma Theta encourages young women to seek the goals of scholarship, cul- tural enrichment, personal development, and other fine qualities of womanhood. Phi Beta Sigma 226 Gamma chapter On January 3. 1914. the Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity was founded on the campus of Howard University by three men. A Langston Taylor. Leonard Morse. Charles Brown. These men chose nine of their class- mates to join them in forming the Alpha Chapter of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity. Since that date, it has become an international organiza- tion with chapters in the United States. Switzerland and Africa. The fraternity has three programs — Education. Social Action and Regional and local levels. Phi Beta Sigma can truly be regards as a fraternity working towards a common goal. Zeta Phi Beta 228 Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Inc. was organized at Howard University on on January 16. 1920. Objectives of service, sisterly love and scholar scholar- ship have brought together women from all parts of the country to be- come Sorors of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority. Sigma Gamma Rho { 2)2 A A “Prof” On June 23. 1978 the Alpha lota chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi honored a man who is acknowledged as an institution within Kappa Alpha Psi. He is known to all of us at Mor- gan as Prof Taylor. Professor Idel W.E. Taylor served as advisor to Kappa Alpha Psi for more than 30 years. His dedication to the development of youth is not restricted to Kappas, but to all those fortunate enough to cross his path at Morgan. The scholas- tic and professional acomplishments of this man are many. Prof received his A B. and S T B. degrees at Lincoln University. He received his AM and M.Div degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and Lincoln University respectively. Professor Taylor served as instructor of English, at Lincoln University. Professor of Psychology. Pro- fessor of Philosophy. Dean of men. college chaplain and founder of the Beta Sigma chapter of his fraternity at Delaware State. After appointment to Morgan in 1947. Prof Taylor taught Philosophy for 30 years. He is a member of Phi Sigma Tau National Honor Society, recipient of the Elder W. Diggs Award, member of the Education Board of AME churches, director of the Plalnx Club Y.M.C.A. and a 32 nd degree Mason. Prof Taylor has been at Morgan for 32 years. Equanimity characterizes the man. He has unselfishly given guidance and instruction to a multitude of students during their matriculation at Morgan The Morgan Family joins the Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity in paying tribute to a man who will forever be a part of Morgan State University. 233 Delta Mu Delta English club Marketing club Standmg C Haines G Lewis R Miles (Vice President) T Wallace E Wright (president) L Burney L Anderson B Harney Jerome M Barnie R Gary C Terry C Hanson K Scott K Scott C Strickland K Dobson P Beale M Booth S Perry E Felton R Shackaford W Baltimore Psi Chi Tijuana James Vinnie Bagwell Kyle Ogle Cynthia Gary Nancy Baskerville Rhonda Johnson Royce Stiles Auther Weatherbee Burrell Freeman (President) Ronald Howard (Vice-President) Lavonya Kess Myra McNair Tony Mitchner Sheila Robinson Renee Wood Dana Robinson Brenda Easley Brenda Washington Rod Manning Charles Randolph Sharon Perkins Julie Smith Lois Washington Charles Ellis Marsha Oliver Della Williams Charlotte Early 2J7 Promethean Kappa Tau 238 Alpha Psi Omega 2 39 Senior mentors 240 Student court The UMOJA Council 2 2 243 Motivating forces 244 I D.C. trailblazers e 11 2 4S Student senate i i1 i i 246 Ira Aldridge players The organization was founded in 1938 by Mr. Edmunds, and was originally called the Mor- gan Players. In the late 1940’s. Dr. Walter Turpin and Mr. Lamb made the organization nation- ally known and at the same time changed the name to The Ira Aldridge Players. They obtained the new name for the organization from a Black Shakespearean tragdean who was named Ira Aldridge. He was world renowed for his roles in Othello. King Lear. Richard III, and others. In 1978. the organization celebrated its 100th birthday on the campus of Morgan State University. The Ira Aldridge Players are the longest continuous black theatre in Baltimore city and outlying counties. The members are: Jeff Richardson-President. Katana Hall-Vice President. Richard Miles- Business Manager. Mary E. Morgan-Member-at-Lodge. Annette Tyler. James Ward. Joanna Short. Erette Strothers. Wayne Gunn. Raymond Hardy. Cherri Cunningham. Kim. Williams. Gayle Bevely. Robin Boone. Robyn Wills. Denise Ransom. Vernetta Eleazwe. and Jacke Martin. Alpha Kappa Mu INDUCTEES Rona F Ammons Yvette A. Armstead Abe A. Bailey David C. Bash Kathy E Brewer James E. Browne Cassandra J. Carter Sheila M. Covert Christina M. Dersch Darcel B. Dobbins Mabel D. Edlow Audrey I. Edwards Lawrence O Egbuchulam Alva N. Enoch Nwuiu W Ezi Edith M. Fleming Beverly D Frazier Sandra D. Freeman Mark G. Glaze Eugenia D. Gray Desiree R. Green Wayne M. Gunn Brenda G. Harvey Mary E Hicklm Renee A Hurdle Tyrone W. Jackson Dcrreck V . Johnson Olivia D. Joynes Bruce K. Keck Mercia M. Lacks Sheron H Leigh Doris H. Ligon Audrey L. Long Dawn L Morton Renee D. Norris Margaret P. Paesch Patricia D. Pitts Peggy D. Quinton Reynaldo M. Sadang Doris E Shields Charlotte M Simpson Kelvin 8. Smith Evctte E. Strothers Yvette E. Taylor Debra J Thompson Shen A Thornton Karen S. Timpson Diane E. Walcott Canta M Ward Bettie L Wells Kenneth C. Williams Ava L. Worrell Mohammad R Yazdanpanah Psychology Urban Studies Business Administration Mathematics Business Administration History Social Work English Chemistry Accounting Home Economics Mathematics Medical Technology Social Work Business Administration Elementary Education Elementary Education Business Administration Biology Business Administration English Political Science Business Administration Elementary Education Political Science Mathematics Economics Mental Health Social Work Biology Mathematics English Sociology Home Economics Political Science Psychology Social Work Elementary Education Science Education Mental Health Mental Health Business Administration Business Administration Theatre Arts Political Science Business Education Mental Health Mathematics Urban Studies Home Economics Busmoss Administration Fine Arts Biology Medical Technology IN MEMORIAM TO THE LATE DR JAMES HAYWOOD HARRISON Special Thanks to Mrs Maggie Hamson Jones Mrs. Bettie Ellington Mrs. Virginia Vauls Lucia S. Hawthorne, '64 Professor of Speech Communication Adviser Alpha Kappa Mu National Honor Society t Organization is .. . our strength! 249 252 Football football football 253 2S4 Football football 257 Gymnastics gymnastics •i£J Gymnastics gymnastics 260 261 Track track (LEFT-RIGHT) FRONT ROW: MARK LEACH. THEODORE ABERNATHY. NEVILLE HODGE. CARLTON McNORTON. MIDDLE ROW: STANLEY KIDD. JEFFREY BING. PETER RADWAY. DUANE PERGERSON. TRAINER JOHN LAN- IER. BACK ROW: COACH LEONARD BRAXTON. JERRY MOLYNEAUX. RUDY HALL. MICHAEL HOLSTON. DARYL RHONE. 262 NEVIL HODGE (RIGHT LANE) THE NUMBER ONE MALE SPEEDSTER ON THE MORGAN TRACK TEAM THIS YEAR. NEVIL HODGE WAS SELECTED FOR THE NCAA DIVISION II GAMES IN MEXICO CITY THIS PAST SUMMER. HODGE WAS THE FIRST MORGANITE EVER SELECTED. AND HE PROVED THE SELECTION TO BE A WISE ONE BY PLACING THIRD IN THE 200 METERS RACE. ADDITIONALLY. NEVIL WAS A RUNNER ON THE RELAY TEAM THAT WON THE ONE-MILE RELAY. Track track track 263 (LEFT-RIGHT) FRONT ROW: YVETTE COLEMAN. EVETTE JONES. PAULETTE CLAGON. IMA JEAN JONES. DANA CARY. SYLVIA FLOYD. BACK ROW COACH LEONARD BRAXTON. PAULA CLAGON. MICHELLE KENNARD. LAWANDA ECHOLES. RHONDA YANCY. ROBERTA BELLE. VALERIE ROBINSON. MARY PARSONS. SHARON BROWN. TANYA BRYANT. TRAINER JOHN LANIER. 264 Track track MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY HAS SOME OF THE NATION’S MOST PREMEIRE, TALENTED FEMALE RUN- NERS ON IT’S WOMEN TRACK TEAM. CURRENTLY. FOUR OUTSTANDING MORGANITES HOLD THE AMERI- CAN RECORD FOR THE ONE-MILE RELAY FOR FEMALES. THE RECORD HOLDERS ARE ROBERTA BELLE. PAUL- ETTE CLAGON. PAULA CLAGON. AND YVETTE COLE- MAN. 1978 - AMERICAN RECORD - MILE RELAY 3:45.1 - MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY BOTTOM LEFT: MORGANITE MARIA PARSONS. A RISING SPRINTER HAS BEEN RANKED 5TH IN THE COUNTRY IN HER FIELD. 265 266 Volleyball volleyball volleyball 267 Volleyball volleyball 268 Volleyball volleyball MACHELE BESS (CAPTAIN) PHYLLIS BROWN LYNETTE BYRD LINDA DAVIS CECILIA DOVE RACHEL IDLETTE ADRIANE JACOBS TERENCE SAMPSON JEWEL THOMPSON DENISE WILSON COACH MARGARET BARTON 4JPN Cheerleaders 271 272 pr « 273 Basketball basketball (LEFT-RIGHT) KNEELING: HEAD COACH GUS GUYDON. ANTHONY YOUNG. DARRELL DAVIS. ASSISTANT COACH DAVE PERRY. STANDING: MANAGER ALSTON DAKERS. ROBERT BROWN. WILLIAM ASKEW. DARRYL EMERSON. AL BUSSIE. BYRON WITHERSPOON. GARCIA HOPKINS. OTIS BROWN. MIKE WARREN. MARTY TOYE. EARL THOMAS. STAN POWELL. TIM FRAZIER. HEAD MANAGER AL HENDERSON UNDER THE DIRECTION OF NEW HEAD COACH GUS GUYDON. THE MORGAN STATE BASKETBALL TEAM IS OFF TO A BLAZING START. PRESENTLY. THEY HAVE CAPTURED THE 1978 METRO CHAMPIONS TITLE. WHICH WAS THE END-PRODUCT OF AN UNDEFEATED OPENING STREAK; ALSO. THE BEARS HAVE RECEIVED NUMBER ONE RANKING IN THE NCAA DIVISION II. 274 27 5 276 Basketball basketball (LEFT-RIGHT) FRONT ROW: JENNIFER WEBB. TERRI ALEXANDER. CHERYL JONES. JUNE WALTON. GWENDOLYN HACKETT. JANICE CARPENTER. SANDRA WHISONANT. ALICIA SMITH. BACK ROW: COACH LARUE FIELDS. DIANE STRICKLAND. TRICHITA POWELL. CHERYL MAKLE. GLENDA JOHNSON. INGA BLUNT. MARY FRAZIER. DETHRA MOON. SYBLE COATES. ASSISTANT COACH KAREN BROWN CO-CAPTAINS. ALICIA SMITH AND INGA BLUNT WOMEN’S BASKETBALL IS BECOMING VERY POPULAR AS WELL AS STYLISH AT MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY. THE BEARS FEMALE BASKETBALL TEAM IS A CHAMPION CALIBER TEAM WITH NUMEROUS BASKETBALL TAL- ENT. THIS YEAR THE TEAM IS BOOSTING A 8-3 RECORD CURRENTLY AND BIG PROMISES FOR THE REST OF THE SEASON. FIRST YEAR HEAD COACH LARUE FIELDS IS THE SPARK PLUG BEHIND THE TEAMS SUCCESS. SUCCESSFULLY IS THE WAY THE WOMEN HAVE BEEN DEFEATING OPPONENTS: 100-49 WHIPPING OF DELA- WARE STATE AND 101-23 LICKING OVER ST. MARY’S. 277 278 Lacrosse lacrosse lacrosse 279 280 18? Morgan State University’s 282 duiLjom SuiLjDjeiu lUdDijiuSeuu JOHN E. NEWSON. A NATIVE OF RAYVILLE. LOUISI- ANA COMPLETED HIS UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES AT SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY IN BATON ROUGE. AND LATER EARNED HIS MASTERS DEGREE IN MUSIC FROM NORTHEAST LOUISIANA UNIVERSITY IN MONROE. LOUISIANA. MR NEWSON ENTERED THE FIELD OF INSTRUMEN- TAL MUSIC AS A BAND DIRECTORY IN TALLULAH. LOUISIANA HE THEN MOVED ON TO WORK IN THE DETROIT PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEM AS AN INSTRU- MENTAL SUPERVISOR FOR SEVERAL OF ITS SCHOOLS. HIS FIRST TEACHING POSITION ON THE COLLEGE LEVEL WAS THAT OF ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF BANDS AT PRAIRIE VIEW A M UNIVERSITY. TEXAS. AFTER WORKING WITH THE PRAIRIE VIEW A M BAND. JOHN WAS OFFERED THE JOB OF BAND DIRECTOR AT ALBANY STATE COLLEGE IN ALBANY. GEORGIA. WHERE HE SERVED ONE YEAR BEFORE HIS APPOINT- MENT HERE AT MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY. UNDER HIS DIRECTION THE BAND FOR THE PAST FOUR YEARS HAS PLAYED THROUGHOUT THE EAST- COAST FOR MANY PRESTIGOUS EVENTS. SEVERAL OF THE PERFORMANCES INCLUDED HALF-TIME SHOWS FOR THE WASHINGTON REDSKINS. PITTSBURG STEEL- ERS. NEW YORK JETS. AND NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS. THE MOST OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE OF ALL THE EVENTS WAS IN WASHINGTON D.C. WHEN THE BAND PERFORMED FOR THE MARYLAND INAUGURAL RECEP- TION FOR THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. Band directors band directors . 2S4 Former olympian and Morganite enters Black Hall of Fame 285 SETTING-THE GRAND BALLROOM OF THE POSH WALDORF ASTORIA-LAVISH BLACK-TIE DINNER-TELEVISION CAMERAS-HOST HOWARD COSELL-BIG NAME ENTERTAINMENT-AND WALL-TO-WALL CELEBRITIES. THE GALA WAS THE INDUCTION OF MORGANITE JOSHUA CULBREATH INTO THE BLACK ATHLETES’ HALL OF FAME. IN THE ILLUSTRIOUS COMPANY OF FORMER HEAVY-WEIGHT CHAMPION OF THE WORLD FLOYD PATTERSON: FORMER HARLEM GLOBETROTTER AND NEW YORK KNICK STAR NATHANIEL •SWEETWATER’’ CLIFTON. AND BASEBALL STAR FRANK ROBINSON. CULBREATH GAINED WORLDWIDE FAME DURING THE 1950s FOR HIS ABILITY TO RUN AND LEAP HURDLES FASTER THAN ANYONE ELSE IN THE WORLD. HE’S RANKED SECOND BY TRACK AND FIELD NEWS ON THE ALL- TIME LIST IN THE 400-METER HURDLES. AT 5 FEET. 7 INCHES. HE’S REGARDED AS THE SHORTEST HURDLER TO ACCOMPLISH SO MUCH. A GRADUATE OF NORRISTOWN (PA.) HIGH SCHOOL. JOSH SAYS HURDLING IS COMPLICATED. REQUIRING PRECISION. CONCENTRATION AND FORTITUDE. YOU HAVE TO GET YOUR STEPS PERFECT. IF YOU CLIP A HURDLE YOU LOSE SIX INCHES FROM YOUR STRIDE WHEN YOU TRY TO COMPEN- SATE. RIGOR MORTIS’ SETS IN I MADE SACRIFICES AND TRAINED HARD. BUT I LOVED TO RUN. I FEEL MY EDGE CONSISTED OF COMBIN- ING THE NATURAL SPEED OF A SPRINTER WITH DEVELOPING THE STRIDE OF A SIX-FOOTER. HE RAN BARE- FOOT ON THE CINDER TRACK AS A SOPHOMORE IN HIGH SCHOOL BECAUSE HE COULDN’T AFFORD TRACK SHOES. YET HE STILL BEAT ALL THE JUNIORS AND SENIORS. IN HIS SENIOR YEAR HE NOT ONLY CAPTURED THE STATE CROWN BUT ALSO WAS RANKED NUMBER TWO IN THE COUNTRY. CULBREATH’S HURDLING WON HIM A SCHOLARSHIP TO MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY. AT MORGAN STATE HE WON A GOLD MEDAL AS THE MOST SCHOLARLY ATHLETE IN HIS GRADUATING CLASS. HE WENT ON TO RECEIVE A MASTER S DEGREE IN EDUCATION FROM TEMPLE UNIVERSITY. ‘JOSH’ WAS THREE-TIME AMATEUR ATHLETIC UNION (AAU) 440-YARD HURDLES CHAMPION AND RECORD HOLDER. AND A MEMBER OF THE ONE-MILE RELAY CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM AT PHILADELPHIA PIONEER ATHLETIC CLUB. CULBREATH RACED TO VICTORY IN THE 400-METER HURDLES AT THE PAN AMERICAN GAMES IN MEXICO IN 1955 AND IN CHICAGO IN 1959. HE WAS ONE OF ONLY TWO MEN TO WIN THIS EVENT TWICE IN THE HISTORY OF THE GAMES. THREE TIMES HE CAPTURED THE PENN RELAY 440-YARD HURDLES CHAMPION- SHIP. IN MOSCOW IN 1958. CULBREATH WON 2ND PLACE IN THE 400 METER HURDLES DURING THE FIRST USA VS USSR COMPETITION. IN THE 1956 OLYMPIC GAMES IN MELBOURNE. AUSTRALIA. HE WON A BRONZE MEDAL IN THE 400 METER HURDLES. WHILE HE WAS DOWN UNDER JOSH SET A WORLD RECORD FOR THE 300 YARD DASH ON AN OVAL GRASS TRACK. AND THAT RECORD STILL STANDS TODAY. TODAY. JOSH CULBREATH IS EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY MANAGER FOR WORLD WIDE MARKETING AND SERVICES AT SPERRY UNIVAC HEADQUARTERS IN BLUE BALL. PENNSYLVANIA. JOSHUA. JOSH’ CULBREATH MORGAN STATE UNIVERSITY APPLAUDS!!! SPERRY UNIVAC NEWS AUG. 1978 SPORTSCASTER HOWARD COSELL WITH CULBREATH TRACK STAR WILMA RUDOLPH. WINNER OF THREE GOLD MEDALS IN 1960 OLYMPICS. ATTENDED CEREMONIES. JOSHING WITH ••SWEETWATER” CLIFTON 287 WE A A 88.9 FM Mahogandy message media Al Stewart genera! manager K weisi Mfume program director Promethean 88.9™ MOIGAN STATI UNIVIISITY •ALTIMOII. MAITLAND 211)9 AL STEWART General Manager INGRID DORSEY Reporter CARMILLITE COOMBS Announcer KWEISI MFUME Program Director PAT JOHNSON Reporter TEA MON TIER Anchor-person LARRY DEAN News Director MICHAEL SINGLETON Reporter DEBYII SABABU Announcer HAROLD TAYLOR Production Coordinator B.T. BENTLEY Reporter AL BRITIAN Sports Reporter CHAUNCEY K. LEWIS Staff Announcer AL SYKES Announcer DORIS HAWKES Secretary ARSCHELL MORELL Anchor-person NEWS LAMONT GERMANY Sports Anchor-person BETTY HUGHES Receptionist ALPHA WILLIAMS Staff Announcer RAHBYN BRAGLEY Production Assistant SANDI MALLORY Staff Announcer MARTY BROWN Reporter DUDLEY BROOKS Announcer RICHARD WATTS Reporter Spokesman Audio-Visual Etc. Etc. ■ Larry Dean Arschcll Morell The Mahogandy Message Media began recep- tion on January 10. 1977 from the University campus, in Holmes Hall. As a publicly financed organization. WEAA strives to present not only music for our listening enjoyment, but to uplift and inspire us through programs of intellectual and cultural enrichment. The location of WEAA makes it accessible to Morgan students and the surrounding community. The staff at WEAA puts forth the greatest efforts to aptly uphold the reputable name of Morgan State University through its Mahogandy Message Media. Working Endeavoring Always Attaining the highest Harold Taylor Promethean Gil Scott-Heron promotes “secrets” 29 ... and Mr. Al Jarreau visits W.EAA. m Spokesman Audio-Visual Etc. Etc. ■ ?95 T. 2?- sisern Chit ggjj ri«!l «• • mTita !?■—. ! T 1 —■ ■' ■■ ur. nu I l’ - film alii i nlr — i |._, - - ■ - ■ .. J : I II i| TPS JJT . ffL W tRmm iMmi mk ■ | Tbi Editor-in-Chief ......E. Adam Jackson-Hasan Associate Editor .............Morrow Coates Literary Editor ..............Jackie Whitfield Business Director ................David Webb Sports Editor ................Dave Hutchinson Copy Editors ...................Bridget Owens Adimu Khary Office Managers ................Darlene Banks Secretary ........................Renee Reavis Photographic Staff Julio Smith. J.K.McKensie Reporters Johnathan Garvin Thornton James Peggy Powell MaDonna Perry Executive Board Chairman ............E. Adam Jackson-Hasan Members ....................Morrow Coates Jackie Whitfield David Webb Dave Hutchinson Bridget Owens Adimu Khary Darlene Banks Renee Reavis Sharon Lampkins The Spokesman newspaper is a bi-monthly publication of SPOKESMAN PUBLICATIONS, the student press organization of Morgan State University. The SPOKESMAN is a member or associate of the follow organizations: Black National Collegiate Press. Institute of the Black World Press. Associate Collegiate Press. Smith- sonian Associates and the U S. Student Press Association. Total Circulation of the is 5000 copies per issue. Promethean TX.------, Ijtt 7 lm Uw ______ _ r 4A h- km r i or |„w TX . ■ « •' ’ r b « •• uj. r £ • - _..r Sir Ut '« • U Kv • “ « k n« III r..„J V Mtk 4 • m TX. Ul n •«Ml .M U Wr T 296 Spokesman Audio-Visual Etc. Etc. 297 Audio visual Spokesman Audio-Visual Etc. Etc. M9 Promethean 110 McKeldin Center 444 3426 LYNN KNIGHT Co-Editor KENNETH WOODS Co-Editor MICHAEL SHEFFEY Assistant Editor KENNETH CLARK Student Adviser DR. BURNEY HOLLIS Faculty Adviser To The Morgan Family: We present to you the 1979 Promethean. I hope that you enjoy this yearbook as much as the staff and I have enjoyed constructing it. I hope it will preserve for you the memories of your Morgan experience. It is the product of many hours of brainstorming, tedious work and frustra- tion. Frustration resulting from the lack of participation in many cases, and the insufficient funds with which we were given to work were the major problems . . The financial crisis that we faced is an issue that should be the concern of the total Morgan Family. Morgan is being system- atically starved and is being faced with institutional changes detrimental to the traditions that Morgan holds dear. I am referring specifically to the State Board of Higher Education's Master Plan for Post Secondary Education, the drop in student enrollment due to cuts in the Basic Edu- cational Opportunity Grants and the decline in the enrollment of incoming freshman. We had better begin to address these problems that are staring us in the face or the Promethean of 1989 will be one of two things; a yearbook full of blond heads and blue eyes or simply a thing of the past. Through this yearbook we have attempted to relate a message that we invisioned at the com- mence of its production. That message being a need for a Renaissance of our cultural heritage, that being the core of our existence. We are a proud people with a proud and painful past. Our history shows us our exceptional capacity to endure. We will survive but not with a clear perspective if we continue to forget who we are once we have arrived”. Only through the perpetuation of our culture will we survive as a people. For you see. we are our only chance for survival and a race with no strong cultural backbone will crumble in time. I hope that as a reflection of Morgan, the oldest and largest Black institution of higher learning in the State of Maryland, this Promethean has emphasized the reservoir of talent and cultural and educational wealth that Morgan has to offer. I hope that we have made a positive statement on the status of the African-American in 1979. I would like to thank the working staff without whose help and enthusiasm this book could not have been a reality. For fear of neglect. I will just say thanks to all those responsible for allowing me this most rewarding educational experience. May the class of 1979 and all others to follow be blessed with happiness and prosperity and remember Morgan as an element in our development as successful Black men and women. Yours in perpetuating Morganism. Lynn Knight Editor Spokesman Lynn Knight editor-in-chief Audio-visual Etc. Etc. Dr. Burney Hollis advisor Spokesman Audio-Visual Etc. Etc. Patrice Little-underclassmen Glenda Simpson-underclassmen J04 Marvin Brown • sports Guy Fullard -sports Spokesman Audio-Visual Etc. Etc. J05 Felix Jackson organizations Cynthia Edwards organizations Alvin Stone public relations Promethean 306 Rushid Salahu-din photography Kenneth Clarke Morgan media Spokesman Audio-Visual Etc. Etc. i07 The saga of the Promethean . . . 306 The staff cools out! Audio-Visual Etc. 309 Spokesman Etc. The staff breaks . . , the book is finished! J10 Promethean staff 79 LYNN KNIGHT Editor-in-chief MICHAEL SHEFFEY Assistant editor DR. BURNEY HOLUS Faculty advisor KENNETH CLARKE Student advisor PEGGY POWELL BRENDA NELSON Senior section LEROY JENKINS Faculty Administration PATRICE LITTLE GLENDA SIMPSON Underclassmen CYNTHIA EDWARDS ANITA GREEN FELIX JACKSON Organizations MARVIN BROWN “GUY FULLARD Sports WILMA BECKWITH Student government PEGGY POWELL KENNETH CLARKE LEROY JENKINS LYNN KNIGHT Literary staff KEVIN McKENSIE DUDLEY BROOKS RASID SALAHU-DIN SEGALL MAJESTIC Photography staff KENNETH CLARKE Morgan media L YNN KNIGHT Cover design ALVIN STONE Public relations WILMA BECKWITH CYNTHIA EDWARDS ANITA GREEN Secretarial staff Spokesman Audio-Visual Etc. THANKS TO OUR PATRONS Sharon Dunn Class of 1979 Thanks To the Math Dept Delores Dunn and Family Jamaica Is Number One The Ex-Marine From Milwaukee Congratulations Class of 79 Mariner Do It Best Stacey Parker-Towson State Paul and Genie May 5. 1979 Don't Forget Me S.Dunn Terri Love To All Dottie Dunn Congradulations to Graduating Class of Morgan 1979 Beware The Bloody Triangle! Traci Dunn Class of 84 Gina Dunn Class of 81 Love God Bless All Class of 1979 Long Live Tac-Kwon-Do !!! Girls at Jens are The Best Good Luck Brenda Shipley Congradulations From Prof Anonye For Dr Haywood Harrison For Clarence Parham For Martin Jenkins Doc LSH My Name Is Jihad Saleem Chew Champion of Champions NH E Adam Jackson-Hasan Striving For Excellence May Peace Be With You Love Is Linda Stewart 80 Doreen Stokes Class of 82 Love Is Joanne Jackson Crystal Hanson Class of 80 Congradulations to Class of 79 Good Luck to The Class Of 79 Congratulations To the Class of 79 Congratulations To Seniors Congratulations To Myself Slimplicity A DELTA Lady ! Walter L Fields 1981 Michael The Scorpio 80 Lionel Peterson Class of '2 Life Is Beautiful Gary Robinson Joy Renee Glover 1980 Most Gracious Lady Of AKA James L Conyers Class '80 Kenny Mean Green Class of 82 Valerie Cheery Smile First In My Heart tt 4 We Are Still The One!A£0 001 Suave Slick Prof Marv4 76 Happiness is being the brother of a Delta, or a sister of a Nasty-Que Dog. Manhood. Scholarship. Perseverance. Uplift. 61177 Miss Anita Janell Green Miss Maria Bennett 1980 Miss Patricia Gabriel 80 Ms Karen Mikie Atkins Ms Shelley Shel Teasley Littyce M Boone To Mom Vanessa George Class of 81 Congratulations Class of 79 Lawrence Botts The MAN 82 Tamara Y Allen Peace Be With You Dave Dr Wood 7 BA 78 Dan Mr Haze 3 BA 78 Sheila Lady of AKA 9A 77F 29 A 77 Sophisticated AKA Reggie Landers Jr Class Pres KAY Ernie Bing Bing” Bell Rudolph 10 A 77 18 A 77 Lovely Lady of AKA A Rising Black In Morgan City Hails From A Chemistry Major Darrell Dr Love Emerson Thanks To The Yearbook Staff Good Luck Class of 79 Sweet Sixteen Keep The Faith Congratulations To Seniors Naeem Kevin TJ The Pride of NJ 1 Nancina 23 A 77 Lady of AKA Cool Guy Yearbook Staff 80 Congradulations to Lynn! Diamond Janet As Prissy Aquarius Cecelia Nelson Georgia Peach Awareness Is The Key-Unlock Your Mind Happiness Is Graduating Lori As Starchild Paula Washington Class of 82 Andre Wickham Class of 80 George or Gl Class of 79 Steven Campbell Class of 81 Laurence Martin Junior 79 Philip Tomlin Junior 79 Tyrone Wilson Class of 80 Maria D Scott Class of 80 Kim Anita Nunnally Class of 81 Congratulations Graduates Unique Is Being A Que 4'4 James Farr Class of 82 Peter Harvey. You Did A Good Job! Congratulations Mr Mrs Harry F. Pugh Sr. Thalia Pugh Phillip Tyler Sharon Maness Cory Dixon Mr Mrs Fenton C Pugh Windell Johnson Mr Michael Boyd Good Work. Lynn 2 Love Mama And Daddy SPECIAL THANKS Dr. Burney Hollis Dr. Clayton Stansbury Mr. Robert Chee-mooke Mr. Dwight Lassiter Mrs. Vivian Ryan Ms. Camille Blackwell Miss Miriam Curtis Miss Sylvia Law Dr. Larry Coleman Mr. Rashid Sala Hu-Din Miss Janice Clark Mr. Robert Pugh Mr. Peter Harvey Mr. Bobbe Frasier Mr. Timothy Smoot Miss Sheila Tillerson Mr. Henry Givens Mr. Sherman Moore Mr. Richard Robinson Mr. George Gant Mr. Mrs. Earl Knight Mr Warren Webb Mr Earl Davis Mr. Julio Smith Congratulations to the Class of 1979 Doctors HALL, RANDALL AND CHAMBERS,PA 2300 Garrison Blvd. Baltimore, Maryland 21216 947-5100 5400 Old Court Rd. Randallstown, Maryland 21133 521-3636 MICKEY'S LIQUORS LUNCH LAUNDROMAT CARWASH AND EXXON GAS 5200 North Point Blvd. Edgemere, Maryland 477-1696 Featuring Delicious Hot Corned Beef Sandwiches The Baltimore Alumnae Chapter of DELTA SIGMA THETA SORORITY, INC. Congratulates GRADUATING SORORS OF ALPHA GAMMA Lynn Knight Sheila Tillerson Peggy Powell Royce Stiles Cathy Stephenson Theresa Johns Renee Redding Tijuana James Wendy Harp Olivia Joines Michele Thomas Carol Philip Laura M. Knight President Baltimore Alumnae AND THE CLASS OF 79 CONGRATULATIONS JANNIECE ROSEMARI BROWN Best Wishes are herewith extended to you upon your determination and courage to a- chieve your goal. Daughter you are the sweetest gift a life time can provide. A blessing and a constant source of happiness and pride Your quick delight over little things: your charm, your smile, your grace: And all the care free joys you bring to every passing day. MOTHER. Sincere appreciation and gratitude is hereby expressed to every one who has shared in shaping of your future. MOTHER DADDY. JOHNLENE. JIMMY BROWN 317 Founours (Deceased): Frank Coleman. Oscar J Cooper. Emesi E Just. Edgar A Love $)si $iji Jfraternitp PI CHAPTER OMEGA IS PI Chapter congratulates the Class of 1979 and the Promethean Staff on a job well done. Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega Omega is a beacon of hope is broadening ones scope is giving when there is need is being exemplary in your word and deed is every brother caring is every brother sharing is taking a stand whenever you must is earnestly facing life day by day is being prudent in what you think and say is this feeling we have of kin is knowing when to bend is that mighty purple and gold is that something that strengthens f your soul is knowing your own true identity a is an ideal that will extend throughout 1 infinity JL Special Congratulations to our Graduating Brothers (Anthony A. Adams. Marvin Brown. Frank A. Earl. Peter C. Harvey and Felix K. Jackson) and our Grad- uating Sweethearts (Glynice Coleman. Sharon Humphrey. Yvonne McGhee. Cheryl Peart. Adrienne Robinson. Sheila Tillerson and Jocelyn Wright) Manhood, Scholarship, Perseverance, Uplift I I 318 CONGRATULATIONS AND CONTINUED SUCCESS TO THE CLASS OF 79 GOURMET SERVICES INC. FROM JOHN LITT(DIRECTOR) AND THE STAFF PI OMEGA CHAPTER OF OMEGA PSI PHI, FRA TERNITY INC Congratulate The Class of 1979 Morgan State University THE PAN-HELENIC COUNCIL CONGRATULATES GRADUATING GREEKS! Frank A. Earl President Nancy Johnson Vice President 320 ALPHA GAMMA CHAPTER OF DELTA SIGMA THETA INC. Wishes To Express Congratulations And Continued Success To Graduating Sorors: WENDY HARP TIJUANA JAMES THERESA JOHNS OLIVIA JOINES LYNN KNIGHT CAROL PHILIP PEGGY POWELL RENEE REDDING CATHY STEPHENSON MICHELE THOMAS SHEILA TILLERSON And The Class Of '79 SPECIAL CONGRATULATIONS TO SOROR LYNN KNIGHT AND THE PROMETHEAN STAFF ON A JOB WELL DONE! Senior directory A Akeredolu. Sherry 105 Lagos Street Ebute-Metta. Lagos. Nigeria Accounting Activities- Accounting Alexander. Charles III Route 2. Box 457G. Hazel and Maple Avenue East Berlin New Jersey 08009 Account- ing Activities- Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Inc. Veterans Club. Accounting Club. Co-op Program Proposed Goal- Certified Public Accountant Alexander. Dejuana 1522 Dondill Place Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 19122 Sociology Activities- Sociology Club Proposed Goal- Lawyer and Criminologist Alford. Wesley M. 1016 Warfield Drive Portsmouth. Virginia 23701 Urban Planning and Human Develop- ment Activities- Football-Letterman. 4 years. Pro- methean Kappa Tau. Scholar-Athelete of the Year. 1977-78. Urban Studies Association. Society for the Advancement of Management Club Proposed Goal- Urban Planner Allen. Henry M. 3812 Edmondson Avenue Baltimore. Maryland 21229 Accounting Activities- Accounting Club Proposed Goal-Certified Public Accountant and Priest Allen. Kim Macnair 319 Greenwood Drive Petersburg. Virginia Elementary Education Activities-Kappa Delta Pi. Promethean Kappa Tau. Student-National Teacher’s Association. Association for the Care of Children in Hospitals, Harper House Dormitory President. 1976- 77. Inter-Residence Council. 3 years. Inter-Residence Council Vice President. 1976-77. Award for the Child Life Teachers Training Program Proposed Goal- Ad- ministrator Allen. Robert 2419 West Bolton Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 19121 Business Administration Proposed Goal- Finance Alston. Jonothan Michael P.O. Box 95 Georgetown. South Carolina 29440 Elementary Education Activities- Concert Choir. National Teacher's Association. Drama Club Alston. Robin Benita 3815 Hillsdale Road Baltimore. Maryland 21207 Biology Activities- Biology Club Beta Kappa Chi. Psi Chi. Promethean Kappa Tau. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Incorporated. Peer Conselor. Who's Who Among American Colleges and Universities. Senior Mentor Proposed Goal- Geneticist Amiohu, Stephen Christopher 1640 East Coldspring Lane Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Business Administra- tion Activities- Economic Society. Peer Conselor. Delta Mu Delta. Who's Who Among American Colleges and Universities Proposed Goal- Business Personnel Anderson. Luke Conway 414 West Street Northwest 11 Washington. D.C. 20001 Activities The Baltimore Community to Overturn the Bakke Case. Collegiate Chapter of the American Marketing Association. 1977- 79. Royal Court of Yo Psi Phi Sorority. Royal Court of the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Incorporated. 1977- 79. Black Leadership Conference. 1977 Proposed Goal- Public Relations Anderson. Maxwell A. Jr. 130 North Culver Street Baltimore. Maryland 21229 Art Education Activities- Student Representative for the University Policy Plan- ning. Student Art Association. McKeldin Art Center Graphic Artist. Cover Designer for the Morgan Maga- zine. Cartoonist for Spokesman Publications Proposed Goal- Advertising Executive Anthony. Jacqueline LaVerne 600 Walter Street Kanna- polis. North Carolina 28081 Political Science Activities- ACPS. Marching Band. Political Union. Political Intern- ship Proposed Goal- Corporate Lawyer Armstead. Yvette Andrea 1831 East Baltimore Street Baltimore. Maryland Urban Studies Activities- Alpha Kappa Mu. Urban Studies Association (Officer). Pro- methean Kappa Tau. Research Assistant-Energy Con- servation Project Proposed Goal- Law 322 Arnold. Joyce Avery 3702 Cedardale Road Baltimore. Maryland 21215 Music Education Activities- Concert Choir. 4 years Atkins. Barbara A. (nee Chesley) 6629 Knottwood Court Baltimore. Maryland 21214 Business Education Pro- posed Goal- Business Administrator Avery. William P. 2501 Woodland Avenue Baltimore. Maryland Mental Health Mental Health Association. SGA. Human Relations workshop. Student Volunteer; Baltimore City Jail. Spring Grove State Hospital. Pris- oners Aide Association. Northwest Baltimore Corp. Cal- vert Educational Center. Echo House B Badamas. Suwe N. 2728 Reese Street Baltimore. Mary- land 21218 Home Economics Activities- American Home Economic Association. Dietetic Association. Maryland Home Economic Association Proposed Goal-Nutritionist Bagley. Stephanie L. 3014 Hartford Road Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Business Administration Bagwell. Vinnie 194 Hillsdale Avenue White Plains New York 10603 Psychology Activities- Dormitory Council. Inter-Residence Council. French Club. Psi Chi. Chess Club. Student Government Association Productions. Promethean Kappa Tau. Alpha Kappa Mu. Tutoring Proposed Goal- Clinical Psychology Balark. Carl Henry Jr. 209 Allendale Street Baltimore. Maryland 21229 Activities Political Science Prome- thean Kappa Tau. Political Union Proposed Goal- Public Administration Ball. Donna Joyce 52 Girard Street Northeast Wash- ington. D C. 20002 Elementary Education Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Vice President of Kappa Delta Pi. Royal Court of Tau Alpha Upsilon. Incorporated (3 years). Proposed Goal- Teacher Baltimore. William 637 Oneida Street Northeast Wash- ington. D C. 20011 Business Administration Activities- Society for the Advancement of Management. Executive Vice President. 1977. Chairman of the Liason Com- mittee for the Marketing Club. Swimming Team. 1975. Basketball Team. 1975 Barnes. Calu Renata 5310 Goodnow Road J Baltimore. Maryland Activities- Inter-Residence Council. Dormitory Secretary. Food Services Committee. Sociology Club Member Proposed Goal-Probation Officer Barnes. Debora Ann 510 Ingraham Street Northeast Washington. D.C. 20011 Elementary Education Pro- posed Goal-Elementary Education Instructor Beard. Mary A. 306 New Avenue Reiserstown. Mary- land 21136 Activities- Home Economics Club. Peer Conseling Proposed Goal-Home Extension Agent Benton. Lisa W. 36 Boxthorn Road Abingdon. Maryland 21009 Elementary Education Activities- Student Na- tional Education Association. Committee for the Search for the Dean of the School of Education Proposed Goal- Teacher Bethea. Kenneth E. II 1967 Dominoe Road Annapolis. Maryland 21401 Biology Activity- Tennis Team Pro- posed Goal- Denistry Blackson. Priscilla Margaret 309 Maiden Lane Somer- dale. New Jersey 08083 Psychology Social Work Ac- tivities- Sweetheart of Kappa Alpha Psi. Social Work Club. Psychology Club, Talent Show. Royal Court of Miss Junior Proposed Goal- Psychology Conselor Blackwell. Frank Ellis Jr. 1928 Swansea Road Balti- more. Maryland 21239 Biology Activities-Phi Beta Sig- ma Fraternity. Incorporated. Biology Club. Pre-Medical Club President. Pan- Hellenic Council. Parliamentarian. 1978 Proposed Goal- Health Field Blackwell. Theresa A 1139 Ellicott Driveway Baltimore. Maryland 21216 Business Administration Proposed Goal- Public Relations Bollin, Pamela Alease Davenport 3916 23rd Parkway Apt. 11 Hillcrest Heights. Maryland 20031 Elementary Education Activities- Concert Choir. 1972-74. Student Government Association Staff. 1974 Elementary Edu- cation Association. 1977 Proposed Goal-Elementary School Teacher Bond. Gloria June Smith 4122 Forest Park Avenue Balti- more. Maryland 21207 Business Administration Pro- posed Goal- Realty Boom. William Steven 2209 North Ellamont Street Baltimore. Maryland Chemistry Activities- American Chemical Society Proposed Goal- Chemical Engineer Boone. Ella Rebecca 619 North Franklin Road Balti- more. Maryland Business Administration Proposed Goal- LSM Computer Operator Boyd. John T. 1308 East Coldspring Lane Baltimore. Maryland 21212 Business Administration Boykin. Pressie D. 2020 West Fayette Baltimore. Mary- land 21223 Business Administration Activities- Concert Choir Boykins. Jan 1077 Norwich Avenue Virginia Beach. Virginia Political Science Activities- Ms. Freshman. 1975-76. Political Union. French Club. Student Govern- ment Bicentenial Committee. WEAA Radio Station Production Assistant. 1976. Student Court Majestrate Justice. French Club. Student Court Chief Justice. 1978-79. Student Leadership Workshop Proposed Goal- Law Brown. Brenda f.O. Box 88 Sheldon. South Carolina 29941 Sociology Acitities- Judo Club. Sociology Club. Promethean Kappa Tau. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. Proposed Goal- Criminoly Brown. Demetris 5507 Peerless Ave. Baltimore. Mary- land 21207 Accounting Proposed Goal- CPA-Auditor Brown. Janniece Rosemari Rt. 5 Box 313 Montgomery. Alabama 21239 Biology Activities- Biology Club. French Club. Yearbook Staff- co-editor, exec, secretary. Phi Beta Sigma Sweetheart Proposed Goal- Dentistry Brown. June M. 1204 McElderry Ct. C-3 Business Edu- cation Activities- Alpha Beta Lambi Proposed Goal- Teaching Brown. Keith 290 Seward Street Rochester, New York Mathematics Activites- Former Pres, of Promeathan Kappa Tau. Pres, of Math Club. Vice Pres, of Pi Mu Epsilon. Treas. of S.A.C.S. and former Resident As- sistant. Proposed Goal- Operations Research Brown. Marvin 5609-K Sinclair Lane Baltimore. Mary- land 21206 Elementary and Secondary Physical Edu- cation Activities- Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Inc.. Who's Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges. Associate Editor- Promethean Yearbook. Dean’s List. Physical Education Club. Chess Club. Tennis Team Proposed Goal- Director of Collegiate Atheletics Brown. Mozella 3335 45th Vero Beach. Florida 32960 Business Administration Activities- Society of Manage- ment Proposed Goal- Financial Manager Brown. Sheila Denise 4945 Pine St. Philadelphia. Penn. 19143 Business Administration Activities- Morgan State University Concert Choir. Morgan Booster Club Pro- posed Goal- Small Business Owner Browne. James Edward Jr. 4901 St. Georges Ave. Balti- more. Maryland 21212 History Activities- P.K.T. Fresh- Soph Honor Society, Computer Club. A.K.M. National Honor Society. History Club. Bullen. Mattie Anita 3507 Langrehr Rd. Baltimore. Maryland 21207 Mental Health Association Activities- Natural Living Club. Student Mental Health Ass., Bethel A M.E. Church. N.A.A.C.P. S W I N G.. Y W C A.. Of- fenders Restorstion Assoc. Proposed Goal- Masters degree in Public Health Burney. Leytrice R. 14460 Carver Dr. Miami. Florida 33176 Business Administration Activities- Morgan Ma- jorette. Member Promeathean Kappa Tau. Honor So- ciety. Delta Mu Delta Honor Society. Sam Club, the Market Club. S.A.C.S. Club. Coop-Education Student. Omega Psi Phi Royal Court Proposed Goal- Top Women Executive in Corporation Byrd. Verna Chelo 1226 N. Dukeland St. Baltimore. Maryland Business Administration Proposed goal- Man- agement C Cain. Denise Arlene 2200 N. Rosedale St. Baltimore. Maryland 21216 Elementary Education Activities- Mem- ber of Promethean Kappa Tau. Member of Kappa Delta Pi. Who’s Who in American Colleges and Universities Proposed Goal- Teacher 324 Campbell. Pamela 1640 E. Coldspring Lane Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Business Administration Proposed Goal- Hospital Administrator Carrington. Annette 131 Willow Court Baltimore. Mary- land 21222 Elementary Education Activities-Member of Morgan State University Women's Track Team. Mem- ber of GRE Workshop Proposed Goal- Teacher Carter. Cassandra J. 2637 Cecil Avenue Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Social Work Activities- President of Social Work Organization 1977-78. Treasurer of Social Work Organization 1978-79. Member Alpha Delta Mu. Member Alpha Kappa Mu. Fulbright Scholarship Appli- cant. Groove Phi Groove Swanxmen Court 1976-77. Member of Morgan's Booster Club Proposed Goal- Child Psychologist Chaney. Diane 4914 Reistertown Rd. Baltimore. Mary- land 21215 Secretarial Science Proposed Goal- Execu- tive Secretary Chaney. Maryanne 3205 Elgin Ave. Apt. C-3 Baltimore. Maryland 21216 Secretarial Science Proposed Goal- Executive Secretary and Modeling Christopher. Lucia Renee 172-20 133rd Avenue Jamai- ca. New York 11434 Business Administration Activities- Yo Psi Phi Sorority. Inc.. Council of Independent Or- ganizations (CIO). Secretary for S.G.A.. Umoja Coun- cil. Royal Court Sweetheart of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Inc- Proposed Goal- Commercial Artist—Advertising Chukwueke. Jude Uba 4014 Chatham Rd. Baltimore. Maryland 21205 Biology and Chemistry (Double Major) Activities- National Honor Society for the Natural Sciences. International Students' Association. Pre- Med Club. Morgan State University Honors Program proposed Goal- Medicine Clarke, Kenneth I. 2017 Westwood Avenue Baltimore. Maryland 21217 English Activities- Sports Editor of promethean 1975-77. Sports Editor of Spokesman 1975-77. Editor-in-Chief of Promethean 1977-78. S.G.A Aide 1976. English Club 1977-78. N.A.A.C.P. 1978-79. Who's Who Among Students at American Colleges and Universities 1977-78 Proposed Goal- Sports Journalism Cartooning Clay. Vivian E. 1604 Liljones Ct. Baltimore. Maryland 21237 Business Administration Proposed Goal- Equal Opprtunity Specialist Cleghorn. Kaye Marie 715 Tremont At. Box 207 Boston. Mass. 02118 Biology Activities- Member of Biology Club. Feather Club Member (Pershing Angels Drill Team) 1976-77 Proposed Goal- Nursing Clements. Charmayne Deeann 345 Thorn St. Sewick- ley. Pennsylvania Music Education Activities- Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc., Morgan State University Choir. Morgan Singers Proposed Goal- Opera Singer Cloud. Leevonn 2080 Echodale Ave Apt. C-8 Baltimore. Maryland 21214 English Activities- Spokesman 1976- 79. English Club Proposed Goal- Lawyer Colbert. Judith Ann 1224 Shesley Rd. Mayo. Maryland 21106 Accounting Activities- Morgan State University Choir. Accounting Club Proposed Goal-Accountant Coleman. Glynice 5302 D Loch Raven Blvd. Baltimore. Maryland 21239 Music Activities- Miss Morgan State University 1978-79. Morgan State University Singer 1975-79. Morgan State University Choir 1975-79. Election Board Committee. Co-Chairperson Salute to Black Women 1978. Chairperson Sister's Outreach Program. Hostess at Lectures and Concerts. Student Education Association. Member Recipient of Morgan Women Award. Proposed Goal- Professional Singer Coleman. Kathy Patrice 10156 Guilford Rd. Jessup. Maryland Business Education Proposed Goal- Teacher (Business) Coleman. Lelya M 5558 Elderon Ave. Baltimore. Mary- land 21215 Secretarial Science Activities- Alpha Kappa Mu Honor Society Coles. Alvin R. 1 Tentmill Lane Baltimore. Maryland 21206 Accounting Proposed Goal- I.R.S. Agent Collins. Steven 910 Riverside Drive New York. New York 10032 Urban Studies Activities- Vice President of Urban Studies Association Proposed Goal- Urban and Regional Planner )25 Corbett. Harriet Teresa 7235 G Street Seat Pleasant. Maryland 20027 Biology (Pre-Medicine) Activities- Biology Club Secretary 1977-78. M.S.U. Modern Dance Ensemble. French Club Resident Assistant, M.S.U. Chapter N.A.A.C.P. Proposed Goal- Anatomy and Physiologist. Covington. Greta R. 92 Daimler Drive Seat Pleasant. Maryland 20027 Political Science Activities- Women's Basketball 1975-77. Vice President of Charles Key Science Club 1977-78. Senator Junior Class 1977-78. Senator Senior Class 1978-79. S.G.A. 1978-79. Member of National Organization of Black Universities and Colleges 1977-79 Proposed Goal- Attorney Crook. Josephine J 4601 Norfolk Baltimore. Maryland 21217 Elementary Education Activities-Honorary Mem- ber of Non Phi Non Sorority Proposed Goal- Teacher Reading Specialist Dalmina. Jocelyn Adina 5629 Frankford Ave. Apt. B-l Baltimore. Maryland 21206 Psychology D Dates. Carolyn D. 4016 Spruce Drive Baltimore. Mary- land 21215 Business Administration Activities- Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity. Inc. sweetheart. Itinerant Workshop Proposed Goal- Business (Sales) Davies-Sekle. Michael Monrovia. Liberia Business Ad- ministration Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau Vice President. Delta Mu Delta President. Member Execu- tive Board of Senior Class. Senior Class Senator. Mem- ber of Student Finance Committe. Legislative Branch of S.G.A. Proposed Goal- Corporate Attorney Davis. Jeffery M (Umoja) 824 Belgian Ave. Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Philosophy Activities- M.S.U Choir. Communications Chairperson for Umoja Council. Vice President of Umoja Council. Director of Umoja Food Coop.. Marching Band. Member of Phi Alpha Tau. Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities. McKeldin Center Staff Aide Proposed Goal- Philosopher. Poet. Musician and Community Director Davis. Lynne D 815 Gilrubin Ct. Apt 5 Baltimore. Maryland 21212 Science Education and Comprehensive Science Activities- Vice President of Charles Science Key Club. President of Alpha Angels. Member of Educa- tion Club Proposed Goal- Science Teacher Dawson. Winfred 1112 N. Montford Ave. Baltimore. Maryland 21213 Business Administration Activities- Student Government Association. University Choir. Society for The Advancement of Management Proposed Goal- Business DeMines. Karen Evelyne 2802 Mohawk Ave. Baltimore. Maryland 21207 Pre-Professional Chemistry Activities- Secretary A.C.S. 1976-77. Omega Psi Phi Royal Court 1976-77. M.S.U. Chemistry Department. Member N.A.A.C.P. Proposed Goal- Organic-Biochemical Re- search DeShields. Jocelyn M 3226 Dorithan Rd Baltimore. Maryland 21224 Music Education Activities- M.S.U. Choir. Alpha Angels. Promethean Kappa Tau Honor Society Proposed Goal- Management Dixon. Isaiah 1607 W North Ave. Baltimore. Maryland 21216 Political Science Activities- Political Union. Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity. Inc. Proposed Goal- Law Politics. Business Dixon. Valerie J. 15802 Presswick Lane Bowie. Maryland 21206 Accounting Activities- Ira Aldridge Players. Stu- dent Government Senate. Freshman Class Senator. Alpha Psi Omega. Alpha Angels. National Association of Black Accountants (Student Chapter). Delta Mu Delta. Promethean Kappa Tau. Spanish Club Proposed Goal- Certified Public Accountant Dobson. Karen 409 Jefferson St.. N.E Washington. D.C 20011 Business Administration Activities- Marketing Club Proposed Goal- Manager Donaldson. Eugene M 941 S.W Ave. D Belle Glade. Florida 33430 Graphic Design Activities- Student Art Association. Veterans' Club. S.G.A. Proposed Goal- Architecture Dorsey. Darlene Mae 206-04 47th Ave. Bayside. New York 11361 Social Work Activities- Spanish Club. Music Operators Guild. S.G.A.. Health Awareness. Director of Health Awareness Center 1978-79 Proposed Goal- Or- ganizing and Originating Personal Day Care Center Dumas. Diretha 2B Clifford Ave. Elgin. Illinois 60120 Political Science Activities- Junior Class Senator. Politi- cal Union Proposed Goal- Law Duncan. Thea Lena 1635 Northbourne Rd. Baltimore. Maryland 21239 Accounting Activities- Accounting Club. Student Chapter of N A S A. Proposed Goal- Certified Public Accountant Dunn. Sharon Ann 1702 E. 33rd St. Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Biology Activities- French Club. Biology Club Proposed Goal- Medical School (Doctor) Dunston. Terri P 3206 Dorchester Rd. Baltimore. Maryland 21215 Business Administration Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Marketing Club Proposed Goal- Business E Earl. Frank A 15329 Beauford Place Silver Spring. Maryland 20904 Political Science Activities- Political Union. R.O.T.C.. Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Inc. Sr Class Executive Board. Sr. Class Senator. President cf the Pan-Hellenic Council. Student Chairman of Military Affairs Student Branch. Thurgood Marshall Law Club. Umoja Council. SGA Proposed Goal- Criminal Lawyer Edwards. Audrey Lorraine 1234 Simms Place. N.E. A” Washington. D C. 20002 Mathematics Activities- Sec- retary of Computer Science Club (SAC). Mathematics Club. Pi Mu Epsilon. Alpha Kappa Mu. Beta Kappa Chi. promethean Kappa Tau. Proposed Goal- Systems En- gineer Fldr'dge- Latricia L 4612 Northwood Dr Baltimore. Maryland 21212 Mental Health Proposed Goal- Coun- selihf? Pldridge. Sheri Lorraine 739 Everett Street Camden, pggvv Jersey 08104 Chemistry Activities- Gymnastics ♦ earr . Intramural Softball and Volleyball. Bear Booster. Honey Bear. Royal Court of Miss Senior Proposed Goal- pharmacist Ptoh. John Chidi 5606 Albanene Place Baltimore. Mary- IaoCj 21206 Accounting Activities- Accounting Club. Delta Mu Delta. International Students Union Proposed Goal- Bank Manager Ezeala. Lambert Chike 6528 Pioneer Drive Baltimore. Maryland 21214 Biology Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Biology Club. Medical Tech Club Ezi. Nwuju Wosu 4415 Marble Hall Road. Apt 254 Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Business Administration Activities- Alpha Kappa Mu Delta Mu Delta. Marketing Club Proposed Goal Business man F Faulk. Erika Yvonne 206 E. 1st Street Summerville. S.C. 29483 Biology Activities- President Tau 8eta Sigma. Promethean Kappa Tau. Biology Club. Com- puter Club. French Club. Omega Psi Phi. Inc. Royal Court Proposed Goal- Oceanography Ferrell. Kerrie Belita 5605 Lundy Drive Lanham. Mary- land 20801 French lnternational Studies Activities- French Club. Spanish Club. German Club. Promethean appa tau. Distinguished Honors Student. Psi Delta Phi. Proposed Goal- Interpreter; Foreign Service Of- ficer Ferris. Deborah Marie 616 Orange Street Bedford. Virginia 24523 Accounting and Psychology Activities- Majorette Proposed Goal- Psychologist Fisher. Elsie A. 622 W. 33rd Street Baltimore. Maryland 21211 Elementary Education Proposed Goal- Elemen- tary School Teacher Fleming. Edith Michele 803 Carrington Avenue Seat Pleasant. Maryland 20027 Elementary Education Ac- tivities- Kappa Delta Pi. Alpha Kappa Mu. Senior Mentor Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities. SGA Proposed Goal- Reading Specialist Folayan. Titus Olybodun Oke-Oshun Street Ikerre- Ekiti. Ondo State. Nigeria Mathematics and Physics Activities- ACM. SPS. SACS. Computer Lab assistant. President of Physics and Pre-Engineering Club Pro- posed Goal- Chemical Engineer Ford. Delores 3816 Hayward Avenue Apt. 2 Social Work Activities- Student Social Work Organization Proposed Goal- Medical Social Worker Ford. Joyce M. 341-2A Homeland Way S. Baltimore. Maryland 21212 Home Economics Education Activities- Secretary of the Home Economics Club Proposed Goal- Teaching Fowlkes. Glenyce Gale 5115 Sunset Road Baltimore. Maryland 21215 Psychology Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Psi Chi. Proposed Goal- Counselor Francis. Hilda Louise 2950 Rosalind Avenue Baltimore. Maryland Biology Activities- Gymnastics Team. Biology Club Proposed Goal- Medicine Frasier. James Bobbe 7911 Dellwood Avenue Glenarden. Maryland 20801 Activities- Vice President Student Government Association. President of the Student Senate. Political Union. State Affairs Concern Team Proposed Goal- Public Relations and Politics Frazier. William T. 1323 Ensor Street. Baltimore. Mary- land 21202 Mental Health Proposed Goal- Flight At- tendant Frazier-EI. Clinton B. 2111 Garrison Blvd. Apt. 3-C Baltimore. Maryland 21216 Urban Affairs Proposed Goal- Planner Fredericks. Lisa 3820 Ridgewood Avenue Baltimore. Maryland 21215 Psychology Activities- Psi Phi Pro- posed Goal- Psychologist Freeman. Larrell Lee 4708 Greenspring Avenue Apt. B-l Baltimore. Maryland 21209 Psychology and Math Activities- PsiChi SACS. Computor Club. Psychology Out of State Research Program Proposed Goal- In- dustrial Psychologist Freeman. Sandra D. 4531 Finney Avenue Baltimore. Maryland 21215 Business Administration Activities- Alpha Kappa Mu. Delta Mu Delta. Secretary in the Counseling Center Proposed Goal- Business Executive or Administrator Fuller. Rodrigus L. 214 E. Broad Street Griffin. Georgia 30223 Urban Studies Activities- Student Government Association Co-director of Communications and public relations.. Urban Studies Association; President. Tennis Club. Who's Who Among Students in American Colleges and Universities. Mayor's Citation Award for Com- munity Services Proposed Goal- Public Policy Career G Gainer. Janet L 7204 Hathowan Terrace Hyattsville. Maryland Business Administration Activities- Swing Phi Swing Social Fellowship. Inc. Gaines. Dwight O 734 Booker Drive Seat Pleasant. Maryland 20027 Accounting Activities- Inner-Residence Council. Accounting Club. Budget and Finance Com- mittee. Senior Class Treasurer. Promethean Kappa Tau Proposed Goal- Auditor Gamble. Marguerite Pinewood. South Carolina Business Administration Activities- Marketing Club Gardner. Sidney N 923 Mill Street Gainesville. Georgia 30501 Biology and Political Science Activities- Omega Psi Phi. Inc.. French Club. Biology Club. Chess Club. Political Union. Student Court. Board of Elections Super- visors Proposed Goal- Lawyer Gaskins. Kirk Nathaniel III 2 River Road D C. Childrens Center Laurel. Maryland 20810 Mental Health Admini- stration Activities- Marching Band. Sophmore Class Vice-President. Jr. Class Vice-President. Peer Counselor. Inner Residence Council Who’s Who Among College and University Students. Senior Class Executive Board. Senior Mentor Proposed Goal- Hospital Administrator Geary. Reginald 5955 B- Western Ryn Drive Baltimore. Maryland 21209 Business Administration Activities- Delta Mu Delta. Marketing Club Proposed Goal- Law Gibson. Kathy 415 Park Blvd Moorestown. N.J. 08057 Psychology Activities-Charm Club. Promethean Kappa Tau. PsiChi. Morgan State Choir. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sority. Inc . Miss Junior's Court Proposed Goal-Con- sumer Psychologist Giles. Richard P 2601 E. Preston St Baltimore. Mary- land 21213 Business Administration Activities- R.O.T.C.. James A Watson Ranger Organization. Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. Inc. Proposed Goal- Military Entreprenuer Givens. Henry L Route 1 Box 96 W-2 Greenpond. South Carolina 29446 Pre-Med Biology Activities- President J28 of Muslim Students. Promethean Kappa Tau. Biology. Public Relations Staff of Student Government. Finance Chairman for Master Plan Inc.. President of Junior Class. Ernest E. Just Biology Society Who's Who Among American College and University Students. Business Manager of Student Government Association, Lab Technician at Baltimore Cancer Research Center- National Institute of Health. Psi Chi. Director of Fresh- man Orientation Proposed Goal- Medical Research and Hospital Administration Glaze. Mark Gregory 3700 Chesholm Road Baltimore. Maryland 21216 Biology Activities- Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity. Inc.. President of Beta Kappa Chi. Sec- retary of Alpha Kappa Mu. Biology Club. Pre-Med. French Club. Who's Who Among American College and University Students Proposed Goal- Public Health Administration Goings. Donna Lynn 74 Merrell Avenue Stanford. Con- necticut 06902 Business Administration Activities- J.V. and Varsity Cheerleader Proposed Goal- Business Ad- ministration Goodson. Marsha Faye 733 Linnard Street Baltimore. Maryland Business Administration Proposed Goal- Management Gordon. Teena M. 211 Ashley Ave. Rockville. Maryland 20805 Psychology Activities- Morgan State University Dance Ensemble. French Club. Proposed Goal- Psy- chologist Green. Diane Loretta 813 North Avondale Road Balti- more. Maryland 21222 Business Administration Activi- ties- S.A.M.. Marketing Club Proposed Goal- Manage- ment Green. Marsha A 3411 Liberty Heights Avenue Balti- more. Maryland 21215 Business Education Activities- Volleyball. FBLA Proposed Goal- Business Education Teacher Greene. Darlene 1685 Darley Avenue Baltimore. Mary- land 21213 Elementary Education Activities- N.E.A. Proposed Goal TEACHER Grooms. Elizabeth 1811 Ruxton Avenue Baltimore. Maryland Business Administration Proposed Goal- Per- sonnel Manager Gunn. Wayne Morgan Lime Kiln Road Sheffield. Maine 01257 Social Work Activities- Alpha Kappa Mu. Alpha Delta Mu. Editor of the Advocate. Ira Aldridge Players. Social Work Student Organization. Proposed Goal- Social Worker H Hale. Ivan Anthony 3600 Springdale Ave Baltimore. Maryland Speech Communications Activities- Who’s Who Among American College and University Students. Vice President of Dwight Oliver Holmes Debate and Speech Society. Associate Justice on the Student Court. Executive Director of the SGA Communication Department. Music Operators Guild. Student Court Pro- posed Goal- Public Relations Hall. Adrienne Marie 6009 Radecke Avenue Baltimore. Maryland 21206 Business Administration Proposed Goal- Finance Hancock. Darlene 1880 E. Fayette Street Baltimore. Maryland Secretatial Science Harp. Cassandra Wendy 10601 Green Mountain Circle Columbia MD. 21044 Biology Activities- Pre-Med Club secretary. Biology Club. French Club. Pan Hellenic Council. Delta Sigma Theta Sority. Inc.. Biology De- partment Lab Assistant Proposed Goal- Doctor Harvey. Brenda Gail Route 1 Box 388 Monroe. Virginia 24574 Business Administration Activities- Senior Class Vice President. President of Alpha Kappa Mu. Secretary of Delta Mu Delta. Marketing Club. Council on Student Life. Leadership Workshop Participant Promethean Kappa Tau. Omega Psi Phi Royal Court. Student Gov- ernment Finance Committee. Junior Class Treasurer. Teachers Aide Proposed Goal- Manager Harvey. Peter C. P.O. Box H.H.H. Tuskegee Institute. Alabama 36008 Political Science Activities- President of Student Government Association. Business Manager S.G.A.. President of Thurgood Marshall Pre-law Club. Political Union. History Club. Omega Psi Phi Fraternity J Inc.. McKeldin Center Board. Who's Who Among Stu- dents in American Colleges and Universities. Educational Policies Proposed Goal- Law Haysbent. Raymond V. 2712 Garrison Blvd. Baltimore. Maryland 21215 Business Administration Activities- SAM Club. Vets Club Proposed Goal- Management Height. Bernadette H. Route 2 Box 477 Cambridge. Maryland 21613 Science Education Activities- Pro- methean Kappa Tau. Alpha Kappa Mu. Secretary. Presi- dent and Vice President of the Charles C. Key Science Club Proposed Goal- Biology Teacher Hicks,. Brenlin Theresa 1616 N. Bond Street Baltimore. Maryland Social Work Activities- Social Work Club Hicks. Marvin Nathaniel 3205 Enslow Ave. Richmond. Va. Business Administration Activities- Varsity Football, lota Phi Theta Fraternity Inc.. Marketing Club Proposed Goal- Marketing Analist Hildaire. Max Murphy Gade 1 Baltimore. Maryland 21215 Political Science Activities- Caribbean Student Association. International Festival Proposed Goal- Foreign Affairs Hoff. Victoria Patricia 5200 Leith Rd. Apt. E Baltimore. Md. Psychology Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Alpha Kappa Mu. Psi Chi Proposed Goal- Counselor Holland. Catherine E. 1126 Kevin Road Baltimore. Maryland 21229 Political Science Activities- Pi Sigma Alpha Honor Society. French Club Proposed Goal- Work in Municipal Government Holliday. Michael A. 4416 Franconia Dr. Apt. A Balti- more. Md 21206 Pre-Med-Biology Activities-Biology Club 1976-78. Pre-Med Club 1977-78. Resident As- sistant 1976-77. President Pre-Med Club 1978-79 Pro- posed Goal- Doctor (Pediatrics) Holsey. Kimberle 4426 N. 20th St. Philadelphia. Pa. 19140 Business Administration Activities- Vice President of Public Relations 1976-77. Society for Advancement of Management 1978-79 Proposed Goal- Corporate Executive Hopkins. Debbie L. Route 1 Box 108 Monroe. Va. 24574 Mental Health Administration Activities -Mental Health Association. Senior Mentor Organization. Promethaen Kappa Tau Proposed Goal- Administrator of Community Mental Health Hudson. Sandra Joyce 5207 Frankford Ave. Baltimore. Md. 21206 Sociology Activities- Sociology Club Pro- posed Goal- Psychiatric Counselor Hunter. Sharon L. 1906 Carneal St. Richmond. Va. 23223 Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Gymnastics Club. Track Team. Biology Club Proposed Goal- Pediatri- cian Irving. Yvonne Renee 1531 Pinewood Pk. Dunbar. West Va.. 25064 Science Education Activities- Majorette 1974-76. alpha Angels. Charles Key Club Proposed Goal- Biology Teacher J Jackson. Felix K. Box 86 Gainesmill Rd. Gainesville. Georgia Business Administration Activities- Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Inc.. Marketing Club. Promethean Yearbook. Spokesman. Who's Who in American Col- leges and Universities Proposed goal- Personnel Spe- cialist Jackson. Florence 4032 The Alameda Baltimore. Mary- land 21218 Business Administration Activities- Com- puter Club Proposed Goal- Personnel Management Jackson. Gregory M. 2620 Maryland Ave Apt. 2 Balti- more. Maryland Business Administration Activities- Tau Alpha upsilon. Marketing Club. Intramural Football and Basketball S.G.A. Proposed Goal- Marketing Spe- cialist James. Angela Denise Route 1. Box 75 Palmyra. Vir- ginia 22963 Business Administration Activities- Society for the Advancement of Management. Resident As- sistant. Senior Mentor Proposed Goal- Personnel Man- ager J30 James. Marietta 1011 Pleasant Oaks Road Baltimore. Maryland Sociology Activities- Sociology Club Proposed Goal- Labor Relations James. Theresa M. 9332 Frontier Avenue Niagra Falls. New York 14304 Mathematics Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Math Club. Phi Beta Sigma Sweetheart. Computer Science Club. Dean's List. French Club Proposed Goal- Statistician James. Tijuana A. 823 E. Haines St. Philadelphia. Penn- sylvania 19144 Psychology Activities- Booster Club. Secretary. Pan Hellenic Council. Food Service Com- mittee President. Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc., lota Phi Theta Centaur Court. Alpha Phi Alpha Sphinxman Court Proposed Goal- Clinical Psychologist Jenkins. Leroy Roosevelt Jr. 8108 Carroll Lane Silver Spring, Maryland 20910 English Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Student Court Assistant Justice. Le Cercle Francais. Promethean Yearbook Staff. English Club. Vice President Proposed Goal- Lawyer Johnson. Deborah 403 Circle Ave Takoma Park. Mary- land Biology Activities- S.G.A. Communications. S.G.A. Health Awareness Assistant Director. Biology Club Treasurer. Natural Living and Good Vibrations. Presi- dent Proposed Goal- Physician Jones. David William Johnson. Howard K. 2559 Perrins Manor Rd Baltimore. Maryland Social Work Activities- Social Work Club Proposed Goal- Law Jones. David William 12515 Falls Rd Cockeysville. Maryland 21030 Sociology Proposed Goal- Probation Officer Jones. Jacqueline Box 61 Taylor's Island. Maryland 21669 Business Administration Prpose Jones. Octavus L. 1914 W. Lanvale St Baltimore. Mary- land 21217 Pre-Professional Chemistry Activities- Vice President of Pharmacy Club 1976. American Chemical Society. Promethean Kappa Tau Proposed Goal- Phar- macy School K Keene. Lewis Irvin 1624 Waverly Way Baltimore. Mary- land Social Work Activities- Social Work Student Or- ganization. Martin Luther King Pre-Ministeral Club. Advocate. Student News Letter. Proposed goal- min- isterial Social Worker Kelly. Ronald L. 904 Belgian Ave Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Accounting Activities- Vice President of Ac- counting Club. National Association of Black Account- ants. Swimming Team Proposed Goal- Public Account- ing Practice Kess. Gerald A. Jr. 4718 Sayer Ave Baltimore. Mary- land Elementary Education Activities- Swimming Team. Choir Proposed Goal- Teacher Kess. Lavonia 3307 Fair Field Rd Baltimore. Maryland Psychology Activities - University Choir. Psi Chi. Computer Club Proposed Goal- Researcher Kirkpatrick. Cecilia Annette 249 Douglass Court Balti- more. Maryland 21231 Business Administration Activi- ties- Computer Club. Business Education Club Proposed Goal- Teacher Knight. Lynn Denese 4 Geier Ct. Randallstown Md. 21133 Graphic Design and Advertising Activities-Stu- dent Government Association Productions Associate Editor Promethean 1978 Editor-in-Chief Promethean 1979. Student Art Association Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Inc. (Miss Delta) Royal Court Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. Inc. Proposed Goal-Journalist Knox. Julie Ellen 182 Lippitt Street Providence. Rhode Island 02906 Elementary Education Activities- MSU Choir 1976. Resident Assistant. Kappa Delta Pi. Miss Senior 1978-1979. Maryland National Education As- sociation Proposed Goal-Teacher L Lachs. Mercia Marie 108 Carver Rd Baltimore. Mary- land 21222 Mathematics Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Alpha Kappa Mu. French Club. Computer Science Club. Financial Secretary Beta Kappa Chi. Vice Presi- dent of Math Club. President. Pi Mu Epsilon Proposed Goal- Operations Research Laird. Elaine Sykes 34 Venus Ct Baltimore. Maryland 21224 Spanish Activities- Director. El Club Espanol. Student Representative Departmental Search Com- mittee and Departmental Recruitments Committee. Secretary to Assistant Dean College of Arts and Sciences Proposed Goal- Translator Teacher Lampkin. Sharon 1618 Northwick Rd Baltimore. Mary- land 21218 History Activities- Literary Editor Writer for Spokesman Newspaper. Coordinator for S.G.A.. English Club Proposed Goal- Publisher Lawrence. Eleanor 1504 Martin Ave Chesapeake. Virginia 23324 Music Education Activities- Miss Junior 1977-1978. MSU Choir. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc., Senior Mentor. Miss Morgan’s Court, Promethean Kappa Tau. Ms. Black Maryland Pagenat Proposed Goal- Professional Singer Lawson. Tony Anthony 2407 Reisterstown Rd Balti- more. Maryland 21217 Accounting Activities- Account- ant Treasurer of Accounting Club. National Association of Black Accountants. Proposed Goal- Public Account- ing Lawton. Patricia Delaine 3928 Highland Park Dr Balti- more. Maryland Psychology Activities- Physics Club. Psychology Club Inter-Residence Council. Life Guard. Vice President NAACP. President of YWCA Proposed Goal-Lawyer Lee. Glenn E. 2302 Ruskin Ave Baltimore. Maryland 21217 Accounting Activities- Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity. Co-op Work Study Program Proposed Goal- Certified Public Accountant Lee. Theressa Ellen 21 W 38th St Leonard. Denise L. 27 Elba St. Rochester N Y 14608 Sociology Activities-Sociology Club. Judo Club. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Umoja Council Proposed Goal Probation Officer Lewis. James E 2713 Gwynns Falls Pkwy. Baltimore, Maryland 21216 Business Administration Activities -Cooperative Education Proposed Goal-Revenue Of- ficer Lewis. Martin W 407 Main Street Baltimore. Md. 21227 Business Administration Activities- SAM Club. Computer science club. Delta Mu Delta Proposed Goal- Manage- ment Liburd. Sonia Maynard Clay Ghaut Gingerland. Nevis West Indies Biology Activities- President Senior Class. Junior Class Senator. President German Club. Biology Club. Pre-Med Club. Founder Carribean Student As- sociation. SACS. N.A.A.C.P.. YWCA. Promethean Co- Editor 1978. Intramural sports Proposed Goal-MS in Computer Science Ligon, Claude M. 9560 Highwind Court Columbia. Md. 21045 Geography Activities- R.O.T.C.. Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. Inc. Umoja Council. Pan-Hellenic Council Proposed Goal- Military Logan. Teri Lynn 1821 Boas Street Harrisburg. Penn- sylvania Home Economics Activities- Junior Class Ex- ecutive Board. Court Clerk. Home Economics Club. President- Home Economics Student Association. Sen- ior Class Executive Board. Secretary Maryland Home Economics Association Proposed Goal- PhD in Textiles Clothing Loines. George D. 606 Nicholson St. N.E. Washington D.C. 20011 Science Education Activities- Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. Inc. Charles C Key Science Club. Dormitory Council. Delta Sigma Theta Royal Court (Delta Beau) Proposed Goal- Forensics Science Long. Stephanie 222 West 8th St. Business Administra- tion Activities-SAM Club. Phi Beta Lamda. Groove Phi Groove Royal Court Proposed Goal- Marketing Re- searcher Lyons. Jessie A 3611 Mohawk Ave Baltimore. Md Speech Communication Activities- Assistant Director Communications S.G.A.. Motivating Forces W.E.A.A.. Secretary D O W Holmes Speech and Debate Society Proposed Goal- Broadcaster M Mahoney. Rhea Kay 4917 Goodnow Rd Apt I Business Administration Activities- Secretary SAM Club Pro- posed Goal- CPA 332 Majolagbe. Adegboyega Akanni P.O. Box 129 Ogbom- oso-Oyo State Nigeria West Africa Physics Activities- Computer Club Proposed Goal- Research and teaching Marcus. Anthony T 2715 Riggs Avenue Baltimore Md. 21216 Chemistry Activities- Pharmacy Club President American Chemical Society. Library Editor Proposed Goal- Chemical Engineer Martin. Judy Antoinette 1211 Kennedy St. N.W. Wash- ington. D C. 20011 Business Administration Activities- Marketing Club. Royal Court Pershing Rifles Proposed Goal- Marketing Mbui. Justus K. 503 Radnor Ave Apt 2 Baltimore. Md. Business Administration Activities- Accounting Club. International Students Association Proposed Goal- Management McAllister. Betty 2516 Edgecombe Circle N. Apt 202 Mental Health Administration Proposed Goal- Admini- strator McClary. Kevin 389 Seymour Ave. Newark. N.J. 07112 Business Administration Activities-Marketing Club. SAM Club. Accounting Lab. Intramural Sports Proposed Goal- MBA in Finance Mcllwain. Cordelia Ruth 3818 Fairview Ave. Baltimore. Md. 21216 Accounting Activities Accounting Club Proposed Goal- Public Accountant McKensie. Joseph Kevin 258 Fenimore Street Brook- lyn N Y. 11225 Physical Education Activities-Football Team, Assistant to Director Communications Depart- ment. Promethean and Spokesman Photographer. Deans List Proposed Goal- Physical Therapist McKinley. Camyra Lynn 7103 Rend Rd. Baltimore. Md. 21207 Activities- Biology Club. Biology Tutor Pro- posed Goal-dentist McLeod. Eleanor J. 5302 LochRaven Blvd. Apt B Balti- more Md 21239 Philosophy Proposed Goal Lawyer McManus. Lisa Andrea 4343 Bennmg Rd. N.E. Wash- ington D C. 20019 Accounting Activities- Computer Science Club. Accounting Club. Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority. Inc., Proposed Goal-CPA Medley. Mary Elizabeth 4014 Dorchester Road Balti- more. Md. 21207 Community Mental Health Meeks. Stephen 1516 E. 28th St. Baltimore. Md. 21218 Chemistry Activities-German Club. Computer Club. Food Co-op. American Chemical Society Proposed Goal- Research Chemist Melenders. Mark A. 1535 Montipelier St. Baltimore. Md. Activities- Computer Science Club Math Major Melton. Rhonda R. 2505 Park Heights Terrace Balti- more. Md. 21215 Mental Health Major Activities- Mental Health Club. Entertainer Fall Cultural Festival 1978 Proposed Goal-Youth Counselor Musical En- tertainer Milburn. Myrna C. 2841 Oakford Ave. Baltimore. Md. 21215 Business Administration Activities- Modern Dance. Choir Proposed Goal- Secretary Miller, Sharon Elizabeth 5519 Glen Arm Rd. Glen Arm Md. 21057 Home Economics Proposed Goal- Seam- stress Mitchell. Ryan J. 1434 Morris Place Chester Pa. 19013 Business Administration Activities-Science Club. Sec- retary SAM Club Proposed Goal-Marketing manager Morgan. Mary Eveolynn 2732 Parkwood Ave. Theatre Arts Activities-lra Aldridge Players. Upward Bound Counselor. Alpha Psi Omega Proposed Goal-Creative Writing Teacher Monroe. Clifford L 5100 Lodestone Way F Baltimore. Md. 21206 Social Work Proposed Goal-Child Care Worker Monroe. Lenovia D. 5100 Lodestone Way F Baltimore. Md. 21206 Social Work Proposed Goal- MS in Social Work Moore. Ester B. 5200 Eastbury Ave. Apt K. Baltimore. Md. 21206 Psychology Activities-Girls track team. Pro- methean Kappa Tau. Psi Chi. International Students Club Proposed Goal-Clinical Psychologist and Business Manager Moses. Valerie Bonita 2207 N. Ellamont Street Balti- more. Md. 21216 Accounting Activities-Accounting Club. National Association of Black Accounts Phi Beta Lamda. SACS Club. Business ED Club Mosley. Robert Dennis 2107 Clifton Ave Baltimore. Md. Psychology Proposed Goal-Child Psychiatrist Pediatrics Moulden. George T 5454 King Arthur Circle Baltimore Md. 21237 Economics Activities-Veterans Club Pro- posed Goal- Management Neal. Denice 4083 Muddy Creek Road Edgewater. Maryland 21037 Elementary Education Activities- Charm Club President Student Teachers Program Proposed Goal- Elementary School Teacher Nelson. Brenda Anita 94 St Margaret Street Charleston. South Carolina 29403 Speech Communications Activi- ties- Ira Aldridge Players. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Promethean Yearbook Staff Senior Mentor Organization Proposed Goal- Public Relations Nelson. Sheryl L 3903 W. Rodgers Avenue. Baltimore. Maryland Social Work Activities- Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. Promethean Kappa Tau Nomishan. Daniel A 899 South Ward. GBOKO. Benue State. Nigeria Science Education Activities- Member of Charles T Key Club Proposed Goal-Teaching Neaeze. Augustine Onyemaechi 5302 Loch Raven Boulevard Baltimore. Maryland 21239 Business Ad- ministration Activities-Member of Delta Mu Delta Club Proposed Goal-Corporate Executive Onasegun. Adewale A. 25 Willoughby Street Ebute- Metta. Lagos Nigeria West Africa Business Administra- tion Activities- SAM Club. Marketing Club. Table Tennis Club Proposes Goal- Business Entrepeneur Opateyibo. Thomas Omotola P.O. Box 2. lie Otun. Ita Olola Ogbomosho. Oyostate. Nigeria Biology Pre- Medicine Activities- Member of the Biology Club. Mem- ber of the Medical Technology Club. Member of the Pre-Medicine Club. Member of the French Club Overby. Jan 1113 Craig Street Norfolk. Virginia 23523 Spanish Activities- Vice President of Spanish Club. Member of French Club. Pentecostal Club Proposed Goal- Bilingual Secretary Parker. David Lee 110 Carver Road Baltimore. Maryland Music Activities- Morgan State Choir. Morgan Singers Perry. Valencia Rebecca 4825 Bass Place South East Washington. D C. 20019 Business Administration Ac- tivities- Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc.. Umoja Coun- cil. Marketing Club Proposed Goal Own and operate a salon Phillips. Rosa R. 2004 N Bentalou Street Baltimore. Maryland Mental Health Activities-Student Government Association. Mental Health Association Pioche, Emma-Collette 9021 Flicker Place Columbia. Maryland 21045 Biology Activities- Biology Club. Phi- losophy Club. Charm Club. SACS Club Proposed Goal- Environmental Biologist Pittman. Vester Jr. 452 East Jersey Street Elizabeth. New Jersey 07206 Accounting Activities- Accounting Club Proposed Goal- Public Accountant Pitts. Patricia Denise P.O. Box 296 Princess Anne. Maryland 21853 Elementary Education Activities- Member of Promethean Kappa Tau. Alpha Kappa Mu. President of Theta Xi Chapter Kappa Delta Pi. Dis- tinguished Honor Student, peer Counselor Promethean Yearbook Staff. Nominated for Who's Who Among American Colleges and Universities. Fulbright Appli- cant Proposed Goal- Social Worker Education Powell. Eunice W. 6805 South Champlain Avenue Chicago. Illnois 60637 Sociology Activities- Sociology Club Proposed-Goal Health Administration Powell. Peggy Celeste 5101 Sunset Road Baltimore. Maryland 21215 English Activities- Reporter for Spokes- man Newspaper. Promethean Yearbook Staff. Presi- dent of English Club. English Tutor. Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Inc . Promethean Kappa Tau Honor Society Groove Phi Groove Royal Court 1975-77 Price. Hope M. 136 East Richardson Avenue Lang- horne. Pennsylvania 19047 Sociology Activities- Mor- JJ4 gan State Marching Band. Concert Band. Pep Band. Tau Beta Sigma Band Sorority. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc. Pugh. Robert 851 East Woodlawn Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 19138 Accounting Activities- Member of Accounting Club. Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. Inc. Comptroller of the Student Government Association Randolph. Charles. R. 2317 Reisterstown Road Balti- more. Maryland 21217 Psychology Activities- Director of Volunteer Services. Umoja Council. Student Govern- ment Association. Groove Phi Groove Social Fellow- ship. Inc. Psi Chi Honor Club Redding. Renee M. 2626 Kimball Terrace Norfolk. Virgina Physical Education-Dance Concentration Ac- tivities- Member of Morgan State Dance Ensemble. Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Inc. Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity royal sweetheart court Revels. Rhonda E. 616 Delaware Avenue Hampton. Virginia 23661 Rice. Charles 2352 West Turner Street Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 19121 Physical Education Activities- Tau Alpha Upsilon. Fraternity. Member of Counseling Com- mittee Proposed Goal- Teaching and coaching Rice. Pamela Diane 26 Myers Road Newark. Delaware 19713 Psychology Elementary Education Activities- Morgan State University Dance Group. Who's Who Among American Colleges and Universities. Psi Chi National Honor Society. Council on Student Affairs. Kappa Alpha Psi Scroller Court Proposed Goal- Work with Handicapped Children Richardson. Winnie Denise 1429 Ellamont Street Balti- more. Maryland 21216 Business Education and Sec- retarial Science Activities-Phi Beta Lambda Roberta. Lisa Marilyn 4115 St. Georges Avenue Balti- more. Maryland 21218 Elementary Education Proposed Goal Elementary School Teacher Robinson. Adrienne 3217 Carlisle Avenue Baltimore. Maryland 21216 English Activities- President of Ger- man Club. Omega Psi Phi Sweet heart. President of English Club (1976-77) Robinson. Dollitte 5700 Jonquil Avenue Baltimore. Maryland Social Work Proposed Goal- Social Worker Ross. Carla J. 106 High Street Montclair New Jersey Speech Communication Activities- Groove Phi Groove Sweetheart. Kwanza council. DOW Holmes Debating Society Ross. Deborah A. 1130 Bramble Lane Orangeburg. South Carolina 29115 Social Work Activities- Social Work Club Proposed Goal- Day Care Administrator Rush. Tanya V. 8205 Allendale Terrace Landover. Maryland 20785 Speech Communication Activities- Morgan State University Choir DOW Holmes Speech and Debate Sociey. French Club Proposed Goal-Pub- lic Relations Ryans. Reginald V. R.R. 1 Box 358 Queenstown. Maryland 21658 Music Education Activities- Morgan State University Choir. Inter-Residence Council Pro- posed Goal- Music Education Ryles. Renee Denise 8501 Glen Michael Lane Randalls- town. Maryland 21133 Business Administration Activi- ties- Sam Club Saba. Risikat Simisola 2934 Lakebrook Circle Baltimore. Maryland 21227 Accounting Sanford. Denise Inell 11606 Laren Drive Clinton. Mary- land 20735 Sociology Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau Honor Society. Morgan State University Choir Pro- posed Goal Personnel Specialist Scott. Dorothy Ellen 712 Nostrand Avenue Uniondale. Long Island. New York 11553 Biology Activities- Morgan State College Choir. Baltimore Symphonette Orchestra. Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc Proposed Goal Biologi- cal Research Scott. Robert B. 5312 8th Street North West Wash- ington. D.C. 20011 Speech Communication Activities- IRA Aldridge Players. Promethean Kappa Tau. lota Phi Theta Fraternaty. Activity Manager for Intramural Sports Proposed Goal- Public Relation Scott. Teresa 704 South 6th Avenue Mt. Vernon. New York Psychology Activities- Student Government Pro- posed Goal Clinical Psychologist 5 Sellars. Jurnice H. 4702 Bonnie Ridge Pikesville. Mary- land 21208 Secretarial Science Shah 1536 Kingsway Road Baltimore. Maryland 21218 Business Administration Shakes. Ramsey Lorna 5013 Norwood Avenue Balti- more. Maryland Speech Communication Activities- DOW Holmes Debating Society WEAA Radio Station. Student Government. French Club Proposed Goal News Reporter Shavers. Irene 4004 Duvall Avenue Baltimore. Mary- land 21216 Political Science Proposed Goal- Law Simmons. Brenda L. 1951 Ridgehill Avenue Baltimore. Maryland Business Administration Smith. Alicia 1325 N. Ellwood Avenue Baltimore. Mary- land 21213 Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau Honor Society. Women's Basketball team Smith. Andrea Laverne 3307 Presstamn Street Balti- more. Maryland Elementary Education Proposed goal- Teacher Smith. Danise Virginia 1627 North Dukeland Street Baltimore. Maryland 21216 Sociology Activities- Mem- ber of the German Club. Phi Beta Sigma Royal Court 1976-79, Miss Phi Beta Sigma 1977-79. Sociology Club Proposed Goal- Criminal Sociologist Smith. Diana Moreen 50 Arnold Road Kingston. Jamaica Chemistry Activities- Member of Promethean Kappa Tau. Caribbean Students Association Smith. Glendolyn 1919 Allendale Court Hyattsville. Maryland 20031 Mental Health Activities- Alpha Angels Smith. Juli M 632 Ridge Road. South East Washing- ton. D.C. 20019 Psychology Activities- Member of Psi Chi. Umoja Council Proposed Goal- Child Psychologist Smith. Nancy L. 4 Echohill Lane Willingboro. New Jer- sey 08046 Sociology Spann. Henrietta 4952 Denmore Avenjue Baltimore. Maryland 21215 Business Administration Activities- Marketing Club Sparrow. Alice L.. 3109 Donna Rd.. Baltimore. Md. 21216. Activities: Accounting Club. Departmental Aide: Major- Accounting Proposed Goal-Accountant Spencer. Brian J.. 4320 Hayward Ave.. Balto . Md. 21215. Activities- Urban Studies Club; Major- Urban Studies Spencer. James R.. Jr.. 1030 N Luzerne Ave.. Balto.. Md. 21205. Activities- Morgan Concert Choir. Opera Workshop; Major- Music: Proposed Goal- Music Teacher Squirewell. Deborah R.. 5005 Bass PI. S.E 202. Wash.. D C.. 20019. Activities- Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc.. Social Work Organization. Senior Mentor. Sigma Sweetheart. Major-Social Work; Proposed Goal- Social Worker Counselor Stanford. Denise. 307 Franklin Rd.. Englewood. New Jersey 07631. Activities-S.G.A. 1978-79. Inter-Resi- dence Council 1976-77. Society of the Advancement of Management 1977-78. Member of Marketing Club and United Black Women Information Center. Stephenson. Cathy M.. 9 Fulton St.. Montclair. New Jersey 07042. Activities- Inter-Residence Council. Jr. Class Executive Board. Home Economics Club. Morgan Dance Ensemble. Kappa Alpha Psi Royal Court (Queen 1978-79). Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Inc.: Major-Home Economics Education Stevens. Linda D.. 164-24 109 Drive. Jamaica. New York 11433. Activities- Social Work Organization. Senior Mentor. Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority. Inc.; Major-Social Work; Proposed Goal; Social Work Administration Stevenson. Gisele S.. 3426 Piedmont Ave.. Balto.. Md. 21216. Activities- Biology Club: Major- Biology; Pro- posed Goal- Dentist Stewart. Gregory C.. 2017 Siclair Lane. Balto . Md.. 21213; Major- Physical Education; Proposed Goal; Rehabilitation Therapy. Symonette. Michael. 2802 Clifton Ave. Balto . Md. 21216. Activities- Volunteer Teaching at Morgan; Major- Music: Proposed Goal- Music Teacher. Composer. Taborn. Robnat. R.F.D. Box 119-C. Cape Charles. Va. 23310. Activities- Political Union. Promethean Kappa Tau; Major- Political Science; Proposed Goal- Lawyer )36 Tabron. Kenneth L.. 1353 Winston Ave.. Balto.. Md. 21239. Activities- M.S.U. Choir. Penecostal Club. Computer Club. Math Club. Student Court. Umoja Council; Major- Mathematics; Proposed Goal- Com- puter Programming. Tapp. Darlene R. 1519 Sheffield Rd.. Balto., Md. 21218. Activities- Tutoring Youth Groups: Major- Elementary Education: Proposed Goal- Elementary Grade Teacher. Taylor. Yvette E.. Box 83A Rt. 5 Esquire Drive. Salis- bury. Md. 21802. Activities- Political Union. M.S.U. Marching Band. Promethean Kappa Tau. Alpha Kappa Mu Honor Society. Pi Sigma Alpha Political Science Honor Society. Vice-President S.G.A. (1977-78). M.S.U. Board of Regents. A founder of Yo Psi Phi Soroity, Inc.. (Vice President 1978-79); Major-Political Science Thomas. James. W. Jr.. 131 Willow Court. Balto.. Md. 21222; Activities- Judo Club. Phys. Education Club. Promethean Kappa Tau; Major- Physical Education; Proposed Goal- Physical Education Teacher. Thomas. Joel L.. 5913 Winner Ave.. Balto.. Md. 21215. Activities- Political Union. M.S.U. Chapter of N.A.C.C.P.. Senior Senator. Philosophy Club. Who's Who in Ameri- can Universities and Colleges. Scroller's Club 1978-79; Major- Political Science; Proposed Goal- Lawyer. Thomas. Sheila O.. 4700 Loch Raven Blvd.. Balto.. Md.. 21239. Activities- Pershing Angel (Queen 1978- 79). Member of C.I.O. Council (Miss C.I.O. 1976-77); Major- Business Administration; Proposed Goal- Private Business. Thomas. Victoria D., 811 St. Paul St.. Balto.. Md. 21215; Activities- S.A.M.. Track and Field. Soccer Team; Major- Bus. Administration. Thompson. Don H.. 125 McTyere Ave.. Jackson. Mis- sissippi 39202 Thompson. Ella R.. 3601 Park Heights Ave.. Balto.. Md. 21215; Activities- Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc.; Major- Bus. Administration; Proposed Goal- Lawyer. Thompson. Karen A.. 2104 Rochelle Ave.. District Heights. Md. 20028; Activities- Founder Yo Psi Phi Sorority. Inc.. Marketing Club. S.A.M. Club. Senior Mentors. Umoja Council. Community Outreach Pro- gram; Major- Bus. Administration: Proposed Goal- Field of Marketing. Thompson. Marilyn R.. P.O. Box 281 N. Main St.. North East. Md. 21901; Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau 1975-1977. Mental Health Association. S.G.A ; Major- Mental Health Technology (Community); Proposed Goal-Personnel Training Counseling. Tillerson. Sheila R.. 100 Tillerson Drive. Newport News. Va. 23602; Activities-Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Inc. (President). Jr. Class Senator. Canidate for Miss Morgan 1978-79. Legislative Intern Md. General Assembly. Asst, to S.G.A. President 1978-79. Library Committee. Coordinator Miss Morgan Coronation 1978. Chair- person of Student Government Leadership Conference. Who's Who in American Universities and Colleges 1978-79. Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Inc. Royal Court (Omega Pearl); Major- Psychology; Proposed Goal- Lawyer. Tillman. Harold F. Jr.. 2207 N. Dukeland St.. Balto., Md.. 21216. Activities- Marketing Club: Major- Bus. Administration; Proposed Goal- Advertising. Tobias. Paula. 839 Roundview Rd.. Balto.. Md. 21225; Activities- Accounting Club. Business Education Club; Major- Accounting. Tolson. Rosemary. P.O. Box 274, Hugheville. Md. 20637; Major- Bus. Administrations; Proposed Goal- Business Management. Ulmer. Kim. 512 Clinton Ave.. Rockville Centre. New York 11570; Major- Psychology: Proposed goal- In- dustrial Psychologist. Underwood. Ellen J. Varner. 2014 Swansea Rd.. Balto.. Md.. 21239; Activities- Marketing Club; Major- Bus. Administration; Proposed Goal- Marketing. Vaughns. Sylvester J.. 7617 Greenleaf Rd.. Palmer Park, Md. Activities- S.G.A., lota Phi Theta Fraternity. Inc.. Accounting Club; Major- Accounting; Proposed Goal- Accountant. Vessels. Pamela D.. 7965 Riggs Rd. Apt. 8. Adelphi. Md.: Activities- Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority. Inc.. Pan Hellenic Council; Major- Secretarial Science; Proposed Goal- Office Administrator. Walcott. Diane E.. P.0. Box G. Christiansted. St. Croix. United States Virgin Islands. 00820; Activities- Urban Studies Club. Caribbean Students Ass.. Alpha Kappa Mu Honor Society; Major- Urban Affairs; Proposed Goal- Health Planner. Waller. Linda M.. 4023 Hilton Rd.. Balto.. Md.. 21209; Major- Elementary Education. Ware. Roderick A.. 91 Buckingham St.. Springfiels. Mass. 01109; Major- Bus. Administration; Proposed Goal- Bus. Executive. Washington. Alonzo. Rt. 4. Box 8 Dunbar. Georgetown. South Carolina; Activities- Football Team; Major- Psy- chology: Proposed- Industrial Relations. Watkins. Bernard 1703 W. Fayette St. Balto.. Md. 21215, Activities- Varsity Lacrosse Team 1975-76; Major- Math; Proposed Goal-Computer Programmer. Weddington. Doris. 1661 Milton Ave.. Balto.. Md. 21213: Activities-lra Aldridge Players. M.S.U. Choir; Major- Music Education; Proposed Goal- Music Teacher. Weems. Denise L.. 4309 Arline Ave. Balto.. Md. 21227; Activities- M.S.U. Choir. Opera Workshop. M.E.N.C.; Major- Music Education; Proposed Goal- Music Teacher. Weldon. Marilyn Y.. 235 Farragut Rd.. Annapolis. Md. 21401; Activities- Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority. Inc.; Major- Bus. Administration; Proposed Goal- Fashion Buyer. Wells. Bettie L., 468 West Court. Glen Burnie. Md. 21061; Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau Honor So- ciety. Delta Me Delta National Honor Society. Alpha Kappa Mu National Honor Society. Economics Club. Accounting Club. National Ass. of Black Accountants: Major- Bus. Administration; Proposed goal- Lawyer. West. Rebecca 2 Fairfield Place. Yonkers. New York 10705; Activities-Student Education Ass., Student Representive of the Search Committee: Major- Ele- mentary Education. White. Renata D.. 125 N. Colvin St. Apt. 8b Major- Elementary Education; Proposed Goal- Teacher. Whittaker. Eric G.. 5508 Bowleys Lane. Balto.. Md. 21206: Activities- Soccer Team. International Students Ass.. Carribean Students Ass.. Biology Club. Pre-Med Club; Major- Biology: Proposed Goal- Marine Biologist. Williams. Della M. 4814 Lanier Ave.. Balto.. Md. 21215; Activities- Member of Psi Chi; Major- Psychology: Pro- posed Goal- Psychotherapist. Williams. Janet. 100 Riverdale Ave.. Yonkers. New York 10705; Activities- Alpha Phi Alpha Sweetheart (Alpha Angel); Major-Home Economics. Wilson. Dani C.. 804 Duke St.. Rockville. Md. 20850; Activities- lota Phi Theta Royal Court. Marketing Club. S.A.M.; Major- Bus. Administration; Proposed Goal- Buyer. Wilson. Majorie D.. 2807 Ivy Bridge Rd.. Oxon Hill. Md. 20022; Activities- Food Service Committee. Resi- dent Assistant of Tubman House Dormitory; Major- Mental Health Technology (Child Care): Proposed Goal- Child Psychologist. Winder. Samuel L.. 4018 Woodhaven Ave.. Balto.. Md. 21216; Activities- Promethean Kappa Tau. Delta Mu Delta. Accounting Club: Major- Accounting; Proposed Goal- Public Accounting. Winston. Rhonda P., 106 Honeysuckle Court. Balto.. Md. 21222; Major- Elementary Education; Proposed Goal- Emotionally Disturbed. York. Cynthia G., 23 Ortley Court. Balto.. Md. 21220: Activities- Biology Club: Major- Biology; Proposed Ca- reer- M.D. Lab Technician. Young. JoAnne M.. 1807 N. Willington St.. Philadelphia. PA. 19121; Activities- Gymnastics Club. Biology Club. Alpha Phi Alpha Sweetheart (Alpha Angel). Groove Pgi Groove Sweetheart (Swanzmen Sweetie). Aesthetic Club; Major- Biology; Proposed Goal- Medical Tech- nologist. Young. Romaine D.. 513 Cedar St.. Cambridge. Md. 21206; Activities- Phi Beta Lambda. Omega Phi Omega Fraternity. Inc. Sweetheart; Major- Bus. Education. Younger. Vernessa. 1205 E. Caswell St.. Kingston. N. Carolina 28501; Activities-Promethean Kappa Tau. French Club. Econmics Club. Assistant Treasurer Jr. Class. Who's Who in American Universities and Collegs; Major- Economics; Proposed Goal- Economist. 338 Autographs The end


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