University of Virginia Library

Week Features
Black Culture

(Continued from page 1)

state legislature, and Elizabeth
Duncan Koontz, director of the
women's bureau in the U.S. Labor
Department.

Mr. Bond will speak at
University Hall at 7:30 p.m. on
Sunday, Feb. 14. While there is an
admission charge for his speech, all
other speeches during the week are
open to the public at no charge.

Mrs. Koontz will discuss blacks
and government at 8 p.m.
Wednesday Feb. 17, in the
chemistry building auditorium.

At 8 p.m. Tuesday, Arna
Bontemps, writer and visiting
lecturer at Yale, will discuss black
writing and authors in the
Newcomb Hall Ballroom.

On Thursday Acklyn Lynch,
professor of education at the
University of Michigan, will speak
at 2 p.m. and again at 8 p.m.
Barbara Sizemore, director of the
Woodlawn Experimental Schools
project in Chicago, will discuss
education and community at 4 p.m.
in the South Meeting Room of
Newcomb Hall.

Other speakers include, on
Monday, Roy S. Bryce-La Porte,
director of Afro-American studies
at Yale University, at 4 p.m. in
Newcomb Hall Ballroom and
Harold Cruse, writer-in-residence at
the University of Michigan, at 8
p.m. in Newcomb Hall Ballroom.

On Tuesday Niki Giovanni, a
poet, and Toni Cade, a writer from
Livingston College, Rutgers
University, will speak at 4 p.m. in
the South Meeting Room of
Newcomb Hall.

On Saturday, Feb. 20, Dr. W.H.
Grier, a psychiatrist and coauthor
of "Black Rage," will speak at 4
p.m. in the chemistry building
auditorium.