Jabou, Mbowe passed away in 1984 or 1985 immediately after supervised the ’83 Census. His “residence curiosity” status had special meaning because of the fact this African from the jungle had straight “As” through out his academic career. I saw him off at the Dayton Airport in the fall of 1974 heading for Banjul to take up his appointment at the Department of Statistics, then headed by Moulie Gibril (currently with the UN in Harare). Batch passed away 3-4 years later after a long bout with mental illness. May their souls rest in peace. Both Ebrima and you are right about Sarah. He did his first degree at Lincoln at about the same time as Omar Sey, I believe. He returned in the fall of 1973 to Madison to do his masters in economics accompanied by his wife Jojoh and their baby Amadou. Ebou, named after “Jew” was born at Madison General in 1974. He returned to Banjul in late 74 or early 75 leaving both Mbye Cham and myself in Madison. The Joe you referred to may be Joe Goddard, the brother of Peter; (I could be wrong again, on this one) Abdou Bojang formerly of the Standard Bank of West Africa in those days was also in the neighborhood (Philly) where he died under mysterious circumstances. Daha Jack also came later in the early 70’s .So did YaMai Secka whom he later married. Speaking of student activism, Vietnam etc. The Mathematics building at UW- Madison bombed by student activists, Kent State stormed by National Guards killing four students. I campaigned for Robert Kennedy in Michigan and Indiana in 1968. After winning both primaries, he took off for the California primaries where he met his fate after celebrating his victory there too. MLK’s life also snuffed the same year. The Chicago Democratic Convention fiasco. SDS, Black Panthers, SLA and of course, NAACP, National Urban League. We saw it live in vivid colour as Dan Rather then White House correspondent for CBS used to say. The student activists of yesteryear are the Establishment of today. My years in the US were full of good memories. Perseverance, respect for the rights of others, to take pride in one’s work. Yus, I will not trade these values for the world. Sidi Sanneh ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html ----------------------------------------------------------------------------