ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: TUESDAY, April 10, 1990                   TAG: 9004100201
SECTION: EXTRA                    PAGE: E-5   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: 
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


PEOPLE

Hugh Hefner, Playboy magazine founder, and his wife, Kimberly, became parents of a baby boy on Monday, Hefner's 64th birthday.

Marston Glenn Hefner was born at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles weighing 8 pounds, 13 ounces, said Playboy spokesman Bill Farley. Both baby and mother were doing well, he said.

Hefner has two children from a previous marriage: daughter Christie, the head of Playboy Enterprises, and son David.

Angela Davis says black college students today are in a better position to identify and challenge racism from curriculums and from overt racist attacks on campus.

Davis told black students at Georgia State University to push mostly white universities to create black studies programs to crush on-campus racism.

"The message we must bring to campus communities across the country is that the problem is not so much ours," she said. "We fought for the right of African-American students to have access to the educational institutions of this country only to realize that the education . . . was flawed in and of itself."

Maria Shriver returned Sunday to co-anchor NBC's "Sunday Today" only to say she's leaving. She cited travel and motherhood as reasons.

Shriver, who is married to actor Arnold Schwarzenegger, gave birth to their first child, a daughter, in December.

On her return from maternity leave, she told viewers that Sunday was her last day on the show she has co-anchored since its inception in 1987.

George Will, a heavy hitter in journalism, was little more than a bench-warmer as a young baseball player.

Will, 48, a fan of the national pastime whose new book is "Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball," said as a youngster he was a born right fielder, "which is where they put the kid they can't figure out what to do with.

"As a hitter, I wanted to walk. I lacked athletic confidence, which is why I sank to journalism," he said in the April 16 issue of People magazine.



 by CNB