Local

Mar 10 2011

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Alabama
Thousands of marchers, including several prominent civil rights leaders, recently marked the 46th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday” (a day during which law enforcement officers attacked civil rights demonstrators marching toward Montgomery across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on March 7, 1965) by re-enacting the walk over the Alabama River. Participants included U.S. Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, a Bloody Sunday survivor, as well as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and the Rev. Jesse Jackson.

California
After a four-month pilot in more than 60 markets across the country, Tavis Smiley and Cornell West recently announced that “Smiley & West” is now officially a weekly program. Alisa Miller, president and CEO of Public Radio International (PRI) says, “Tavis Smiley and Cornel West bring a rare dynamism and authenticity to conversation, and a heartfelt dedication to inviting listeners to take part in the exchange of ideas and discussion of thought-provoking topics. The addition of Smiley and West underscores PRI’s commitment to offer new places to discover a diverse, interconnected world, and to stimulate important conversations in American society.” For a list of stations and times the show will air, visit http://google/4pavz.

District of Columbia
The Washington, D.C., Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Project Foundation recently received a $1 million gift from the memorial’s design-build joint venture team, Mckissack & Mckissack, Turner Construction Co., Tompkins Builders Inc., the Gilford Corp. (MTTG). The gift will support the memorial on the National Mall honoring Dr. King. To promote Dr. King’s messages of hope, democracy, justice, and love, MTTG Joint Venture has created the MTTG Dream Design Build Scholarship program for high school seniors. In its inaugural year, MTTG will award up to ten $5,000 scholarships to minority high school seniors from the Washington metropolitan area who are pursuing a post-secondary education in architecture, engineering, or construction management fields, or attending a trade school following graduation. For more information about the scholarship or to submit an application, please visit www.mttgmlk.com. Scholarship applications will be accepted until March 15.

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Alabama

Mar 3 2011

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Michigan
Several of Detroit’s public high schools are projected to close due to an initiative ordered by state education officials aimed at eliminating the district’s $327 million deficit. Detroit’s public school system was taken over by the State of Michigan last year, following allegations of corruption, the hole in its budget and tumbling enrollment. As a result, classroom sizes could potentially swell to 60 students per instructor. According to reports, Robert Bobb, emergency financial manager for Detroit Public Schools, recently enacted a financial restructuring plan to cut the district’s number of schools (147) in half, despite an estimated 58,570 students. “We are moving forward with the plan,” Bobb told reporters. “Right now my focus is on my transition plan and the [Deficit Elimination Plan].”

Ohio
Ohio-based creative writer Tanisha Herrin is releasing a powerful new book, “Fighting the Blues as a Black Woman: How I Survived Suicidal Depression.” The book, which is her 10th work to be self published, will help raise awareness about depression and benefit an Ohio mental health cause. The book is Herrin’s personal perspective on how depression and several suicide attempts almost destroyed her life. It is also a book of inspiration and triumph. Herrin says: “Even though I have been through a lot over several years—being robbed at gun point, three suicide attempts and losing my mother to name a few—I found a way to view my life in a new light. Others who have been through similar downfalls can bounce back to fulfill their life’s purpose.” Fighting the Blues as a Black Woman is not for sale. Instead, people can request a free copy of the book in paperback, ebook or digital format. For each copy of the book that is requested, $1 will be donated by the Nancy A. Herrin Foundation to an Ohio mental health cause. The non-profit foundation—started in memory of Herrin’s late mother—will donate up to $2,000. “I hope to help raise awareness of how depression can have serious effects on your life, if the proper steps aren’t taken to improve your well-being,” Herrin says. “So many people are affected by depression daily that they think it’s normal or okay to be miserable and live an unfulfilling life.”

Texas
A new nonprofit group in Texas, the Former Majority Association for Equality (FMAE) is offering college scholarships to a demographic it says has fewer scholarship options than other groups: White men. The group was started by Colby Bohannon, a student at Texas State University. He’s an Iraq War veteran who decided to return to school and said he had trouble finding college scholarships for which he qualified. He found many programs willing to grant money to female or minority students, but not White males like himself. So Bohannon and some friends founded the FMAE group, which plans to begin handing out $500 scholarships this summer. Only White men with at least a 3.0 grade point average can qualify. “We know that we’re going to be receiving some vicious attacks from people claiming that we are racists or promoting some bigotry-filled agenda,” said Bohannon who claims he is just trying to help students who may have been a majority in the past, but are no longer, as America’s demographics change. “If you’re not a male, and if you’re not White, you’re called a minority,” Bohannon said, “I’m not sure White males are the majority anymore.” In Texas non-Hispanic Whites are now a minority according to U.S. Census figures released earlier this month that show they make up about 42 percent of the state’s population, down from more than half 10 years ago.

Wisconsin
Hundreds of parents, educators, students, administrators and city activists gathered in the parking lot outside Madison East High School to hear prominent civil rights activist Jesse Jackson speak. Wearing a heavy coat and hat, Jackson made it a point to touch upon Madison’s recent worker rights and collective bargaining debacles, but he also specifically addressed the youngsters in the audience, urging them stay in school, to stay positive, to vote, and to support their teachers. “When students come alive you have the awesome power to make America better,” Jackson said. “When you go to school today, study hard; be all that you can be.” Prior to his speech, Jackson led more than 300 students in a march around the city. “Fight for the right to be a better nation,” he told the crowd. “Keep fighting one day longer. At the end of the day your brains will outlast your knees.”

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

California

Dec 2 2010

Here’s a look at African-American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Arizona
Tony Rose, publisher/CEO of Phoenix-based Amber Communications Group Inc., the nation’s largest African-American publisher of self-help books, has been asked to be a member of the 2011 NAACP Image Awards literary subcommittee in the category of Instructional Literature. The committee is responsible for the review, evaluation and vote on submitted literary projects for consideration in their assigned category. The top five nominees will be announced at the 42nd NAACP Image Awards press conference in January. The entire membership of the NAACP will then get a chance to vote for the winners, who will be announced at the ceremony in March.

California
Joseph Jackson, father of pop icon Michael Jackson, has refiled a wrongful death lawsuit in state court against the Conrad Murray, the doctor charged in his son’s death, and added Applied Pharmacy Services, Las Vegas company, as a defendant. Joseph Jackson originally filed the suit in federal court, but a judge declined to hear the case and said it should be handled in Los Angeles Superior Court. The case accuses Murray of negligence in administering the anesthetic propofol to Jackson. Court records show the pharmacy sold the drug to Murray nearly a month before the singer’s death in June 2009.

District of Columbia
Nearly 40 percent of the 17,000 households in Washington, D.C., that receive welfare have been in the system for much longer than five years, and Ward 8 Councilman Marion Barry recently teamed up with Ward 7 Councilwoman Yvette Alexander to change that. The two hope to introduce a bill that would remove recipients from the welfare roll after the five-year period. If passe, the legislation would quickly eliminate 8,000 recipients. Barry said that although the bill is “imperfect and incomplete,” the intent is to launch “serious dialogue on how to break the cycle of generational poverty, government dependency and economic disparity in the city.”

Florida
Luther “Uncle Luke” Campbell, former leader of Miami Rap group 2 Live Crew, is now an assistant football coach at Miami Central High School. He also coaches in his home neighborhood of Liberty City, where he founded the “Optimist League” for inner-city youth. Once criticized for his sexually explicit lyrics, Campbell, 49, looks to move forward on a clean slate. “I’m happy and proud of what we accomplished, but that part of my life is over,” he told Miami Herald’s Linda Robertson. “The entertainer – I left him on stage.”

Here’s a look at African-American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Arizona

Nov 18 2010

Here’s a look at African American issues and people making headlines throughout the country.

Alabama
Richard Bates has been elected to be the first Black sheriff in Marengo County. Bates told The Tuscaloosa News he wants to provide good law enforcement to the west Alabama county and is not concerned about being the first Black sheriff. Marengo County is about half Black and half White and he said he won by knocking on as many doors as possible and it didn’t matter if the voters he contacted were White or Black. Bates is a former deputy sheriff and military police officer who says he will focus on fighting illegal drugs while he is sheriff.

California
Air security officials recently struggled with arriving passengers who were outraged by new anti-terrorism screening procedures they consider invasive and harmful. Many passengers expressed their disapproval of being forced to choose scans by full-body image detectors or pat-downs. Top federal security officials said that the procedures were safe and necessary sacrifices to ward off terror attacks. The most popular instance of non-compliance this week came from the San Diego airport where software engineer John Tyner, complained about being removed from an airport after refusing both forms of security, specifically the groin check.

District of Columbia
More than 30,000 residents in D.C. are in search of employment and Mayor-elect Vincent Gray plans to make putting people to work a priority when he takes office in January. “The more people are out of work, the tougher it becomes for our local small business owners, a vital segment of our economy, to stay in business,” Gray said. “For the past three and a half years, the current administration has virtually ignored unemployment, doing little, if anything, to deal with this growing crisis” The D.C. Fiscal Policy Institute reported in October that while joblessness increased for African-American residents, employment remained steady for White residents and college-educated residents and a large part of that is because of the recession. Some of the poorest areas in the District have unemployment rates as high as 30 percent.

Here’s a look at African American issues and people making headlines throughout the country.

Alabama

Nov 11 2010

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Alabama
Terri Sewell, a Birmingham lawyer who was college friends with First Lady Michelle Obama, made history Tuesday becoming the first Black woman elected to Congress from Alabama. Sewell will represent the 7th District, a seat formerly held by Democrat Artur Davis. She defeated Republican Don Chamberlain. District of Columbia Radio stations WHUR 96.3 FM and WHUR-WORLD HD2 of Howard University in partnership with the Capital Area Food Bank, will sponsor “Food2Feed,” a 12-hour radiothon and fundraiser to feed needy families during the Thanksgiving holiday. The event will take place at the Old Post Office Pavilion on Nov. 18 from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Volunteers will fan out along 12th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in Northwest Washington to encourage people to donate. In the Washington area, approximately 633,000 residents are at risk of hunger or experiencing hunger. “Food2Feed” and the Capital Area Food Bank distribute 20 million pounds of food, including six million pounds of fresh produce, to more than 700 partner agencies each year.

Georgia

The City of Atlanta and the Committee on the Appeals for Human Rights of the Atlanta Student Movement held a dedication ceremony recently to dedicate Fair Street in honor of the Atlanta Student Movement. Presiding over the occasion was Atlanta City Councilman Michael Julian Bond. A long time coming, those in attendance were elated over the unveiling and dedication of the street.

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.

Alabama
Terri Sewell, a Birmingham lawyer who was college friends with First Lady Michelle Obama, made history Tuesday becoming the first Black woman elected to Congress from Alabama. Sewell will represent the 7th District, a seat formerly held by Democrat Artur Davis. She defeated Republican Don Chamberlain.

California

Across Black America

Here’s a look at African American people and issues making headlines throughout the country.
 

Arkansas
Walmart Stores Inc. recently announced the promotion of Rosalind G. Brewer, 49, to president and CEO of Sam’s Club. She will replace current Sam’s Club President and CEO Brian Cornell, who informed the company that he would move back to the Northeast for family reasons. Brewer was most recently president of the Walmart U.S. east business unit, where she was responsible for more than $100 billion in annual revenue, representing almost 1,600 stores and more than 500,000 associates. Brewer was also the first chairperson of the Walmart President’s Council of Global Women Leaders. “Roz came to us with an outstanding background in consumer packaged goods more than five years ago,” said Mike Duke, Walmart president and CEO. “During that time I have seen her develop into a talented merchant and retailer. She has strong strategic, analytical and operational skills and has successfully managed a large and complex business. I’ve also been struck by Roz’s servant leadership when I have visited stores with her. She always lets her team do the talking, with her focus being on how to better support their needs.”
 

California
Essence magazine recently announced the fifth annual Essence Black Women in Hollywood Luncheon honoring the industry’s most exciting African American talent, both in front of the camera and behind the scenes in Hollywood. The event will take place on Feb. 23 at the Beverly Hills Hotel. Essence will celebrate five extraordinary women who have left an indelible impression with their work within the film and television industries: Kerry Washington (Vanguard Award), Octavia Spencer (Breakthrough Performance), Pam Grier (Legend Award), Paula Patton (Shining Star Award) and Shonda Rhimes (Visionary Award). This star-studded event commemorates Essence magazine’s annual Hollywood issue and in honor of the fifth anniversary, Essence.com is giving fans exclusive access to all the red-carpet interviews via live stream from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and re-airing that evening at 9 p.m. EST.