Newspaper Page Text
January 31, 1985/The Maroon Tiger/Page 15
Elamantary Schools
Martin Luther King Early Childhood
Martin Luther King, Jr.
"Martin Luther King Christian Academy
Education Center
Middle School
1055 West 39th Street
Martin Luther King, Jr.
3201 East Republican St.
77 Lawrence Avenue
Baton Rouge, LA 70806
Elementary School
Seattle. WA 98112
Dorchester. MA 02121
Tel: 504-383-6816
960 Tenth Street
Tel: 206-587-6318
Tel: 617-445-4120
Principal: L.A. Thompson
Oakland, CA 94607
Tel: 415-465-5146
Principal: Mrs. Searetha Smith
Principal: Mrs. Will Ella Brown
Universities and Colleges
Principal: Mrs. Minnie B. West
Martin Luther King, Jr,
Martin Luther King Junior High
Elementary School
1651 E. 71st Street
'Morehouse College
Martin Luther King
2430 32nd Avenue
Cleveland, OH 44103
830 Westview Drive S.W.
Elementary School
Tuscaloosa, AL 35401
Tel: 216-431-6858
Atlanta. GA 30314
7124 Northwest 12th Ave.
Tel: 205-759-1539
Principal: Mr. Jerry Mitchell
Tel: 404-681-2800
Miami, FL 33147
Principal: Mrs! Louise Crawford
Director, Public Relations:
Tel: 305-836-0928
Principal: Mr. Clifford R. Mathews
"Martin Luther King Early Childhood
High Schools
Dr. Allen May
Education Center
Martin Luther King High School
'Boston University
Martin Luther King, Jr.
4906 West 6th Avenue
4445 S. Drexel Blvd.
19 Deerfield Street
Elementary School
Portland, OR 97211
Chicago, IL 60653
Boston. MA 02215
3750 Greenspring Avenue
Tel: 503-288-6391
Tel: 312-373-7558
Tel: 617-353-3791
Baltimore, MD 21211
Tel: 301-396-0756 1
Principal: Harriet Adair
Principal: Dr. Reginald Brown
Director, MLK Center:
Dr. McConley Hughs
Principal: Mrs. Mary Silva
"Martin Luther King
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Elementary School
High School
Malcolm-King Harlem
Martin Luther King, Jr.
4800 West 26th Street
3200 East LaFayette St.
College Extension
Elementary School #11
Little Rock, AK 72204
Detroit, Ml 48207
2090 Adam Clayton
886 Bergen Avenue
Tel: 501-663-6397
Tel: 313-4S4-1802
Powell, Jr. Blvd.
Jersey City, NJ 07306
Tel: 201-547-5851
Principal: Geneva Williams
Principal: Mr. James Solomon
New York, NY 10027
Tel: 212-678-58,6
Principal: Ms. Angela Bruno
"Martin Luther King
Child Development Center
Martin Luther King, Jr.
High School
President: Dr. Mattie Cook
Martin Luther King, Jr.
1401 Simon Bolivar Avenue
122 Amsterdam Avenue
Drew/King Center
Elementary School #6
New Orleans, LA 70113
New York, NY 10023
Post Graduate Medical School
101 Passaic Avenue
Tel: 504-524-0391
Tel: 212-874-1202
Psychiatry and Human Behavior
Passaic, NJ 07055
Tel: 201-777-5300
Program Director: Mrs. Pearlie H. Elloie
Principal: Ms. Nellie R. Jordan
University of California
at Los Angeles (UCLA)
Principal: Mr. Joseph Werling
"Martin Luther King School
Martin Luther King High School
1720 East 120th Street
35 Lamp Street
Musgrave and Washington Lane
Los Angeles, CA 90059
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Providence, Rl 02906
Campus I
Tel: 213-603-4803
Elementary School (K-8)
Tel: 401-456-9398
Philadelphia, PA 19144
Chairman: Dr. Claudwell Thomas
33 Church Street
Principal: Stephen Kane
Tel: 215-843-9700
Paterson, NJ 07505
Principal: Mr. Louis E. DeVicaris
'Crozer Theological Seminary
Tel: 201-881-6139 or 201-881-6140
Middle Schools
"Martin Luther King School
Colgate/Rochester University
Vice Principal: Mrs. Irene Reynolds
1100 South Goodman Street
Martin Luther King, Jr.
4615 South 22nd Street
Rochester, NY 14620
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Middle School
Phoenix, AZ 85040
Tel: 716-271-1320
Elementary School
582Connally St., S.E:
602-243-5256
President: Larry L. Greenfield
50 Montgomery Place
Pittsburg, PA 15212
Atlanta, GA 30312
Tel: 404-577-3972
Principal: W.D. Swindall
Tel: 412-323-4160
Principal: Mr. Frank Smizik
Principal: Mr. Leviticus
"Martin Luther King School
2131 Jackson Street
Gary, IN 46407
Tel: 219-883-8591
Principal: Clausell Harding
‘Academic institutions where Dr King studied
“Schools being invited to join the network
Farrakhan: The Man . . .
(Continued from Page 24)
stones until it filled up the ditch
and the donkey walked out. And
so he told me to remember that
every knock is a boost. So, the
Iman’s denunciation of me and
the government’s denunciation
of me — I take that as the cross
that I must bear as a man who is
uncompromising and unwilling
to yield or bend to a world that
has oppressed and suppressed
truth and destroyed Black peo
ple as a nation.”
In many speeches and lec
tures, Farrakhan symbolically
says that if Black people do not
receive total equality in this
nation, they will demand a
separate nation. This has been a
continuing, if more subtle,
theme of the Black Muslims,
excluding the followers of Iman
Warith Deem Muhammad.
Farrakhan’s messages and his
close alliance with the Reverend
Jesse Jackson have alienated
many whites, especially Jews,
and many Black civil rights
leaders. He has been repudiated
from the United States Senate to
Vice-President George Bush for
comments on the Jewish religion
that were made during a lecture
from his headquarters in
Chicago, Illinois. But it is
Farrakhan’s friendship and
association with Jackson, which
has been the focus of media
attention.
“I've known Rev. Jackson for
years. In 1972, our mosque was
attacked by police in New York.
Rev. Jackson at the request of
Aretha Franklin came to stand by
my side and had a press con
ference to denounce police
intrusion into our mosque. From
that day we became friends and I
owed to Rev. Jackson a debt of
gratitude. I've admired his
tremendous wit, his tremendous
skill as a debator of the issues, his
drive for Black people. So it was
natural that when this brother
would desire to become the first
serious Black to fight for the
nomination of the Democratic
Party for the president of the
United States, I had to support
him.
“I think we gained much (from
Jackson's candidacy). We gained
movement again. Jesse Jackson’s
candidacy was the catalyst to
bring Black people together and
create movement. Jesse
Jackson's candidacy sparked
hope in our youth. Jesse
Jackson’s candidacy removed
once and for all the fear among
our young people that maybe we
cannot achieve this or cannot
achieve that. Our youth now
believe that they can compete
with whites, that they can best
them in argument, because
Jesse’s arguments were superior
and because his arguments were
superior, Black youngsters feel
that we cannot only become the
best dancers and singers and
sports figures but we also can
become the great thinkers,
Pulse of the
People
Dear Editor,
I feel the registration process is
intolerable, and needs to be
drastically improved. Due to
gross administrative inefficiency,
registration is unnecessarily
cumbersom. In particular,
students must contend with
absurdly long lines as they
attempt to confirm “pre”-
registration. Subsequently, they
are unfairly assessed late-
registration fees, and in many
cases, miss course lectures and
assignments. Furthermore, it is
redundant for students to “pre”-
register, and then return to
confirm pre-registration. In
stead, students should have to
only complete pre-registration.
In summary, it is paramount
that registration be carried out
with greater expedience, and
simplified in the manner
prescribed above. Also, I hoped
that the Administration will
week contructive discourse with
student and faculty represen
tatives in order to remedy this
problem.
Thoughtfully,
"A Registration Refugee”
Mike Winstead
philosophers, strategists,
statisticians that our great fathers
were in ancient Egypt ana an
cient Africa.”
Rev. Jesse Jackson did notwin
the democratic nomination for
president of the United States,
but he indirectly and directly
added thousands of new voters
to the rolls. Eventually, there was
speculation that he would run
for governor of South Carolina,
his home state. But there is even
more speculation and curiosity
on Farrakhan and Jackson. What
direction will the future take
them?
“Our goal for the future is the
complete freedom, justice and
equality of Black people either
within the social political order
of the United States or in a
separate territory or state of our
own that would allow us to build
a government for ourselves in
which we could grant ourselves
these essentials of life that up to
this present moment we are
being denied within the United
States of America. My hope for
Rev. Jackson is that our
friendship will continue to be
nurtured and strengthened. He’s
a very great asset to Black people
and we must protect him. We
must help to nurture his growth
for he's only 42 years of age and if
he has done this well at 42, what
will he do at 46 and what will he
do at 50? Unfortunately, we
didn’t see Martin Luther King
grow to reach 50. Nor did we see
Malcolm X grow to reach 50. Our
leaders are snuffed out at the
prime of their intellectual
growth. We hope we can keep
Jesse Jackson, Louis Farrakhan,
and Kwame Toure and ail of our
great scholars — that they die of
old age struggling still for the
liberation of our people.