This issue of Contact from May, 1976 features excerpts from WHUS Black Media’s interview with UConn President Glenn Ferguson, as well as an... Show moreThis issue of Contact from May, 1976 features excerpts from WHUS Black Media’s interview with UConn President Glenn Ferguson, as well as an announcement of Contact’s new editorial board. This issue also contains an article about the recent racial violence in Boston, a piece examining black liberation in relation to Greek life, and a reflection on the extent of black women’s liberation. Furthermore, there is a discussion of the bicentennial, an article about black film, and information about the new publication, “Black-World-View.” There is poetry by Clifton McKnight, Cheryl Bryant, C. McKnight, Ronald Williams, Rodney Vann Swift, Bo-Dimps, Alison Blackwell, and Jai Smith. Also included are reviews of the plays “A Day of Absence” and “The Life of a King,” as well as an article explaining the role of student shows on Channel 19, WHCT. There is an account of the three-day program “Black Woman to You,” and a description of the First National Conference of Blacks in Higher Education. An international section includes an article about the oppressive Gandhi regime in India, news of rebellion in the Caribbean, and an examination of the struggles of the Haitian people. There is also a letter from Gary Tyler, an inmate at Angola State Penitentiary on death row, and an account of the legal case of Madeline Fletcher, a Michigan police officer. Show less