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As part of Black History Month, there was a blood-free HIV testing event on College Walk today (Wednesday) in order to raise awareness of the AIDS epidemic in the African-American community. It was open to the community, and we're not sure how many test-ees were Columbia affiliates and how many weren't, but we've heard some of the results were rather sobering.

At the end of the event, speaker Miss Black New York Shade Ogunleye mentioned that out of the 57 people who were tested, 13 were found to be HIV-positive. Remember: One out of four people who have HIV aren't even aware that they do. If this isn't reason enough for you to be safe(r), we don't know what is.


In which Columbia dining connoisseur Dena Yago informs how much soul she got for her swipe at last night's John Jay dinner:

Kicking off Black History month, John Jay held what is colloquially referred to as "Black Night." DVD's and CD's of Sidney Poitier and Mary J. Blige were tactfully set up over the yams and ribs, but by far, the main centerpiece was the Barack Obama shrine set up over the salad bar.

Biscuits and cornbread were the runaway favorite, perfectly matched to the collared greens and pulled pork. Wilma took real pride in her creation, barbecue sandwiches and some unidentifiable veggie patty with cole slaw. The more adventurous set had fried plantains and baked yams at the vegan bar. Breaking from John Jay tradition, the food had soul. Soul food, perhaps?

The presence of spices and flavor threw a couple visitors for a loop, as did the plethora of flags hanging in the dining hall. I'm not really sure what countries they were; I'm not really sure if they knew what countries they were. If I recall, there was an Armenian flag, and that is definitely a white country. Ultimately, along with the informational brochure provided by the Black Engineering Society of Columbia, the meal lived up to the hype and left me feeling strong, black and proud.

bhmWelcome to February! And Black History Month! Columbia's 22nd annual celebration of African Americanness kicked off last night in Roone Arledge with, among other attractions, the best catering this Bwog reporter has smelled at a Columbia event. People of many shades attended the affair, made more festive and vaguely African by gold kente cloths on white. After a hauntingly beautiful rendition of the Black national anthem, Office of Multicultural Affairs dean Ajay Nair welcomed the assembly with lovely phrases like the "political and aesthetic power of the polycultural" and "counterhegemonic dialogical paroochialism" (ok, those words came separately).

Amidst the presentations of awards, musical productions, and introductions of speakers came a brief address by President Bollinger, fresh from a junket to Tanzania with J. Sachs. After a brief mention of the Institute for African Studies, Prezbo launched into a sermon on the insidious forces "chipping away ever so significantly from Brown vs. Board of Education"-referring to the recent court ruling that overturned his work at the University of Michigan in 2001. He predicted dire consequences should the Seattle and Louisville cases concerning race-based admissions currently under review by the Supreme Court go the same way.

He stepped down to less-than-thunderous applause, and the show went on. Meanwhile, Bwog can't find the Black History Month calendar of events. Little help, anyone?

- LBD


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