On Gun Violence - New York Beacon
Transcription
On Gun Violence - New York Beacon
New York’s Beacon website: NewYorkBeacon.net Vol. 20 No. 31 Showing the Way to Truth and Justice August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 E-Mail [email protected] 75 Cents JOBS, JOBS, JOBS!!! It’s still issue 50 years after historic DC march CIVIL RIGHT LEADERS —Al Shaprton and other voting rights advocates speak with press after meeting with President Obama (NNPA Photo by Freddie Allen). (See Story On Page 11) CBC takes a stand against ‘Stand Your Ground’ laws (See Story On Page 3) United African Movement marks anniversary with rally for Brawley BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 2 ByYusef Salaam Valerie Harrison Lincoln appoints Valerie Harrison general counsel The Lincoln University announces that Valerie I. Harrison has been appointed general counsel. She will assume the position on Aug. 5, 2013. Harrison comes to the institution from Arcadia University where she served as vice president for legal affairs and general counsel. Prior to this position she served for 14 years as associate university counsel at Temple University. She has also served as senior counsel at Arco Chemical Company in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, senior attorney at Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc., of New York, associate in the Labor and Employment Section of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius of Philadelphia, PA and was a legal intern to the Honorable A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr., of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. “We are so pleased to have Attorney Harrison join us,” said President Dr. Robert R. Jennings. “I am confident that a person of her skill, intellect and experience will assist us in strengthening the University and continuing on our path as one of the great citadels of learning in the nation and world.” Harrison has also served as an adjunct professor of Race & the Law as well as legal issues in Communication Management at the Beasley School of Law and the College of Liberal Arts at Temple University. Active in civic and community affairs, Ms. Harrison serves on the board of directors of the Public Interest Law Center of Philadelphia, the Art Sanctuary and is a past member of the Board of the Philadelphia Diversity Law Group. She is a member and former Trustee of Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church of Philadelphia. She has several publications to her credit and is in great demand as a speaker. A graduate of the University of Virginia where she received the Bachelor of Arts degree in Economics, she holds a Masters of Liberal Arts degree from Temple University and a Doctor of Jurisprudence degree from Villanova University. Ms. Harrison expects to complete a Ph. D. degree in AfricanAmerican Studies at Temple University in December 2013. The United African Movement (UAM), which is celebrating 25 “year of protracted struggle,” recently sponsored a rally for Tawana Brawley at the Brooklyn Christian Center. A full house listened as speakers offered analysis and clarity on vital issues such as George Zimmerman being found not guilty of murdering 17-year-old unarmed Trayvon Martin, and former Dutches County prosecutor, Steven Pagones, who has filed to garnish Tawana Brawley’s employment check because she allegedly defamed his name when she fingered him as one of the six White men who kidnapped, gangraped, and assaulted her 26 years ago in an wooded area in Wappingers Falls, NY as the then15-years-old adolescent was walking home. Michael Greys, a co-host of the MNN talk show, “Community Cop”, was the guest speaker. His focus was on the George Zimmerman case; six female jurors concluded that Zimmerman shot the African teenager to death in self-defense on February 26, 2012 in Sanford, Florida. The favorable verdict for Zimmerman is rooted in Florida’s controversial Stand Your Ground law. Greys noted the racial makeup of the court was suspicious, meaning the White jurors, (one of them “White by proxy” as it was remarked), the White judge, and White prosecutor. Greys pointed out that the jury and the other Whites saw the 28 year-old mulatto-looking Zimmerman as an honorary White. They viewed Martin as someone they hated, he declared. He argued that by initially identifying Martin’s remains as “John Doe gave Governor Rick Scott, Attorney General Pamela Jo Bondi, and State Attorney Angela Corey (whom Scott appointed special prosecutor), and Sanford law enforcement officials time to organize strategy” on how to handle the case in favor of Zimmerman. He said that the trail was a mockery of justice, Tawana Brawley “theater.” The speaker said that Corey, in following her script, failed to present Martin’s side of the story in a convincing manner. “She allowed Zimmerman’s narrative to dominate the trail.” After the audience sang “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” and a roll call was offered in the memory of unarmed African Americans who’ve been slaughtered by White cops and White civilians, Alton Maddox, chairman of the UAM, briefly corrected a popular misunderstanding regarding why he’s not allowed to practice law. “I was not disbarred,” he said although sources report that there’s been movement to disbar him because he continues to be an outspoken activist regarding injustices perpetrated against African Americans. “I was barred, not disbarred. When you’ve been disbarred, it’s because you’ve done something illegal like stealing money from a client.” He said that he’s still eligible to be a member of the New York State Bar as long as he pays his annual dues. He said that the recommendation for him to be barred came from the New York State Legislature. He stated that he was barred because “I was a watchdog for justice.” Twenty-three years ago, thenNew York State Attorney Robert Abrams and Governor Mario Cuomo set the stage for Maddox’s indefinite banning when he re- fused to reveal privileged attorneyclient information during his tenure as legal representative of Tawana Brawley along with now-disbarred Vernon Mason. Reverend Al Sharpton was the teenager’s spokesperson. Abrams concocted a grand jury that ruled Brawley had lied and that she and her advisors had created a hoax although an Orange County gynecologist, hired by Maddox’s team and who’s identity was unknown to him, had examined the teenager and rushed her to Westchester County Medical Center, where it was documented that she had been raped. Abrams put those files and other records pertaining to the case under permanent lock and key; included in those files is the autopsy report of Harry Crist, Jr., a cop whom Brawley identified as one of her attackers. The public report is that Crist committed suicide 48 hours after Brawley was found with dog feces smeared over her body and KKK printed on her with the feces. But, Dr. Alexander Aplosca, who examined his body, said he never documented a self-inflicted wound and that his findings were inconsistent with suicide; during the Abrams’s grand jury hearing, Dr. Michael Baden testified that Crist had committed suicide although Baden had not examined Crist’s remains. Maddox reminded the audience at the Brooklyn Christian Center that a mostly White “petit jury in Duchess County, after nearly a year-long trial, found that Pagones had indeed kidnapped and raped Tawana Brawley.” He wrote in the United African Movement newsletter that Pagones must be “prohibited by law from picking Tawana’s pocket.” A Surry, Virginia court, in conjunction with New York, ruled to tax $300 from Brawley’s bi-weekly check payable to Pagones for the rest of her life because she defamed his name. He told the crowd, “Tawana has not had a hearing regarding the garnishment. We intend to take this case to the Supreme Court.” He said that he viewed Pagones latest act against Brawley as financial rape. He inferred (CONTINUED ON PAGE 14) Group wants Queens principal probed for ‘bias’ against Blacks Over 36,000 people have signed on to a popular Change.org petition calling on the New York Department of Education to terminate Minerva Zanca, principal at the Pan American International High School in Queens, NY, who reportedly made racist comments about and fired the school’s African-American high school teachers. According to Assistant Principal Anthony Riccardo, Zanca called two African- American teachers, John Flanagan and Heather Hightower, “big lipped,” “nappy haired,” and “gorillas” in a conference with him. Flanagan and Hightower filed complaints with the New York City Depart- ment of Education in the spring and were subsequently fired at the end of this school year. A third African-American teacher, Lisa- Erika James, who ran Pan American’s successful theater program, resigned when her program was defunded without explanation after Zanca began working at the school. “The decision to cut the theater program’s resources so drastically seemed irrational. The children and their families pushed back, and Mrs. Zanca’s response was that it was due to budget but that was not the case. I read the budget and saw the numbers. Principal Zanca was retaliating against my highly successful program based on the color of my skin,” said James. “Heather and John, my colleagues who are also African-American, received satisfactory ratings as teachers every year since they began teaching. Suddenly this year when Mrs. Zanca reviewed them, their ratings dropped so dramatically. They were the only two teachers who were recommended for a discontinuance, which means that their licenses to teach could be removed forever.” A longtime friend of James, Kevin Powell, started the petition on Change.org after learning about the discrimination his friend was facing at Pan American. More than 36,000 people have signed on to the petition, including parents and community members. “I find it unacceptable that a principal can engage in this kind of conduct without any repercussions,” says Powell, who started the petition on Change.org. “We are not going to stop until due justice and process is served here.” New signatures on the petition are sent to Dennis Walcott, chancellor of New York City’s Department of Education as well as the Office of Equal Opportunity and Diversity Management. On July 8, over 150 supporters, including alumni, parents, teachers, and the United Federation of Teachers, protested outside the Department of Education carrying signs and megaphones, calling for the termination of Principal Zanca. City Council Representative Julissa Ferreras and Assemblyman Francisco Moya joined the demonstration in support of the fired teachers. “We call for an immediate swift, fair and thorough investigation,” said Janella Hinds, vice president for Academic High Schools for the United Federation of Teachers. “We expect everyone in the school community to be treated with dignity, fairness and respect in the workplace.” Since the protest, NY State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has stated he is looking into the case and investigating the possible violation of teachers’ civil rights. Beacon (USPS 011-156), serving Metropolitan New York is published weekly by SHGM at 237 W. 37th Street, Suite 203, New York, NY 10018. Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY. POSTMASTER; send address changes to The New York Beacon - 237 W. 37th Street, Suite 203, New York, NY 10018. (212) 213-8585 Fax: (212) 213-6291, Web Site: www.newyorkbeacon.com, Email:[email protected], The New York Beacon Subscription rate: $35.00 per year. By George E. Curry NNPA Editor-in-Chief Sybrina Fulton Trayvon’s mother: ‘Use my broken heart’ to prevent future tragedies By George E. Curry NNPA Editor-in-Chief PHILADELPHIA (NNPA) – With her voice laced with emotion, Sybrina Fulton, the soft-spoken mother of Trayvon Martin, urged delegates to the National Urban League’s annual convention here to use her personal tragedy to prevent the recurrence of unjustified youth killings in the future. Fulton’s 7-minute speech to the delegates on Friday came 13 days after a jury in Sanford, Fla. acquitted George Zimmerman, the acknowledged killer of the unarmed 17-year-old high school student, of second-degree murder charges. Martin, who was returning to a residence he and his father were visiting in Sanford 18 months ago after purchasing a bag of Skittles and a can of Arizona iced tea at a nearby 7Eleven convenience store when he was followed and fatally shot by Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch captain who claimed self-defense. Fulton told an wildly cheering crowd, “My message to you is please use my story, please use my tragedy, please use my broken heart, to say to yourself, ‘We cannot let this happen to anybody else’s child.’” There was no table chatter as delegates paid rapt attention to the mother who is still grieving her son’s death. “I speak to you as Trayvon’s mother,” she said. “I speak to you as a parent [receiving] the absolutely worst telephone call you can receive as a parent is to know that your son – your son – you will never kiss again. I’m just asking you to wrap your mind around no prom for Trayvon. No high school graduation for Trayvon. No college for Trayvon. No grandkids coming from Trayvon. All because of a law that has prevented the person who shot and killed my son to be held accountable and to (CONTINUED ON PAGE 14) PHILADELPHIA (NNPA) – One of the primary goals of the 1963 March on Washington was finding or creating jobs for Blacks. At a panel discussion during the annual convention of the National Urban League, jobs was mentioned more frequently than any other topic as leaders discussed the famous march 50 years ago and an upcoming one planned for Saturday, Aug. 24. Barbara Arnwine, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said employers are increasingly using measures that have nothing to do with job performance that disproportionately limits the ability of African-Americans to gain employment. “I need you to make sure that your state has a law that says very clearly that you cannot use the fact that somebody has been arrested as a reason not to employ them,” she told Rev. Al Sharpton convention delegates. “A mere arrest tells you nothing.” Sounding more like an evangelical preacher than the lawyer that she is, Arnwine drew loud applause when she said, “You need a state law that says to employers that credit checks have nothing to do with your ability to work. If your credit is bad, it’s because you don’t have a job. Get real.” Al Sharpton, president of the National Action Network, said the private sector needs to assume a larger role in reducing Black unemployment, which stood at 12.7 percent when Obama took office and rose to 13.7 percent in June, twice the White employment rate of 6.6 percent. According to the Department of Labor Statistics, more than 2.5 million Blacks are unemployed. “Ever since President Obama has been in, there has been an increase in jobs in the private sector, but Black unemployment has not decreased. Why? Because we work [disproportionately] in the public sector,” he explained. “So while the private corporations who now don’t have to deal with us because the Supreme Court is knocking down affirmative action, they are not hiring us. The public sector is being cut down with agencies and programs – we’re being mini(CONTINUED ON PAGE 16) CBC takes a stand against ‘Stand Your Ground’ laws By Freddie Allen NNPA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON (NNPA) – Instead of waiting for the Justice Department to decide whether it will bring federal charges against George Zimmerman trial, a neighborhood watchman who was acquitted of second-degree murder charges in connection with the killing of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed Black teen visiting with his father in Sanford, Fla., the Congressional is already acting. It held a hearing on “The Status of Black Males: Ensuring Our Boys Mature Into Strong Men” that featured a number of Black leaders who addressed the issues (CONTINUED ON PAGE 14) (Left to right) Trayvon Martin’s father,Tracy Martin; Attorney Benjamin Crump and D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton (NNPA Photo by Freddie Allen) Morial calls for new civil rights movement By George E. Curry NNPA Editor-in-Chief PHILADELPHIA (NNPA) – National Urban League President Marc H. Morial has called for “a new civil rights movement,” one that will focus on economic empowerment and justice. Morial, now in his 10th year as president and CEO of the nation’s second-oldest civil rights organization, announced his proposal last Wednesday nights at his group’s annual convention here. After citing tremendous progress made over the past 50 years, Morial said, “The challenge before us now is to create a new ‘Civil Rights Movement for Eco- nomic Empowerment and Justice.’ If 1963 was about jobs and freedom – two, zero, one, three is about economic empowerment and justice…a continuation movement standing on the shoulders of progress in which a new generation of Blacks, whites, Hispanics, Native Americans, Asians, Jews, Gentiles, Protestants, Catholics, Hindus, Muslims – people from all walks of life, dispositions and orientations coalesce around working together to ensure that the promise of life, liberty and economic opportunity becomes real for this generation. We started it 50 years ago, and it’s time to finish our business.” Morial said, “Now, let me be clear. I do not naively believe that this happens overnight. But when we are all committed to the kind of progress that can advance our nation and our democracy toward the ‘land of equal opportunity’ that we can be, our shared vision can certainly outweigh our superficial differences.” With a March on Washington planned for Aug. 24, the National Urban League leader said just as Blacks have fought for basic rights in the past, such as the right to vote and have full access to public accommodations, African-Americans are now in another fight to preserve those gains. Marc H. Morial (CONTINUED ON PAGE 14) 3 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net Jobs are still a key issue 50 years after historic D.C. march Sen. Schumer calls on shops to stop monitoring and tracking shoppers BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 4 City Comptroller John Liu Comptroller Liu urges hike in minimum wage By J. Zamgba Browne Special to NY Beacon City Comptroller John Liu predicted this week that the State’s minimum wage hike could harm low-wage workers in New York City . He renewed his call for an $11.50-per-hour minimum in the Big Apple. Comptroller Liu said this would make employers ineligible for the harmful tax credit and help many more workers make ends meet in the most expensive major city in the nation. “State lawmakers did their best to craft a minimum-wage hike that would help workers in Rochester and Buffalo , but a tax credit for employers they included as part of that deal may actually harm lowwage New York City workers,” said Comptroller Liu. He said this is yet another good reason why “we need to raise the New York City minimum wage to $11.50 an hour. Not to mention that New York City is just so much more expensive to live in.” (CONTINUED ON PAGE 14) U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer has revealed that major national retailers are increasingly using sophisticated monitoring software to track every movement shoppers make while in their stores, and then often times save that data in perpetuity. The technology allows shoppers to be tracked, moment by moment, through signals put out through their smart phones, allowing a retailer to learn in what part of the store they spent time in, what products they’ve considered buying, and how long they’ve spent looking at those products. If a shopper doesn’t want to be tracked, their only option is to turn off their phone’s WiFi, or leave their phone at home. And most of the time, that isn’t even an option because consumers don’t know the tracking is occurring. To combat this invasion of privacy, Schumer asked the Federal Trade Commission to require that retailers give shoppers a clear and obvious opportunity to “opt-out” before tracking them. Schumer said that a consumer’s personal cell phone is just that – personal. It shouldn’t be used as a tracking device by retailers without a c o n s u m e r ’s p e r m i s s i o n . Schumer suggested the FTC require that stores send electronic notices to the phones they are about to start tracking, and give the owners of those phones a chance to opt-out. “Cell phone tracking is intrusive and unsettling - it’s as if you are being followed around while shopping at the mall, with someone looking over your shoulder at every product you’re considering,” said Schumer. “If you’re shopping, you expect to be the one doing the reviewing, but stores are flipping that on its head, and treating the consumers as the products. If stores are going to track you footstep by footstep, you should be alerted in no uncertain terms, and be given the opportunity to de- U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer cline. Personal cell phones are just that - personal. They shouldn’t be used as some James Bond-like tracking device without the shopper ’s knowledge.” According to published reporters, retailers like United Colors of Benetton, American Apparel, Swatch and Family Dollar gain access to the shopper’s unique cell phone ID and acquire information about shoppers without their permission. Retailers may use this information to find out how shoppers navigate through their store and how long they look at specific merchandise before purchasing. Currently, in order to prevent these stores from tracking you via a cell phone, you must shut off the Wi-Fi on your phone or leave your phone a t h o m e o r i n t h e c a r. And frequently even that is not an option, since consumers don’t know they are being tracked. Retailers can then combine the data they’ve collected with data found online, creating an incredibly detailed profile of e a c h s h o p p e r. Schumer pointed out that consumers have no say over how that data is used, who it’s sold to, where it’s stored, or how it’s secured. Retailers purchase this tracking technology from third-party technology companies like Cisco, Euclid Analytics and Path Intelligence, a British company that provides its services to retailers and malls across Europe and Australia. Schumer has highlighted concerns about cell phone tracking in the past. In 2011, two U.S. malls halted their experimentation with the technology after Schumer raised privacy concerns. Schumer today urged the FTC to allow shoppers to opt-out of this cell phone tracking program. Schumer explained that this is a deceptive trade practice because shoppers are unaware that their movements are being tracked and urged the FTC to make retailers notify shoppers if they use this technology. Schumer suggested that the FTC consider requiring retailers to send text messages or other electronic messages to the phones they are about to start tracking, and give the owners an opportunity to opt-out of the tracking. Bronx car wash workers unionize against ‘notorious’ car wash kingpin Workers at the WCA Car Wash in Soundview voted unanimously to join the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU), UFCW, becoming the seventh car wash in the city where workers have voted to unionize. WCA Car Wash, more affectionately known to the workers as the Rico Pobre Car Wash, is owned by John Lage, who is by far the largest car wash owner in New York City, owning more than 20 car washes in the metropolitan area. Omar Pineda, a 35-year old Rico Pobre worker from El Salvador, said: “My coworkers and I are thrilled with our victory and feel very grateful for all the support from the community. Just as we won our election we are going to win a just contract. We hope that with the union contract we will win the respect we deserve and some benefits as well, like better salary, job security and protection against the chemicals.” Pineda was a former worker from the Soho Car Wash who was transferred to Rico Pobre after it was closed down. He has been with the company for 13 years. Lage has been under investigation by the New York State Attorney General’s office for serious allegations of wage-and-hour violations. In 2009, Lage was forced to pay $3.4 million to workers for back pay and damages after a federal lawsuit. A recent report by RWDSU, New York Communities for Change (NYCC) and the Center for Popular Democracy (CPD) found that businesses owned by Lage and his associates could generate as much as $34 million a year in revenue, while paying workers minimum wage salaries or less. “We feel great with our victory,” said Jorge Linares, a 32-year old Rico Pobre worker from El Salvador. “My coworkers and I hope to win a contract that will guarantee some of the benefits we deserve, like better pay, paid vacation and sick days, and protection against chemicals. We hope to continue to struggle and hope other car washers join us.” This victory comes on the heels of the launch of the WASH New York campaign, a broader project to raise community concerns about widespread mistreatment in the car wash industry, was launched earlier this year as a joint effort between Make the Road New York (MRNY) and New York Communities for Change (NYCC) and supported by the RWDSU. With over 200 car washes in New York City and 5,000 low-wage employees, the industry has exploited its workforce with wages that are low and too often illegal. “The RWDSU has long been dedicated to improving the lives of low-wage workers, and we are proud of the employees at Rico Pobre, who have taken a significant step toward improving their jobs and their lives by voting to join the union today,” RWDSU President Stuart Appelbaum said. “These brave workers fought back against their employer, like David slaying Goliath. Across the city, car wash workers are standing up, speaking out and demanding that they be treated with dignity and respect. This is a building movement.” T h e WA S H N Y campaign has quickly gained momentum, with the RWDSU winning six National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) car wash elections to unionize throughout New York City, winning a successful strike at the Sunny Day Car Wash in the Bronx, saving the jobs of workers at the Soho Car Wash, ratifying two union contracts at Sunny Day and Astoria Hi-Tek Car Wash & Lube. This campaign has brought about significant change in how workers are treated, even at washes the union hasn’t yet organized. “Today’s vote is further proof that the WASH New York campaign has taken hold across the city,” said Deb Axt, co-director of Make the Road New York. “John Lage and other car wash owners should take note and start negotiations with their workers.” A recent WASH New York survey of 89 workers at 29 different car washes found that more than 71% of the workers put in at least 60 hours a week – and some worked 105 hours a week. Despite the long hours, 75% of the workers didn’t get overtime pay for exceeding 40 hours. When workers did get overtime pay, it was often less than the legally mandated rate of time-and-a-half. Some 66% of the workers said they often received less than minimum wage. Only five workers said they were paid the difference to make minimum wage if their earnings with tips were less than the legal rate. “We congratulate the brave car washers at WCA on their decision to join RWDSU,” said Jonathan Westin, executive director of New York Communities of Change. “I’m confident that workers at many more car washes across the city will follow their lead.” 5 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 6 Editorial Let’s rebuild Detroit Beacon By Harry C. Alford Beyond the Rhetoric Walter Smith: Publisher & Editor-in-Chief Miatta Haj Smith: Co-Publisher & Executive Editor William Egyir: Managing Editor Student loan ‘solution’ is not good enough By Julianne Malveaux NNPA Columnist The United States Senate finally stepped up to ensure that student loan rates would not double. There have been weeks of back and forth, but now Senators says they will tie student loan rates to the federal funds rate, which means that in the short-run the lowest student loan rates will be 3.86 percent, up slightly from 3.4 percent. The bad news is that these loan rates may rise up to a rate of 8.25 percent, depending on prevailing interest rates. All other loan rates, including those for graduate student, for Parent PLUS loans, and others, will rise as well. It may seem a victory that student loan rates don’t rise much higher than they were in June. The connection of rates to the federal funds rate, however, connects the notion of supporting student to the oscillations of the economy. We need talented students to enter the labor force, as encumbered as they might be, whether the economy is rising or tanking. The notion that student loan rates will be tied to the federal funds rate offers students no security. One might argue that many have no economic security. The mortgage holder with a variable mortgage is subject to interest rate fluctuations as they manage a balloon payment. Those with underground mortgages are victims of interest rate variables as they try to dig themselves above ground. Surely, though, students who are financing their education in order to invest in the health of our nation should have different rules. When I graduated from college in 1974, interest rates hovered between 9 and 10 percent. The student loan interest rate was 2 percent. Why? My cohort was no more or less brilliant than any other. We were part of our nation’s plan for its future, which should be the case for today’s young people. Many hoped that the deal on student loan interest rates would take into account the federal funds rate (the rate to which the Federal Reserve Bank offers to banks) is well below 1 percent. From that perspective, even the existing rate of 3.4 percent suggests that the government is taking in more than it gives out. It’s complicated – there are other costs that must be considered in the lending process. It’s complicated, but shouldn’t our students get as close to the same deal that banks and others get? Allowing student loan interest rates to fluctuate, to the detriment of students in an environment when rates are certain to go up is to slap our students in the face. President Obama says he wants more students to graduate from community college or four-year institutions; we need more graduate and professional students in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) programs. It seems hypocritical to articulate these needs and then to undercut the means to meet them. There are more than one 1 trillion dollars outstanding in student loan obligations. The average student graduates with $27,000 in debt. Since nearly half of all students graduate with no debt at all, this means that the average debt for those who borrow is closer to $40,000. Many students with a talent for organizing, human resource allocation, or classroom teaching are diverted from their goals because their first priority is to pay student loan debt. We are starving our civil society institution, and those who would serve them, by placing money over affinity and creativity. This has been happening for decades, but the current student loan dustup reminds us that we have not provided the safe space for our young people that we should. The Senate bill passed 80-18 with some Democrats rejecting it because of its flaws. Others, like the progressive Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), elected as a financial whiz and people’s advocate, chose to go with the one-year “okeydoke” rather than dig her heels in for the long run fight. In some ways, Warren is right. The finger in the dike approach saves students this year, and so it is better than nothing. When, though, is better than nothing simply not good enough. Stay tuned. The vote on reauthorization of the Higher Education Act will happen next year. Are students waiting and watching? What about parents? Is there a political lobby to turn this mess around? Julianne Malveaux is a Washington, D.C.-based economist and writer. She is President Emerita of Bennett College for Women in Greensboro, N.C. It has been a long and rocky ride down the economic slope for the Motor City, a city I know well. Procter & Gamble hired me out of the University of Wisconsin after I graduated in 1970. Knowing I was about to be drafted, they placed me in Toledo, Ohio for training and assured me that I would be placed in Detroit after I completed my service. I was just discharged from the United States Army as a 2nd Lieutenant and was motivated to excel in my new civilian career When I was discharged in 1974, I learned that he sales office had moved from Detroit to suburban Dearborn. This was part of a big migration by corporate Detroit which had given up on the city and Coleman young, its firebrand mayor. That was the beginning. Year after year and decade after decade, the businesses, White middle class and then Black middle class, left for the suburbs or beyond. The declining tax base, increasing crime rate, blight and debt beyond belief became too common for any good. Authorities kicked the can down the street on an annual basis (pretty much like our federal government today). Now, Detroit is in very dire straits. It has a debt of $20 billion and can only generate about $1 billion per year for its annual costs. Bankrupt indeed! I am glad to see the bottom because now we can only go up. Detroit is too big of a city with a great heritage for us to turn our backs on it. This is the stuff great things are made of. What we need now is a Project New Detroit Commission appointed by the Michigan governor. Members of this panel should be made up of nonpoliticians and credible business managers. If I ruled this matter, here is how I would throw down on the bleak situation. There is rampant corruption. All city officials involved in any process where money is involved such as licensing, procurement, taxation, etc. should take a lie detector test and undergo a background check (revenue exceeds noticeable income). If anyone resists, it should be considered a resignation. This should be handled by the prosecutor’s office after he and his office goes through the same scrutiny. Gangs are the biggest distributors of drugs and the violence and crime related to it. Gang leaders (captain level and above) are to be identified and then prosecuted for racketeering under the RICO statutes. No more leaders, no more gangs. Good riddance! More than half the property tax owners do not pay their tax bills. Give them 90 days to catch up or make strict arrangements. Failure should lead to property seizure and quick auctions. This cash flow is critically needed for the city treasury. The school system of Detroit is one of the worst in the nation. Effective immediately, there should be a charter school licensing system. All tax-funded charter schools should be compelled to teach literacy and mathematics; some science to be added, beginning with first through 12th grades. Elementary public schools can be replaced with these charter schools whenever practical. High schools should be considered for merger with others or just closed when literacy and math levels are inferior. Libraries will be privatized. You can’t have a great city without a quality workforce. Detroit is the capital for unions. This will end. All city-related union contracts should be voided immediately and payroll and benefits will be in accordance with the Bankruptcy Committee and the ability to pay by the employers and shareholders. The city will no longer be responsible for the parks and recreation facilities. The ownership remains with the city but the maintenance, grounds keeping, security, etc. will be privatized via a request for proposal process (3-year terms). All utilities and hospitals will be privatized. RFPs will be renewable on 10 year terms. City or county commissions will provide oversight and regulatory enforcement. In regards to empty buildings and vacant lots, proposals will be accepted and reviewed. If viable and up to code, proposals will be approved deeded for $1. Development must begin immediately. Ninety percent of the workforce during the (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16) Focus on poverty, not the middle class By George E. Curry NNPA Columnist Several of us were sharing our views on radio Sunday night with Gary Byrd when my friend and colleague Cash Michaels urged us to remember that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated while organizing poor people. This is a good time to remember that as President Obama seeks ways to strengthen the middle class and civil rights leaders focus on celebrating the 50th anni- versary of the Aug. 28, 1963 March on Washington. The idea of organizing a Poor People’s Campaign was discussed during a Nov. 27-31, 1967 Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) planning session in Frogmore, S.C. With the nation’s attention focused on the Vietnam War, Dr. King wanted to redirect the conversation to what the Bible calls the least among us by focusing on jobs and income. Dr. King’s idea was to bring poor people from all over the coun- try to Washington, D.C. in order to put a face on the suffering of people. While still firmly committed to nonviolence, his plan was for a dramatic presence that would disrupt traffic and shut down the nation’s capital. “We ought to come in mule carts, in old trucks, any kind of transportation people can get their hands on. People ought to come to Washington, sit down if necessary in the middle of the streets and say, ‘We are here; we are poor; we don’t have any money; you have made us this way,’” King said. “And we’ve come to stay until you do something about it.” Just as his close advisers had urged him not to give his “I Have a Dream Speech” in 1963, variations of which they had heard earlier, most of Dr. King’s inner circle disagreed with his decision to embark on a Poor People’s Campaign. Children activists and former civil rights attorney Marian Wright Edelman recalled in her book, Un- finished Business, “William Rutherford, who had organized the Friends of SCLC in Europe in 1966 and was appointed executive director of SCLC during the summer of 1967, declared that, ‘basically almost no one on the staff thought that the next priority, the next major movement, should be focused on poor people or the question of poverty in America.’ At the time James Bevel wanted to remain focused on combating slums in northern cities, (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16) 7 We must do better: Look at the facts By Marian Wright Edelman Child Watch Nearly 2,000 people attended Molly Conley’s funeral last month to mourn the young humanitarian who was the victim of a random drive-by shooting the day after her 15th birthday. She was shot in the neck while walking with friends to a sleepover in a residential neighborhood in Lake Stevens, Washington. Molly was a 4.0 student best known for her kindness which she used to encourage her parents to care for infants waiting for foster families and to start a group called “Mother’s Helper” that raised money to aid victims of domestic abuse. Caldwell County, Mo. sheriff’s deputies went to the home of the Curtis family after receiving an emergency call on January 11, 2012. Their 12-year-old son, Steven, had mishandled a gun and accidentally shot himself in the head. Steven loved playing football and being outside. He also spent a great deal of time hunting and grew up learning about gun safety and had a hunter’s safety certification from the Conservation Department. In Breckenridge, Mo. —a town of just 450 people—hunting safety is an important part of the middle school’s agricultural curriculum. Steven’s father didn’t know how his son got the gun from a locked cabinet that was in their living room. Eleven-year-old Tayloni Mazyck was walking near her apartment building in Brooklyn, N.Y. on May 31, 2013 with her mother and niece when she was caught in gang-related crossfire. A bullet crashed into innocent Tayloni’s chin and lodged in her spine. According to Brooklyn prosecutor Jordan Rossman, she will be paralyzed for life. Instead of walking in her fifth-grade graduation ceremony, Tayloni was transferred to Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine for the summer. Her mother says some days Tayloni is in intense pain and easily frustrated because she can’t do simple things such as scratch her nose; other days she is convinced she will walk some day in the future. Tayloni suffers from post trau- matic stress, says she is too scared to go home, and wakes up crying from flashbacks of that terrible night. These are three of the child and youth stories shared in the Children’s Defense Fund (CDF)’s new report Protect Children, Not Guns 2013—three of the 18,270 children and teens killed or injured by guns in America each year. Like Molly, Steven, and Tayloni, every one of these children deserved to live their whole lives. We can and must do better. CDF’s new report documents the truth about guns and the facts about the preventable gun violence epidemic in our nation including the economic cost of gun violence; a state-by-state breakdown on gun deaths among children and teens; comparisons on gun violence rates between the United States and other high income countries; positive and negative state actions on gun violence prevention, and more. It also documents the progress made since the Newtown massacre and lists steps for continuing action with urgency and persistence. What can you do? Urge your members of Congress to protect children from gun violence by supporting this year common sense gun violence prevention measures including universal background checks and limits on assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines. We also need policies that support consumer product safety standards for all guns, public funding for gun violence prevention research, and resources and authority for law enforcement agencies to properly enforce gun safety laws. Parents, consider removing guns from your home and be vigilant about where your children play. Boycott products and places that glamorize and normalize dangerous weapons and violence. Have we been fighting the wrong wars to keep our children safe? Nearly five times more children and teens were killed by guns in 2010 than U.S. soldiers killed in action that year in Iraq and Afghanistan. America’s military and law enforcement agencies have 4 million guns. Our citizens have 310 million. And we have no idea how many of those guns were purchased without a background check. The gun lobby has been enriching gun manufacturers at the expense of our children’s safety for far too long. For years the National Rifle Association has blocked the truth and actively fought against the passage and enforcement of gun safety laws. Please use the resources in Protect Children, Not Guns 2013 to find the latest research and actions you can take to protect children, not guns, in your home, in your community, and as a citizen to help create a better, safer America for all children. Together we can—and must—do better right now. So many child lives depend on it. Marian Wright Edelman is president of the Children’s Defense Fund whose Leave No Child Behind® mission is to ensure every child a Healthy Start, a Head Start, a Fair Start, a Safe Start and a Moral Start in life and successful passage to adulthood with the help of caring families and communities. For more information go to: www.childrensdefense.org. Viewing trends from coast to coast By Cheryl Pearson-McNeil NNPA Columnist Have I told you how much I love being part of the cutting edge research of the latest and greatest in technology and how consumer trends and behaviors impact that technology; or how much I especially love sharing that knowledge with you? It is empowering to know that our tech savvy world we live in continues to evolve at rapid speeds, largely because of our preferences as consumers. It’s interesting, too, that our tastes and trends vary, not only by our rich diversity of race, gender and age, but by where we live in the country. Nielsen recently released its first Local Watch Report, which explores the media consumption trends of U.S. consumers, depending on where they live. Y’all know I’m always saying we are spoiled rotten because we can now entertain ourselves with whatever we want to watch, whenever, wherever and however we want to watch it. According to the latest Nielsen insights, the cross-platform, or multiple viewing options we have gets even more specific by region. Let’s begin with traditional TV, which is still the way most of us watch our favorite programs. Viewership on this medium is actually up in several markets over the last year. As a group, Blacks log more TV viewing hours, about six and a half hours a day, (including both live TV and DVR playback) than any other demo- graphic. But, what’s also interesting, is the viewing time, detailed what area you live in these great United States. The leading cities in live TV consumption in daily hours and minutes are: Pittsburgh (five hours, 28 minutes, up 21 minutes from 2012); St. Louis (five hours, 23 minutes, up 15 minutes from 2012); Baltimore (five hours, 19 minutes, up eight minutes from 2012); Philadelphia (five hours, 18 minutes, and that’s down 11 minutes from 2012) and Detroit (five hours, 15 minutes, up six minutes from 2012). Consumers are watching the least amount of TV in San Francisco (two hours, 57 minutes, down eight minutes from 2012); followed by Los Angeles (three hours, 39 minutes, down 15 minutes from 2012); Denver (three hours, 45 minutes, down 11 minutes from 2012); Seattle (three hours 50 minutes, down 24 minutes from 2012) and Minneapolis (four hours, also down 24 minutes from 2012). When we talk traditional TV, we also have to keep in mind the other times-shifted choices. In addition to live TV, DVR playback, VOD (video on demand) and viewing over-the-top content (video delivered via the Internet) are also measured. Let’s get back to that over-thetop content viewing for a minute. Smart TV (also known as connected or hybrid TV, a television set that integrates the use of the Internet or is connected to a settop box (signal receiver), Blu-Ray player or game console) ownership is experiencing some growth in popularity. The largest penetration of these Smart TVs with their over-the-top video streaming capabilities is in San Francisco, where there is eight percent ownership. On the other hand, Smart TV ownership is lowest in Charlotte with 2.9 percent. As for other options to view content portable is also the way to. For example, we love our smartphones, because 69 percent of African-Americans own them. It appears that we are taking a little longer, though, to warm up to tablets – about 11 percent of us overall own these gadgets. And, just as we watch the most TV, we use our mobile devices for watching video at a 30 percent higher rate than the rest of the population. The percentages of our device ownership tend to jump, however, when we check out the numbers market by market. These are the top African-American Markets for smartphone penetration: Chicago (75 percent), Washington, D.C. (73 percent), Atlanta (72 percent), New York (72 percent) and Dallas (72 percent). Here are our top areas for tablet ownership: Tampa (28 percent), Atlanta (27 percent), Boston (26 per- cent), New York (26 percent) and Washington, D.C. (26 percent). What does all of this mean to any of us? It means that marketers and manufacturers have a myriad of opportunities to understand, appreciate and reach you as unique and diverse consumers in locations (as equally diverse) each with their own personalities. Best of all, you get to choose. So, you drive the market. Cheryl Pearson-McNeil is senior vice president of Public Affairs and Government Relations for Nielsen. For more information and studies go to www.nielsenwire.com. On gun violence By Assemblymember Walter. T. Mosley As a state representative, a father, and native Brooklynite, I am horrified by the increase gun violence we have seen in our communities this summer. I am proud to say that my first vote as a lawmaker was in favor of passing the NY SAFE Act, which enacted the toughest gun laws in the country right here in New York State. In the shadow of the verdict from the Trayvon Martin trial, we are reminded that daily incidents of violence have not been exclusive to one community or district but rather have become a trend in most urban areas. As lawmakers, we are tasked with being a catalyst for change and finding innovative and efficient ways to address the grow- ing problem of gun violence. The NY SAFE Act was an incredibly powerful first step – banning military style assault weapons, ensuring that all gun purchases are subject to a background check and keeping guns away from convicted felons and those who pose a danger due to mental illness. But we cannot stop there. The scope of the NY SAFE Act must be expanded to address the rampant and flagrant use of handguns, which have been the weapon of choice in many of these recent shootings. We need to engage and empower our communities by conducting regular gun buy back programs that provide a safe and anonymous space to help get weapons off the street. I urge all my fellow elected officials to foster closer relationships with their local precincts to improve community policing tactics that are necessary to discourage open violence on our streets. And I especially urge our congressional representatives to push for legislation that strengthens the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) and make sure it has the tools, oversight and authority to enforce existing laws and truly regulate the expansive, nationwide gun market. This is crucial because we know that New York State remains vulnerable as long as less restrictive laws exist in surrounding states. I will continue to work with my colleagues as part of the SLAIG (State Legislators Against Illegal Guns) Coalition and make sure that we stand together in keeping all New Yorkers safe on the streets. BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net Opinion BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 8 African Scene France praises Mali’s election as Keita leads France has hailed Mali’s presidential election, the first since a coup and an Islamist-led insurgency which it helped repel, a “great success”. Ex-Prime Minister Ibrahim Boubakar Keita’s supporters celebrated in the capital, Bamako, as they predicted an outright win for him in Sunday’s vote. The state broadcaster said Mr Keita was in the lead, as votes are counted. He had pledged to restore Mali’s honour after it was forced to rely on France to fight the Islamists. France sent more than 4,000 troops in January to regain control of northern towns and cities from al-Qaeda-linked militants. Congratulations are in order that the Mali elections went off well” The Islamists had captured territory with the backing of Tuareg separatists in 2012, but their alliance quickly crumbled. They had taken advantage of a coup in Bamako after the army accused the civilian government of not doing enough to repel their offensive. A UN peacekeeping force was deployed to Mali earlier this month to pave the way for elections, as France began to withdraw its troops from its former colony. The elections are intended to reunite the north and south. Observers said voter turnout was high in Bamako, but lower in the north. French Prime Minister JeanMarc Ayrault said France did not act out of “paternalism” and wanted Mali to become a “democratic independent nation”, AFP news agency reports. “Congratulations are in order that the Mali elections went off well... For France, it is a great success,” Mr Ayrault is quoted as saying. The BBC’s Alex Duval Smith reports from Bamako that support- Archibishop Desmond Tutu Archbishop Tutu ‘would not worship a homophobic God’ Woman casts her vote in Mali election ers of Mr Keita partied throughout Sunday night after state broadcaster ORTM reported that he might win outright, averting a run-off vote on August. 11. The government had earlier said it would need five days before issuing the result. European Union election observation mission chief Louis Michel said the election had gone off well and was marked by enthusiasm among voters. Mr Keita, or “IBK” as he is popularly known, has a reputation of being a strongman, our correspondent says. Aged 69, he ran his campaign under the banner of ‘’For Mali’s honour’’, playing on the fact that Malians felt humiliated by having to call for France’s help to prevent their country from breaking up, our reporter says. Prominent religious leaders in the mostly Muslim nation called on people to vote for him; he is also considered the favourite of the military, including last year’s coup leaders, she adds. His biggest rival is seen as Soumaila Cisse, who founded the Union for the Republic and Democracy (URD) in 2003. Mr Cisse has called for the junta that seized power in 2012 to be cleared from the political scene. The election was contested by 27 candidates. Some 6.8 million people were eligible to vote at 21,000 polling stations across the country. Turnout in a presidential election in Mali had never reached 40% and about 25% of the capital’s registered voters took part in the last presidential race in 2007, Reuters news agency reports. South Africa’s Nobel peace laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu says he will never worship a “homophobic God” and will rather go to hell. The retired archbishop was speaking at the launch of a UNbacked campaign in South Africa to promote gay rights. Despite same-sex relationships being legal in South Africa, it had some of the worst cases of homophobic violence, UN human rights chief Navi Pillay said. Archbishop Tutu, 81, is a longstanding campaigner for gay rights. in 1996, but has remained the moral conscience of the nation, correspondents say. I am as passionate about this campaign as I ever was about apartheid” Same-sex relationships are illegal in more than a third of countries around the world and punishable by death in five, Ms Pillay said. In Africa, homosexual acts are still a crime in 38 countries, according to the rights group Amnesty International. “I would refuse to go to a homophobic heaven. No, I would say sorry, I mean I would much rather go to the other place,” Archbishop Tutu said at the launch of the Free and Equal campaign in Cape Town. “I would not worship a God who is homophobic and that is how deeply I feel about this.” Archbishop Tutu said the campaign against homophobia was similar to the campaign waged against racism in South Africa. “I am as passionate about this campaign as I ever was about apartheid. For me, it is at the same level,” he added. Ms Pillay said gay and lesbian people in South Africa had some of the best legal safeguards since apartheid ended in 1994, but they still faced brutal attacks. Last month, a lesbian was found dead, having been sexually assaulted with a toilet brush. “People are literally paying for their love with their lives,” she said, AFP news agency reports. The UN would push for gay rights to be recognised in countries where they are illegal, Ms Pillay said. “I constantly hear governments tell me, ‘but this is our culture, our tradition and we can’t change it’... So we have lots of work to do,” she added. Archbishop Tutu won the Nobel peace prize in 1984 for campaigning against white minority rule in South Africa. NMA president happy with mission to help people of Liberia Dr. Rahn Kennedy Bailey has expressed satisfaction with the outcomes to date of the National Medical Association’s (NMA) Liberia medical mission project, which was implemented with the support of Her Excellency Madame Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, president, Republic of Liberia, along with Drs. Marsha and Frank Glover, who covered all hotel and travel expenses for the delegation from their personal resources. NMA incurred no expenses in connection with the delegation’s travel to Liberia. Led by me as NMA’s 113th president and NMA member Frank Glover, M.D. (SHIELD - Strategic Healthcare Initiative Emphasizing Local Development), the first trip (November 10-17, 2012) included eight NMA physicians who trained and taught Liberian medical students and physicians while examining patients in need of healthcare. “We assessed the needs of the Liberian healthcare infrastructure to determine strategies to assist. These strategies will include developing joint projects with NMA, SHIELD, the Liberian government, and the U.S. historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs)”. The second NMA Liberian trip took place Feb. 23-March 2, 2013, with 37 NMA physicians, to assist in re-building/building the Liberian healthcare infrastructure. This effort enabled Liberia to go from 15 trained specialists to expected more than 140 in five years, and dramatically decrease the maternal and infant mortality rates, which are currently among the highest in the world. The areas of need identified by the postgraduate task force of the Liberian Ministry of Health are: medicine, pediatrics, surgery, and obstetrics and gynecology. The goal of this effort is for every county hospital in Liberia to be staffed with all of the necessary specialists within five years by establishing a new medical school and research facility in Tapeta and upgrading the existing medical school in Monrovia. The NMA delegation of doctors worked in JFK, ELWA, Grant, and JFD Hospitals and clinics. They gave lectures to medical students and residents, performed surgeries, provided care for hundreds of patients, conducted ACLS and PALS training for doctors and nurses, neoMedical group and Liberia President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16) Benjamin Todd Jealous NAACP resolution urges workers collective bargaining During the NAACP’s 104th annual convention, delegates unanimously passed a resolution reaffirming the Association’s commitment to fair labor practices and calling for foreign automakers to allow employees to organize a union and engage in collective bargaining. The resolution was put forward by the Mississippi State Conference of the NAACP. “The American middle class is the engine of our economy and deserves fair wages and treatment in the workplace,” stated NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous. “This resolution reaffirms our commitment to ensuring that employees of foreign automakers are not treated as second-class citizens.” The resolution states, in part that, “…the NAACP requests that Nissan, and other foreign automakers, abandon their antiunion agenda and treat American workers with the same human rights to organize a union and engage in collective bargaining that they provide around the world…” Support for the resolution coincided with the convention t h e m e “ We S h a l l N o t b e Moved,” and discussions centered on modern day attempts to roll back the progress of the civil rights era and the efforts of civil and human rights advocates to combat these efforts. “We are proud of this longstanding partnership with the civil rights community and our shared commitment to fairness for all,” said UAW President Bob King. “This sends strong message of support to the struggling Nissan workers in Canton who want a solution that gives them dignity and fairness on the job as they create quality products at the best value for customers.” The resolution stems from the associations growing concern about fair labor practices by foreign automakers. House votes to uphold NSA domestic spying Americans for Limited Government President Nathan Mehrens issued the following statement on the defeat of the Amash amendment that would have defunded the NSA domestic spying program in the House of Representatives: “The NSA domestic surveillance program on every American was very nearly defunded in a narrow vote in the House, with a mere seven vote swing deciding its fate. Despite the disappointing outcome, the narrow margin is very good news for the American people, for now they have a political problem that can be dealt with via elections. “The 205 representatives of both parties that voted to stop the spying program voted to uphold the Fourth Amendment and the original intent of Section 215 of the Patriot Act, which never authorized blanket, suspicionless surveillance of every single American. “The 217 representatives who voted to defeat the Amash amendment have upheld the indiscriminate collection of phone and email records on everyone — just in case intelligence agencies might need that information later. This was a vote against the Fourth Amendment that protects against unreasonable searches and requires that warrants only issue but upon probable cause. To suggest the American people have no reasonable expectation of privacy in their phone and digital records against searches when no crime has been committed is to suggest that the Fourth Amendment no longer applies. “The fact is, the government’s interpretation of Section 215 of the Patriot Act does something that has never been done before — which is assert that because you might commit a crime or engage in terrorism, you can be subjected to a search. Every case of searches of third party vendors’ phone and bank records were all relevant to investigations into specific persons regarding specific crimes. These are just general warrants searching everything and everyone. Every member who voted in favor of the surveillance state being built must now explain to their constituents what other freedoms they’re willing to sacrifice on this altar of false security.” City Comptroller John C. Liu’s office raised concerns about the economic damage that could result from another standoff over the federal budget and debt ceiling, which many observers believe is likely to occur this fall. “We wish Washington’s days of irresponsible, high-stakes brinkmanship were in the past, but they seem to be looming on the horizon once again,” said Comptroller Liu. “Another outbreak of ‘Washington mania’ over the debt ceiling or budget would significantly hamper economic growth in New York City and beyond.” The warning was made in a post on 1CentreStreet.com, a blog recently launched by the Comptroller’s Office to examine important and underreported economic and public policy issues related to New York City. The post was written by Chief Economist Dr. Frank Braconi, who cautioned that rosy economic growth predictions for 2014 would have to be sharply revised if a deadlock occurs this fall. “The optimistic view that quickening momentum in the national economy would assert itself in 2014 was supported by a belief that neither political party would see advantage in further antagonizing voters with more budget theatrics,” Dr. Braconi wrote. “Unfortunately, storm clouds are now gathering over the 2014 budget process, suggesting that the economy may again fall victim to political gamesmanship.” The post details elements of Comptroller Liu’s comments on the City’s Adopted Budget for Fiscal Year 2014, which he delivered this week at the NYS Financial Control Board annual public board meeting. The 1 Centre Street blog serves as a venue for members of the Comptroller’s Office to explore topics as varied as the definition of “rich” in New York City and getting stuck behind a garbage truck while driving. The posts, which are written by staff economists and policy experts, are intended to foster public debate and do not nec- essarily constitute official views of the Comptroller’s Office. Some of the other issues discussed on 1 Centre Street include: * What immigration reform and a higher minimum wage would mean for New York City’s restaurant industry. * Whether a composting program makes sense in New York City. * The New York State policy that increases the risk of homelessness among those with HIV/AIDS. * Why the NYPD unit that investigates vehicular crashes should be expanded. * What the United Neighborhood Houses’ “Blueprint for Neighborhoods” report has to offer policymakers. Comptroller Liu encouraged the public to become part of the conversation by visiting 1CentreStreet.com and commenting on the posts on Twitter by using the hashtag #1CentreSt. Visit www.comptroller.nyc.gov for the latest news, events and initiatives. Follow Comptroller Liu on Twitter. To receive Twitter updates via text message, text “follow johncliu” to 40404. Ausar Auset Society to mark 40th anniversary with gala ceremony The Ausar Auset Society International will welcome several African kings, or their representatives, and queen mothers from Ghana, West Africa and the Asanteman Association of USA to its 40th anniversary gala celebration on Aug. 3 at the Brooklyn Marriott Hotel. Representatives from the Nkonya, Assin Apimanim, and the Ejisu traditional regions are among those expected to attend. Relationships with Ghanaian kings were established in 1985 when 55 members of the Society were honored at a durbar for the Ashanti kings in Accra and since that time, the Society has received international acclaim for its success in bringing practical spiritual teachings to the world. Nana Imhotep Gary Byrd, award-winning broadcaster, poet, songwriter, and executive producer; Dr. Molefi Asante, renown scholar, historian, Temple University professor, and author of topics related to African history and Africentricity; and Nana Camille Yarborough, esteemed perfor- mance artist, author, cultural activist, and TV program host of Ancestor House will each receive a prestigious award for continuous and noteworthy contributions to the African American community. Royal Magazine publisher, Nana Osei Akoto, along with a reporter, plan to attend. Cultural presentations, citations, entertainment, and addresses from guest speaker, Imhotep Gary Byrd and keynote speaker, Ra Un Nefer Amen, leader of the Ausar Auset Society and CEO of Taui Network are programmed for the evening. Ausar Auset Society International, a Pan-African cultural and spiritual organization based in Brooklyn, NY, began serving Black communities in 1973 and currently offers spiritual and health classes spanning topics that include ancient Egyptian history, Bazi astrology, Qi Gong exercise, parenting, and male-female relationships in more than 35 international locations, including the UK, Toronto, Bermuda, Trinidad, South Africa and Ghana. Its governing practices follow the traditional African kingship model recognized in modern Nigeria, Ghana, and South Africa and in various cultural organizations of the Diaspora. The Aug. 3 celebration highlights decades of achievements, foremost among them the training of men and women dedicated to the spiritual tradition of ancient Kamit. Ra Un Nefer Amen (also referred to as Shekhem Ur Shekhem)—founder, chief priest and leader—has not only trained the Society’s priests and priestesses, but has also personally counseled members of the Black community, who have asked for his support, guidance and enlightenment. Shekhem Ur Shekhem is the noted author of the Metu Neter Volumes 1 – 7 and a host of other publications that include books on African spirituality, health and natural healing, meditation, Qi Gong and oracle systems. Through his transformative teachings, Ra Un Nefer Amen, the leading global expert on Kamitic spirituality, continues to show the world how to navigate the paths of life, successfully. Mayor pledges support for immigration reform By J. Zamgba Browne Special to NY Beacon Mayor Michael Bloomberg has added his voice to chorus for comprehensive immigration reform. He pledged his support at a recent gathering of the Faith and Politics Institute at Gracie Mansion. The Mayor said now is the time for reform because America needs a modern immigration that welcomes the entrepreneurs and the hard workers that will grow the nation’s economy and create jobs and keep its citizens competitive on the world’s stage. “I think it is fair to say we have never been closer to achieving that goal, but it’s like jumping 95 percent of the way across the Grand Canyon – unless you jump 100 percent it’s all for not and we have got to make sure that Washington hears us and understands that we just have to pass reform this year,” he added. As I pointed out earlier, immigrants really do make a huge impact on our economy. “New York City is a city of immigrants. Almost half of the small business owners in our city are immigrants, Immigrant workers generate close to a third of our city’s gross city product,” said Mayor Bloomberg. He also said these immigrants are more than half the city’s registered and practical nurses, nearly half of the medical doctors and surgeons, and 60 percent of homeowners in New York City are also immigrants. Mayor Bloomberg also said New York’s story incidentally, is not unique. “Across the U.S., immigrants are named on roughly three-fourth of the patents granted at top technical universities. Nationwide, according to Mayor Bloomberg, immigrants start more than a quarter of new businesses. He also emphasized that because of immigrant homeowners, the value of housing in the nation has increased by some $4 trillion since 1970. Immigrants really are the key to the future of New York – and to the prosperity of our nation,” he added. 9 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net Looming fall standoff over debt ceiling could deal economy setback BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 10 THE ADAMS REPORT Fashion, Beauty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .& Stuff By Audrey Adams Gone fishing! Audrey Adams After spending the entire year working; I have decided that it is time for a much needed break! Hopefully you are not like me. I tend to work hard all the time and leave precious little time for myself. Miracle of miracles; a friend asked me to go with her to the Hampton’s to attend an event. At first I resisted the rather juicy sounding invitation and she didn’t press me because she knows how stubborn I can be (smiles). She gently reminded me that “all work and no play” isn’t the best thing for anyone and that I was the only person hell-bent on working. So I went, reluctantly. It was hard for me though, to stop thinking about all the work that would be waiting for me when I returned . . . that is, until I sat on the beach with a glass of champagne! Then it was over. All thoughts of work, New York etc . . . were washed away in one fell swoop. All I could do was think about how fortunate I was to be sitting on the beach, enjoying, relaxing and taking in the fresh air. I looked up at the sky and marveled at the clouds drifting by, heard the squeals of laughter from children playing in the water, almost felt the swoop of a seagull’s wing! Okay that might be stretching it, but I kid you not . . . those two days were what made me decide that I was indeed socially and vacation-ally challenged. So I have made a decision. I am going on vacation! So, it’s time for you to come out of your cave and live! Give yourself permission to enjoy your life. Have fun. Summer is almost over. What are you going to do? If you haven’t made any plans then you are short-changing yourself. Life is sailing right past you. Refuse to lift your head up and see the opportunities in front of you; and the boat will slip silently through the channel and out to sea, leaving you at the shore, land-locked and alone. Are you afraid to poke your head out of your cave? Call a friend and invite them to join you. Don’t know what to do? Do anything! Do something that will force you to interact with people. Don’t have any friends? Wrong! Everyone has friends and acquaintances in their life, maybe you haven’t made the effort to connect with anyone. Give it a try; you will be surprised at how receptive people can be when you step outside your comfort zone. Maybe you have a friend who needs your help. Offer your hand in friendship. Show a sister/brother some love. Me, I’m going fishing with a friend. Hope you will too. Think about it. See you in September. Visit my website, TalkwithAudrey.com and checkout my online radio and TV show, Talk! with Audrey for a series of interviews that will inform, motivate and inspire you. Audrey Adams, former director of corporate public relations and fashion merchandising for ESSENCE continues to motivate and inspire women through her syndicated columns and motivational speaking engagements. THE ADAMS REPORT© NAN exec debunks Bill O’Reilly ‘misstatements’ on Sharpton book Tamika D. Mallory, national executive director of National Action Network (NAN) and head of the Decency Initiative, says it is a blatant contradiction that Bill O’Reilly would question Rev. Al Sharpton writing a book on the evolution of his principles and ideas, detailing among other things why he is against certain lyrics in hip-hop and has stopped himself from using specific words. “Being published by Simon & Schuster in a joint venture with the parent company Cash Money Content, which itself has a relationship with the parent company of Cash Money Records, I find Mr. O’Reilly’s assertions a contradiction because I sit on the Diversity Council of News Corp that owns Fox News and the New York Post in the seat designated for National Action Network. Both of these media are frequent, consistent critics of Rev. Sharpton and NAN, and have done things that many of us disagree with in terms of aspirations of the Black community.” “News Corp also continues to support National Action Network functions and events financially, so if Rev. Sharpton can say we disagree with the News Corp entity, but should be open to dialogue, by what standards might he say to Simon & Schuster, that we are not open to doing business with Cash Money, especially since he can express his Tamika D. Mallory problems with lyrics and language ing is a blatant lie. The fact rein the book? Either we have one mains that Pepsi had still withstandard or not. drawn any relationship with Lil’ “Secondly, I was in the meet- Wayne, so what would there be a ing between Pepsi executives, the deal around? The book deal with family of Emmett Till and Rev. Simon & Schuster and Cash Sharpton. There was nobody Money Content was signed from Cash Money in that meeting through Massenburg Media and because Pepsi had severed all ties Rev. Sharpton last year and the with Lil’ Wayne, and Cash Money book was in publication even beand had done so at the urging of fore the Lil’ Wayne/Pepsi controboth the Till family and Rev. versy occurred. The evidence of Sharpton. The purpose of the that is that the galleys are already meeting was for Pepsi to assure out. the family and Rev. Sharpton they “Finally, as Rev. Sharpton often were not going to reinstate the Lil’ says, “We can have different Wayne deal. To insinuate that opinions, but we can not have difthere was some deal in the meet- ferent facts.” Dr. Amy Baxter School immunizations made easier with Buzzy For many, back to school time means time to update vaccinations. In the close quarters of the classroom, being fully vaccinated is important for younger kids, older kids, teens, and even college students. While vaccines keep your children protected from serious diseases (and their friends, classmates and others in the community) it can add drama for an already grumpy kid not ready to leave summer. Although needle pain from a shot may not seem like a big deal, needle sticks are the most common and most feared cause of medical pain in the wo rld. The simple-to-use, innovative Buzzy makes back to school immunizations a breeze. Inspired by her son’s traumatic — and completely avoidable — shot experience, Dr. Amy Baxter set out to find a solution to help the 23% of adults and 63% of kids with needle phobia. Her “a-ha” moment came from noticing her numb hands from gripping the vibrating steering wheel after driving home from work one night. Working from her basement, Dr. Baxter eventually tested her idea using a personal massager and a bag of frozen peas…and it worked. 26,000 Buzzies later, Dr. Baxter is putting personal pain control into the patient’s hands and empowering children of all ages to have no fear when getting shots at the doctor. “For young children, pain is punishment and scary, so addressing fear is an important first step to making shots less of a big deal. Children are less fearful when they know what’s happening and feel in control. We see children crying and screaming as much from the cleaning swab as from the poke that actually hurts,” shares Dr. Baxter. Dr. Baxter’s pointers on preparing kids for a shot include: When asked “am I going to get a shot?” focus on the benefit. “Yes, they have medicine that keeps you healthy.” Never promise they won’t get a shot unless you intend to follow through and come back another time if they’re due for one Never threaten with a shot if children don’t behave Establishing a needle as punishment or you as untrustworthy will guarantee a bad experience. If the child’s question is, “Is it going to hurt?” avoid using the words pain or hurt. Instead, use the word “bother,” and answer this way: “Actually, a lot of kids aren’t that bothered by shots. Before you get them, I’ll show you how we will make getting them not a big deal.” If they’ve had a bad experience in the past, say “I found out about some new cool things we can do to make them much more comfortable.” Another “cool thing” from the personal pain company MMJ Labs (buzzy4shots) is a set of BeeStractors DistrACTION(R) cards. By finding hidden monkeys or the sleeping space kitty, even teenagers are proven to focus away from the needle and pain. Used together with Buzzy, these pain management solutions can effectively protect children from traumatic medical experiences. March on Washington to spotlight Trayvon and voting rights issues Just one week after National Action Network organized the nationwide “Justice for Trayvon” vigils in over 100 cities across the country to press the federal government to investigate civil rights charges against George Zimmerman, several local preachers and activists, led by Rev. Al Sharpton and NAN will gather today at Metropolitan Baptist Church, presided over by Rev. Dr. David Jefferson. At the church, NAN will renew a call for mobilization for the Saturday, Aug. 24 national action to reclaim the dream march on Washington that Rev. Sharpton and Martin Luther King, King, III, are leading. Fifty years after the 1963 March on Washington, Voting Rights, and the Justice for Trayvon Martin movement are key civil rights rallying issues and the Aug. 24, 50th anniversary March on Washington will focus on voting rights and ending state laws like Stand your Ground and Stop and Frisk. It will be the first national march since the acquittal of George Zimmerman. According to Rev. Al Sharpton and NAN, Dr.King’s dream has been undermined by both the Supreme Court Voting Rights decision and the acquittal of George Zimmerman. By George E. Curry NNPA Editor-in-Chief PHILADELPHIA (NNPA) – Fulfilling a pledge to aggressively protect the voting rights of people of color in the wake of the Supreme Court striking down a key section of the Voting Rights Act, Attorney General Eric H. Holder, Jr. has announced that the Justice Department will sue the state of Texas to compel it to preclear any planned changes in its voting procedures before they can go into effect. In Shelby County v. Holder, a sharply divided Supreme Court gutted Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the part of the law that describes the formula to be used to determine which states or political subdivisions are subjected to preclearance requirements. President Obama has stated that his administration will press Congress for new legislation that will override the court’s decision that weakens the landmark legislation. Holder called the court’s 5-4 vote “a deeply disappointing – and flawed – decision.” Speaking at the National Urban League’s annual convention here last Thursday, Holder said, “And today I am announcing that the Justice Department will ask a federal court in Texas to subject the state of Texas to a preclearance regime similar to the one required by Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act. This request to ‘bail in’ the state – and require it to obtain “pre-approval” from either the Department or a federal court before implementing future voting changes – is available under the Voting Rights Act when intentional voting discrimination is found. Based on the evidence of intentional racial discrimination that was presented last year in the redistricting case, Texas v. Holder – as well as the history of pervasive voting-related discrimination against racial minorities that the Supreme Court itself has recognized – we believe that the state of Texas should be required to go through a preclearance process whenever it changes its voting laws and practices.” In its Shelby County v. Holder ruling last month, the Supreme Court struck down the requirement that nine states, most of them in the Deep South, and portions of others to obtain permission from the Justice Department or a federal court before changing election procedures. Under the Voting Rights Act, states can ‘bail out’ of the preclearance provision if they can prove that they have not discriminated against disadvantaged groups in a decade. Under the rarely used Section 3 ( c ) of the law, which was not overturned by the court, states not previously covered by the Voting Rights Act can be added or bailed in if it is proven that they are discriminating on the basis of race or ethnicity. Within two hours after the Supreme Court ruling, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott announced that he will restore a controversial Voter ID requirement that was frozen by the Justice Department. Under the provision, student IDs are not accepted to verify the identities of voters, but gun registration is an accepted document. Abbott, who is running for governor next year to succeed outgoing Rick Perry, also announced that the state will implement a controversial redistricting plan that dilutes Black and Latino political clout. Texas appears to be an ideal target for the Justice Department because a federal court in Washing- U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder Voting Rights Act in light of the Court’s ruling, we plan, in the meantime, to fully utilize the law’s remaining sections to ensure that the voting rights of all American citizens are protected.” After Texas, the next likely showdown will be between the Justice Department and the state of North Carolina. The state legislature there had passed legislation that, if enacted, would cut early voting by a week, eliminate same-day registration, require strict voter ID and end a popular program that pre-registers high school students before their 18th birthday. ton ruled last year that the state had intentionally discriminated against Latinos when it re-drew its congressional districts. The court threw out the map saying both parties had “provided more evidence of discriminatory intent than we have space, or need, to address here.” In announcing his upcoming action against Texas, Holder told delegates to the National Urban League convention, “This is the Department’s first action to protect voting rights following the Shelby County decision, but it will not be our last. Even as Congress considers updates to the According to Bob Hall, executive director of Democracy North Carolina, House Bill 589 also: * Eliminates flexibility in opening early voting sites at different hours within a county; * Eliminates straight party ticket voting; * Authorizes vigilante poll observers, lots of them, with expanded range of interference; * Expands the scope of who may examine registration records and challenge voters; * Repeals out-of-precinct voting; * Makes it more difficult to add sate* Limits who can assist a voter adjudicated to be incompetent by court; ** Raises contribution limits to $5,000; and the limit increases every two years with inflation and * Repeals some of the disclosure requirements of outside money. The measure, rushed through in the closing days of the legislative session, was sent to Republican Gov. Pat McCrory for his expected signature. In his address to the National Urban League, Attorney General Holder said, “Although mandated by the Constitution, voting rights are not always guaranteed – in practice – without robust enforcement. That’s why, despite the court’s decision, I believe we must regard this setback not as a defeat, but as an historic opportunity: for Congress to restore, and even to strengthen, modern voting protections.” The 1965 Voting Rights Act expired after five years, but was extended by Congress in 1970, 1975, 1982 and for another 25 years in 2006. The last time, it passed the House 390-3 and the Senate 98-0. However, in the current political climate, many are worried if Congress will continue to act in a bipartisan manner on voting rights. (CONTINUED ON PAGE 16) Civil rights leaders meet with President Obama on Voting Rights neutering what many called the By Freddie Allen NNPA Washington Correspon- crown jewel of the Civil Rights Movement. Section 4 required all or parts dent of 15 states with track records of voter WASHINGTON (NNPA) – The discrimination to get “preclearance” Voting Rights Act is down, but not from the Justice Department or a fedout and civil rights leaders joined eral court for any changes they President Obama and Attorney wanted to make to voting laws. Within General Eric H. Holder, Jr. at the hours after the Supreme Court ruling White House Monday to discuss in Shelby County v. Holder, a numrenewed efforts in the fight against ber of state lawmakers from previously covered states announced voter discrimination. In a statement released after the plans to move forward with restricmeeting, Al Sharpton, civil rights tive voting laws that disproportionactivist and president of the Na- ately affect minorities, the elderly and tional Action Network said: “To- young voters. Texas is one of those states. day the United States President The Lone Star State has a history and Attorney General met with a broad coalition of civil rights and of voting discrimination, the latest voting rights leaders to assure us entry due to redistricting plans that that they will continue to work with disproportionately affected minority us to protect every American’s voters. During a speech at the National right to vote.” Sharpton continued: “We had a Urban League’s annual convention great alarm when the Supreme Attorney General Eric Holder said Court ruled against Section 4 of the that, “the State of Texas should be Voting Rights Act but after meet- required to go through a preclearance ing with the President and the At- process whenever it changes its vottorney General we were assured ing laws and practices.” Holder plans to use remaining secthat the Voting Rights Act may be wounded but it is not dead. It is tions of the law go after states that not even critically wounded; it can continue practices that intentionally discriminate against voters. and will be revived.” Barbara Arnwine, president and Last month, the Supreme Court, struck down Section 4 of the Vot- executive director of the Lawyers’ ing Rights Act of 1965, effectively Committee for Civil Rights Under President Obama Law, said that uncovering and fighting voter discrimination in the current landscape is a daunting task, but she was encouraged to see how much the Department of Justice is strategizing and positioning itself to be a real force in combating racial discrimination. Kasim Reed, mayor of Atlanta said that civil rights leaders and voting rights advocates will be doing more education than ever. “While there are a number of adverse tactics being used to un- dermine the right to vote,” said Reed. “While there are a number of adverse tactics being used to undermine the right to vote, if we do our job we will make sure that people maintain access to the ballot.” Reed said that he plans to work with mayors across the nation to form partnerships with civil rights organizations to assist in voter engagement and education. Marc Morial, president and CEO of the National Urban League, said that voters must “be particularly vigilant on proposals in state legislatures when they happen, not when they gain momentum, but when they happen.” Arnwine said that her group will be looking at all the states and plans to conduct hearings nationwide to assist Congress in obtaining the data that will be necessary to create a new voting map. “[President Obama] is committed to making sure that the right to vote is secure and strong and that he’s also calling on people to do everything they can to protect their right to vote,” said Arnwine. “Ultimately, it’s about what the citizens will do.” Arnwine’s group is part of a larger coalition formed to assist embattled voters around the nation (The Election Protection Website is www.866ourvote.org; telephone, 866/OURVOTE). Melanie L. Campbell, president and CEO of The National Coalition on Black Civic Participation, said that young voters have increased their civic engagement, rallying around recent Supreme Court decisions on affirmative action and the Voting Rights Act. “Our young people are connecting the dots,” said Campbell. “They connect the Stand Your Ground law to the voting rights law, so part of what’s going to happen during the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, you will see young people coming here for training and teach-ins, because they understand that the rights that need protecting all center around the Voting Rights Act.” The commemorative march in Washington will be on Saturday, Aug. 24. “The Supreme Court decision has had a catalyzing effect. The Trayvon Martin tragedy combined with the Supreme Court decision [in Shelby v. Holder] really has energized people,” said Morial. “You’ve got Moral Mondays in North Carolina the Dream Defenders in Florida. The great thing about the Dream Defenders is seeing young people that are engaging and they’re not looking for permission.” 11 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net Holder seeks to force Texas to ‘preclear’ voting changes BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 12 Beacon On An Elegant Affair Double ring and double wedding ceremony for the Southerland-Anekwe families in Bklyn Bishop Guy Sansaricq and (Bride and Groom) Rev. Alexis Yvonne Southerland and Dr. Obiora Nnamdi Anekwe (Photos: Tanya Ndip & Hitomi Abe) The historic Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn was the setting on June 29th for the wedding of Rev. Alexis Yvonne Southerland and Dr. Obiora Nnamdi Anekwe. The exchange of rings and vows, as well as the Unity Candle lighting were all part of the traditional service. The beauty of the ceremony was enhanced by the soft glow of Tiffany stained glass windows, traditional music played on the famous Austin pipe organ and the Henry Prussing murals. The officiants of the Saturday ceremony were Rev. Kenneth Bogan and Rev. Sylvia Gayle Kinard; the liturgist was Rev. Bettye Bogan and the organist Gregory Eaton. Serving as maid of honor was Danielle Summers with Tori Baker and Sharon Jean-Pierre as bridesmaids. The junior bridesmaid was Enuma Anekwe with flower girls Taylor Jackson and Kendall Jackson. Dr. Ejinkonye Anekwe was best man for his brother with Dr. Timothy Onyiuke, and Tochi Duhu as groomsmen. The wedding mass was held on June 30th at St.Gregory the Great Roman Catholic Church also in Brooklyn, at which the officiant was Bishop Guy Sansaricq. Serving as witnesses were Emma Jeanette Anekwe, mother of the groom and Yvonne Southerland, mother of the bride. Standing with the bride was Danielle Summers, and with the groom Dr. Ejinkonye Anekwe. Again the sanctuary was awe-inspiring with the high marble altar and columns. Rev. Southerland graduated from the Emma Willard School in Troy, New York, the oldest school for girls in the United States and made her debut at the Sigma Gamma Rho Cotillion in Atlanta where she was crowned cotillion queen. While a student at Spellman College, Rev. Southerland participated in the Junior Year Abroad program, studying at St.Edwards Hall at Oxford University, Oxford England. She graduated from Spellman with honors. She holds a Master of Divinity degree from Union Theological Seminary, and a Master of Science in Teaching from Fordham University. She is employed as a unit coordinator with the New York City department of Education and serves as the pastor of Discipleship at the Greater Restoration Baptist Church in Brooklyn, New York. She is the daughter of Yvonne Foster Southerland, artist, author and retired art educator with the former New York City Board of Education, who also taught at the American School in Gelnhausen, Germany and the American School of Languages in Florence, Italy. The bridal party and mothers strike a fashionable pose Her father is the late Rev. Plato Southerland, formerly associate pastor at Brown Memorial Baptist Church of Brooklyn, and administrator with the former New York City Board of Education. Dr. Anekwe graduated with honors from Grace Christian School of Columbus, Georgia, and received a Bachelor of Arts in Mass Media with honors from Clark Atlanta University. He received a Master of Education in Counseling and Student Development from Tuskegee University where he served on the faculty for several years and a Doctor of Education from Auburn University. During his doctoral studies at Auburn, he conducted and presented research in education, ethics and philosophy at the International University Bremen in Bremen, Germany; John Cabot University in Rome, Italy; Cracow University of Technology in Cracow, Poland, and the University of Sterling in Sterling, Scotland. He is presently pursuing a Master of Science degree in Bioethics at Columbia University, and is a teacher with the New York City Department of Education. The groom is the son of Emma Jeanette Anekwe, a retired teacher with the Muscogee County School District, Columbus Georgia, and Dr. Gregory Ejinkonye Anekwe, who was formerly chairperson of the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Lagos, College of Medicine. He retired as a professor from the Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Jos. After a wedding trip to the Dominican Republic, the couple will reside in Brooklyn, New York. (D.T.) McDonald’s 365Black Awards ceremony celebrates pride, heritage and achievements McDonald's 365Black Awards By Audrey J. Bernard Style & Society Editor McDonald’s 365Black Awards was launched in 2003 as an extension of the company’s 365Black platform, created to celebrate the pride, heritage and achievements of African Americans year-round. The awards are given annually to salute outstanding individuals who are committed to making positive contributions that strengthen the African American community. The award ceremony has become the centerpiece of the annual Essence Festival in New Orleans, LA. On Saturday, July 6, 2013 at the Theater in the New Orleans Ernest N. Morial Convention Center, luminaries walked the long and winding gold carpet to attend McDonald’s 10th annual 365Black Awards hosted by award-winning actress Taraji P. Henson. Actress/comedian Kym Whitley covered the celebrity action from the “golden” carpet. The star-studded audience blended with 365Black guests and VIPs as they celebrated the heritage and achievements of African Americans who remain Deeply Rooted in the Community® all year long, recognizing those whose contributions and accomplishments were truly exemplary. Watch what happened by tuning in to BET® (Black Entertainment Television) on August 25, 2013 at 11pm EST/10pm CST. This year’s stellar honorees included Grammy Award-winning singer-philanthropist Gladys Knight, supermodel Beverly Johnson, education leader Steve Perry, Chicago White Sox Executive Vice President Kenny Williams, McDonald’s owner Roland Parrish, teen entrepreneur Leanna Archer, and youth environmentalist Charles Orgbon III. “These honorees have inspired others by employing their talents and resources to improve their communities, while also laying the groundwork for future growth and development,” stated McDonald’s U.S. Marketing Director Rob Jackson. The event also recognized the achievements of exceptional McDonald’s Black owners/ operators. This year 365Black proudly recognized the achievements of Deborah Allen, Henry L. Coaxum Jr., Mary Redmond, Carolyn Hunter, Leon Goodrum, and Geta & Janice Asfaw. Their ability to proudly and respectfully represent the McDonald’s brand day after day is one of the reasons the company has achieved its unprecedented level of success. “We applaud this year’s honorees for their tireless dedication to serving others. Truly, the contributions of these individuals are integral to strengthening communities on the whole,” added Jackson. “From McDonald’s owner/operators to global superstars, past and present 365Black Awards recipients prove that benevolent work yields positive results.” “It is an honor to be recognized alongside these remarkable individuals,” said the Empress of Soul Gladys Knight. “By lending a hand to others, we can all help create environments of strength and compassion that enrich our neighborhoods, regardless of who we are or where we live.” Celebrated presenters included R&B singers Brandy and LeToya Luckett, Ray Ellis, Omari Hardwick and Robinne Lee. Comedian Jonathan Slocumb proved to be more than an audience warmer. He was so spot on funny that he was offered an “opening gig” from Knight herself! When not cracking up the crowd, Slocumb introduced special performances by recording artists Yolanda Adams, Erica Campbell, Deborah Cox, Estelle, Jordin Sparks and Angie Stone. (Photos by Chris Mitch) Honoree Beverly Johnson Honoree Leanna Archer Honoree Gladys Knight Honoree Roland Parrish Honoree Kenny Williams (center) Host Taraji P. Henson McDonald’s Kevin Newell Estelle performs Erica Campbell performs Honoree Charles Orgbon III, gold carpet host Kym Whitley Honoree Dr. Steve Perry & wife Jordin Sparks performs Deborah Cox, Yolanda Adams, Angie Stone perform LaToya Luckett, Gladys Knight, Brandy Comedian Jonathan Slocumb BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net The Scene 13 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 14 CBC takes a stand against ‘Stand Your Ground’ laws (from Page 3) facing Black men living in the United States of America “The loss of 17 year-old Trayvon [Martin] has focused attention on Black males as nothing else has in decades,” said Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-Washington, D.C.). Tracy Martin, the father of the slain teen addressed the need to seek the positive in an event marred by negatives. “I always said Trayvon was my hero, he saved my life,’” he said. Tracy Martin said that it was heart-breaking for him to not be there during his son’s final moments of life. Martin said that he hopes that the president’s recent remarks about the case and race relations, “sparks a conversation in every household over the dinner table and that conversation is: What can we do as parents, what can we do as men, what can we do as fathers, what can we do as mentors to stop this from happening to your child?” Martin added: “I think that’s where the conversation begins.” Martin said that the Trayvon Martin Foundation would advocate against senseless crime and senseless gun violence, develop mentoring programs, and work on educating people on the Florida statutes and the Stand Your Ground laws. “There’s nothing that we can do to bring Trayvon back but there’s something that we can do under the foundation to keep other families from going through this, then we will,” said Tracy Martin. Benjamin Crump, family lawyer for Trayvon’s parents, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton, posed a simple question: “Can a private citizen with a 9 mm gun profile our children, get out of his car and follow our children and confront our children?” Crump said: “We believe that there should be an amendment to the Stand Your Ground law that simply says you can not be the initial aggressor, you can not start a confrontation, you can not pick the fight and then shoot that person then put your hands in the air and say, ‘I was standing my ground.’” David Johns, executive director of the White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for African Americans, addressed the needs of young Black boys often stigmatized at birth. “By the third grade, children from low-income families who are not reading at grade level are six times less likely to graduate from high school than those who are proficient in reading,” said Johns. “We cannot solve the employment or education crisis facing Black boys and men and America without first ensuring that they all have access to high quality early education.” Jones also noted that by age 4 less, than 30 percent of Black children were proficient in letter recognition, compared to 40 percent of White children. According to Jones, 55 percent of Black children were proficient at color and shape recognition compared to 70 percent of White children. “Access to high quality early education for African American boys especially can be the difference between the pathway that leads to the White House and one that leads to the jailhouse,” said Jones. Michael Eric Dyson, a sociology professor at Georgetown University and MSNBC contributor, acknowledged that Trayvon Martin and many who look like him suffer from stereotypes that predated them by centuries “Black teens’ inherit suspicion and skepticism about their humanity and their inheritance, that’s what they deal with on the daily,” said Dyson. “Has some element of hip hop culture glorified and reinforced the devaluing of Black life? Of course, it has. But it has also spoken against it. They are combating the vicious misrepresentation of Black masculine identity by resorting to the very violence that is critical to American culture and American identity and the sense of machismo that young Black people appropriate has been given to them by a culture that creates laws like Stand Your Ground.” Dyson added: “They didn’t invent the game, they’re playing it in their own way.” Professor Dyson said that educators need to adjust to the unique learning styles, that would covet legendary hip hop MCs such as Nas and Jay Z instead of shunning them. “As the president of the United States of America, your skin speaks before your mouth opens, the authority and the dignity that you possess as the most powerful person in the world gives you a leverage,” said Dyson. “Just as the president has been unafraid to go to Morehouse to challenge those Black men in public, be unafraid to stand before the rest of America to challenge them, too.” Kwesi Mfume, a former Democratic congressman and ex-president and CEO of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), said that it’s up to Black men to take responsibility for mentoring young Black boys. “We reaffirm to ourselves as men, when we get to that stage, ‘to the day I die I’m gonna make my body a bridge so that somebody can run across it,’” said Mfume. “We reaffirm that we have no other obligation in life, accept to try to make it better for the group running behind us.” Mfume suggested anti-stand your ground laws, federal legislation that would make it “ it illegal to profile, pursue, accost and eventually kill somebody,” and taking a closer look at mandatory minimum sentencing. Mfume said that members of the Congressional Black Caucus should consider an urban “Mar- shal Plan” and direct existing resources towards urban investment to employment and education, a suggestion made by many over the years. “We can’t depend on the Justice Department to do it for us, we don’t know what they’re going to do, but there is lots that we can do for ourselves,” said Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-Washington, D.C.). “Some of it [we can do] within the African American community, some of it within the United States Congress and state and local governments.” Norton continued, “If we do not focus on a living, long-term legacy, this will go away. We’ll go on to the next kid who has been murdered, said Norton. “I want to see something real happen.” Trayvon’s mother: ‘Use my broken heart’ to prevent future tragedies (from Page 3) pay for this awful crime.” The acquittal of George Zimmerman on second-degree murder charges touched off protests around the country and sparked a national movement to repeal Stand Your Ground laws that allow an individual to invoke self-defense even when being the aggressor. Public opinion polls also revealed a deep racial divide. A Washington Post/ABC News poll found that 86 percent of Blacks disapproved of the verdict, practically all of them strongly opposing the jury’s decision, and only 31 percent of Whites opposing the verdict; 51 percent of Whites approved the decision. “The verdict is not going to define who Trayvon Martin was,” his mother said. “We will define his legacy. We will define who he is and what he was all about.” Like Mamie Till Mobley, whose 14-year-old son, Emmett, was brutally murdered in 1955 near Money, Miss. for allegedly whistling at a White woman, Fulton sees her son’s death as serving a larger purpose. In a 1995 interview with Emerge magazine, Mobley said: “The Lord spoke to me and said that Emmett didn’t belong to me in the first place, that I had been chosen to be his mother while he was on earth and he came here with a specific purpose. He’s done what he came here to do.” Sybrina Fulton expressed similar sentiment when she said, “At times, I feel like I am a broken vessel. At times, I don’t know if I’m going or coming. But I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that God is using me and God is using my family to make a change, to make a difference.” United African Movement marks anniversary with rally for Brawley (from Page 2) that Pagones does not want to meet Tawana in a court of law regarding his defamation claim because of his link to her assault in Wappingers Falls. The legal expert/activist said that he has been to Virginia and was met with hostility by officials because he intends to free Tawana from her plight as an “indentured servant.” The chairman called for the end of the “legitimate rape” of Black women like Brawley and Nafissatu Diallo, an African hotel housekeeper whom a New York criminal court deemed a hoaxer regarding her charges of sexual assault, attempted rape, and unlawful imprisonment against French politician, Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Morial calls for new civil rights movement (from Page 3) “But there are extreme forces – not from Main Street or the mainstream for that matter – that seek to turn back the clock on 50 years of progress,” he stated. “A small group of people with very loud voices and deep pockets are putting the rights of gun owners over the safety of our streets and the lives of our children. Those same people criticize our First Amendment right to peacefully assemble to express our grievances, yet favor those senseless Stand Your Ground laws that make our streets less safe, perpetuate ongoing conviction and incarceration disparities and lead to tragedies like the shooting death of Trayvon Martin.” Martin, 17 and unarmed, was shot to death by George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch captain in Sanford, Fla., as he was returning to the home of one of his father’s friends after purchasing a bag of Skittles and a can of Arizona Tea from a local convenience store. “I was saddened as most of you when the verdict was announced. I’ve said it before, and I will repeat it here – with the not guilty verdict in the trial of George Zimmerman, the tragedy of Trayvon Martin’s death has become a travesty and miscarriage of justice. We must accept the jury’s decision under the due process of our legal system. But we have made it clear that this is far from over” said Morial, an attorney and former mayor of New Orleans. He noted, “On behalf of the National Urban League and Urban League Movement, many of us have joined the leaders of the NAACP, National Action Network, the Black Women’s Roundtable, La Raza, and others in calling on and commending the Department of Justice for pursuing a federal criminal civil rights investigation in an effort to determine whether any federal laws were violated by George Zimmerman in connection with the death of Trayvon Martin. Stand Your Ground laws – and those similar to them – must be reviewed and rejected.” Some conservative commentators have accused civil rights leaders of being concerned when a Trayvon Martin is killed by a George Zimmerman, who has White and Latino lineage, but not when Blacks kill other Blacks. Conservative TV host Bill O’Reilly said, “It was wrong for Zimmerman to confront Martin based on his appearance. But the culture that we have in this country does lead to criminal profiling because young Black American men are so often involved in crime.” He also said, “When was the last time you saw a public service ad telling young Black girls to avoid becoming pregnant? Has President Obama done such an ad? How about [Jesse] Jackson or [Al] Sharpton? Has the Con- gressional Black Caucus demanded an ad like that? How about the PC pundits who work for NBC News?” O’Reilly continued, “White people don’t force Black people to have babies out of wedlock. That’s a personal decision. A decision that has devastated millions of children and led to disaster, both socially and economically.” Morial said conservatives are misstating the facts. ”I am outraged when Black teens kill Black teens or when gangbangers take the lives of another gangbanger and all too often, innocent bystanders. I am outraged at the violence that has taken far too many of our nameless, faceless and now forgotten young people…whether in Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, New Orleans or any other city,” he stated. “I am outraged by underachievement and low test scores…by parents that won’t live up to their responsibilities. So, for anyone who says we have no concern about what’s happening in our communities every day, they are not in our churches to hear our prayers. They are not in our community meetings to hear our conversations and see us working toward solutions. They are not in our kitchens to feel the anguish and the pain when yet another one of our loved ones is senselessly taken from us,” Morial said, with his voice dripping with emotion. “They are not part of this organization or others that work on a daily basis to impact the legislation that perpetuates inequality, or to develop the programs that ensure our children are ready for college and careers, or to work with those whom society has flippantly discarded and denied a second chance. Quite simply, they are not there. However, we invite them along this journey with us should they ever choose to trade in uninformed criticism for constructive action.” By Audrey J. Bernard Style & Society Editor Proctor & Gamble’s My Black is Beautiful (MBIB) hosted one of the most lavish events during the 2013 Essence Festival in P&G’s My Black Is Beautiful hosts VIP screening of Imagine a Future documentary New Orleans on Thursday, July 4, 2013 at a private screening followed by a lovely NOLA’s style dinner of the critically acclaimed Imagine a Future documentary in conjunction with the Tribeca Film Festival co-directed by Shola Lynch and Lisa Cortes. Guests joined the cast and creators of the thought-provoking film at NOLA’s trendy hotspot Manning’s Restaurant where after seeing the 30-minute documentary — which provided lots of food for thought — dined on mixed green salad, baked mac & cheese, local vegetable, herb roasted chicken breast, natural jus slow stewed beef tips with mushrooms and creamy pasta primavera followed by delicious bread pudding. P&G’s MBIB celebrated its sixth year as one of the title sponsors of the Essence Festival. The film aims to empower African Ameri- can women and addresses such complex issues as beauty, selfesteem, and skin tone. “I didn’t look like what I saw in a magazine,” says teenager Janet Goldsboro, who is in the documentary. “I look different from all my cousins. I had dark features, dark hair, dark eyes, big nose and big lips, and I used to get made fun of because of how I looked.” She adds: “Boys say, ‘I like the light-skinned girls,’ or, ‘I like white girls because I want my baby to come out pretty.’ And that hurts you because it makes you feel like you’re ugly looking.” The film also follows Goldsboro’s visit to South Africa and includes interviews with such dynamic women as writer/cultural critic Michaela Angela Davis, Olympic gold medalist Gabby Douglas, and Melissa Harris-Perry, the MSNBC host. “This year, we are also happy to bring our first-ever documentary, Imagine a Future, directly to our extended family in New Orleans -- where Imagine a Future all started,”stated MBIB rep. One year after unveiling the Imagine a Future initiative -- in conjunction with educational leader UNCF and community partner Black Girls Rock! -MBIB presented its namesake documentary to the local community in New Orleans through a partnership with Girl Up NOLA. With the help of Walmart, MBIB gave over 200 local New Orleans’ girls an exclusive opportunity to be one of the first to view the documentary before the national BET premiere. Screening attendees learned about Goldsboro’s story of self- acceptance and self-discovery as she traveled from Delaware to South Africa. Goldsboro was a hit with young audience members who, after the viewing, engaged in conversation with her and the film’s creative team with an indepth Q&A panel discussion hosted by MBIB spokesperson and well-known actress, Tatyana Ali. During the four-day festival, once again, the MBIB booth at the Convention Center was one of the festivalgoer’s favorite meeting places where they received personal care and beauty experiences and personal care products and beauty brands; as well as minimakeovers and consultations in the MBIB Studio. Additionally, booth attendees enjoyed meeting scores of celebrities who stopped by for their own personal touchups. From left to right, Director Shola Lynch, Executive Producer Beverly Bond, documentary lead Janet Goldsboro, actress Tatyana Ali and Director and Producer Lisa Cortes help P&G’s My Black is Beautiful kick off ESSENCE Festival weekend with a screening of the Imagine a Future documentary on July 4, 2013 at Mannings Restaurant. (Photo: Business Wire) Beverly Bond has blazed trails in the music, entertainment and social entrepreneurship industries. Her body of work, across sectors, has made her one of the most celebrated DJ’s, and social innovators of our time. A true music connoisseur, Bond’s passion for music and her uncanny ability to read the crowd has solidified her as one of the premier DJ’s in the world. In 2006 Bond founded Black Girls Rock! a youth empowerment mentoring organization while simultaneously creating the annual Black Girls Rock! Awards to celebrate the accomplishments of exceptional women of color who have made outstanding contributions in their careers and stand as inspirational and positive role models in the community. In 2010, Bond partnered with BET to share her Black Girls Rock! vision with the rest of the world. As the creator and executive producer of the televised show, Bond crafted a program that was groundbreaking in its approach to exhibiting the breadth and depth of talent celebrated by women in the African Diaspora. The premiere of Black Girl s R o c k ! Awards on BET, was magnanimous in regards to its motivational impact as well, drawing an impressive 2.7 million viewers and commanding the No. 1 spot on the chart for Black households. Lisa Cortés is a versatile producer with deep roots in both the film and music industries. Executive producer of the Academy Award® winning film Precious, the Yale graduate has worked with actors such as Helen Mirren, Halle Berry, Cuba Gooding Jr., Mo’Nique, Kevin Bacon, Joseph Gordon- Levitt, Paula Patton and Gabourey Sidibe and is known for producing films with difficult and provocative themes. She a special talent for giving light to expressive voices not often heard and stories not often told. As senior vice president of production at Lee Daniels Entertainment, she produced and developed numerous award-winning films including The Woodsman, Shadowboxer and Tennessee. Prior to her film career, Cortés worked with Russell Simmons and Rick Rubin to launch the iconic Def Jam brand. She was vice president of artist and repertoire at Mercury Records, where she worked with many multi-platinum and Grammy Award winning artists. Cortés became the first African American woman to have her own label deal at a major record company when she founded and served as president of Loose Cannon Records, a subsidiary of Polygram Records. Cortés launched her own production company, Cortés Films, in 2010 and has several projects now in production. She is also series producer on the new crime investigation television series, Celebrity Crime Files Shola Lynch is an award-winning American filmmaker who burst on the scene in 2004. Her eagerly anticipated second feature documentary Free Angela & All Political Prisoners is a first- hand account of the events that thrust Angela Davis into the national spotlight from a young college professor to a fugitive on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list. The film premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and was released theatrically in the U.S. by Code Black and Lionsgate exclusively in AMC theatres. Lynch’s first independent feature documentary, Chisholm ’72 – Unbought & Unbossed, about Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm’s historic run for president in 1972, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, aired on PBS’s POV series, and garnered two Independent Spirit Award nominations and a prestigious Peabody for excellence. Lynch honed her filmmaking skills as a visual researcher and associate producer for Ken Burns and Florentine Films. Her work on the two-part Frank Lloyd Wright documentary and the ten-part Jazz series inspired her to pursue the craft of storytelling. Since then she has produced and scripted stories that have aired on BET, CNN, ESPN, HBO Sports, and PBS. Lynch also holds a graduate degree in journalism from Columbia University and is working on a book based on her new film. Janet Deanna Goldsboro, a 17 year old student at Caesar Rodney High School in Dover, Delaware, is the daughter of Nathan and Tamatha Goldsboro. Her family also includes her older brother Nathaniel, and twins Angelia and Emmanuel. As a young African American teenage girl, she struggled with low self-esteem beginning in her childhood. She always felt God made a mistake when he created her with dark features, long jet-black hair, full lips and a wide nose. In her mind, this was not the standard of beauty and felt that society agreed. She felt she had to change all she was in order to be loved. Her perception changed one night while watching the “Black Girls Rock!” Award Show where she saw Black women encouraging and empowering other Black women. In that moment her perception on beauty transformed. Later that night she prayed and asked God to help her learn how to love herself. The first step she took was being positive and uplifting her own spirit. The next was to put all that newfound positive energy into her dream of starting a magazine that she would name Nubian Beauty in which she would celebrate both the inner and outer beauty of all girls of color. Leveraging the tools she learned from Black Girls Rock! and My Black Is Beautiful, Goldsboro will be the voice of unity for her generation. 15 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net AUDREY'S SOCIETY WHIRL BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 16 Jobs are still a key issue 50 years after historic D.C. march (from Page 3) mized in the public sector.” But Sharpton said Blacks have the economic leverage to force companies to hire more African-Americans. “We need to renegotiate Black America’s understanding – we called them covenants – with the private sector,” he said. “The court can say all it wants about affirmative action, we have the consumer power to say to companies that do business in our communities that, ‘You must have targets of doing jobs in our community.’ They can’t make us buy from those who won’t hire us.” Jesse Jackson said that all levels of government should also be held accountable. “In Chicago, there are 81,000 vacant lots,” he stated. “They cut public housing and they foreclosed on private housing. They’ve cut public transportation, cut trauma care. Cut public schools. There is no present plan to bring us out of that isolation. And I think the government has some obligation.” Especially a government and nation as rich as the U.S., according to Marc Morial, president and CEO of the National Urban League. “We’ve got a $15 trillion economy in the United States o f A m e r i c a , t h e l a rg e s t economy in the world,” he stated. “And it is unacceptable – Dr. King talked about it and Whitney Young talked about it – for there to be these vast oceans of poverty amid all the plenty. So many are doing well and so many people are left behind.” He said many U.S. tax and trade policies are misguided. “American public policy is focused on job creation,” Morial said. A significant part of it is focused on job creation in the wrong places. For example, there’s a huge infrastructure rebuilding program that the people of the United States are paying for. The problem is it’s for the reconstruction of and rebuilding of Bagdad. It’s for the reconstruction of Kandahar…Your and my tax dollars are being invested. That could be and should be redirected to Philadelphia, to Baltimore, to Boston. Secondly, United States trade and tax policies are encouraging job creation. But they are encouraging job creation in China, in India and overseas.” Closer to home, far away from I r a q a n d A f g h a n i s t a n , R e v. Lennox Yearwood, Jr., president and CEO of the Hip Hoop Caucus, said that unlike civil rights veterans, many youth are not eager to participate in marches. “My generation just doesn’t want to march for marching’s s a k e , ” h e s a i d . “ We g o t t o march for a reason. Trayvon is one reason. Voting rights is one r e a s o n . We m u c h p u s h f o r policy.” Proving Yearwood’s point, a young member of the audience gnetly questioned the value of marching. “I’m concerned about those who are tired of marching who have never marched,” Jackson said. He noted that all demonstrations were undertaken with specific goals in mind and marching is simply a means to an end. Sharpton agreed. “You say why march about voting?” he asked, rhetorically. “Well, that’s how we got it the first time. We did not get voting rights at a cocktail sip, trying to have racial harmony sessions. We got it by organizing and galvanizing and the only way we are going to make changes is by organizing and galvanizing.” Morial said recent changes in federal student loan programs are threatening the existence of some historically Black colleges. Recalling a recent conversation with Norman Francis, who has been president of Xavier University in New Orleans for 45 years, Morial recounted, “He said that the effect of the changes to the student loan program cost the member colleges of the United Negro College Fund $50 million.” Morial said he heard similar stories from other HBCU presidents. “I spoke the other night to the president of Lincoln University [in Pennsylvania]. This was a stunning piece of information. He said, ‘I’m going to lose half of my freshman class. They cannot come back. “There is something deeply flawed when young people who have gone to high school, graduated from high school, gotten admitted to colleges and universities, successfully completed one year and cannot go back even if they have A’s and top-level scores. They can’t go back because of money.” Morial said if the Federal Reserve can lend money to banks at zero interest rates, similar accommodations need to be made to save HBCUs. In response to a question from a convention delegate about whether there should be a national boycott of Florida, Sharpton said he would sup- Focus on poverty, not the middle class (from Page 6) Hosea Williams promoted voter registration campaigns in the South, Jesse Jackson wanted to continue to develop Operation Breadbasket, and Andrew Young worried that SCLC’s budget of under a million dollars necessitated smaller campaigns in the South.” But Dr. King forged ahead, calling for $30 billion to be spent on anti-poverty measures, employment and housing construction. King was helping organize garbage workers in Memphis when he was assassinated. Ralph D. Abernathy, his successor and close friend, continued with plans for the Poor People’s Campaign. Instead of the militant protest Dr. King had envisioned, however, the highlight of the Poor People’s March to Washington was not shutting down the capital, but the erection of Resurrection City, a collection of tents pitched in D.C. Various executive agencies were lobbied on behalf of the poor and leaders called for an Economic Bill of Rights. The shantytown was disbanded after six weeks. In the view of many observers, Dr. King posed a greater threat to the power structure when he began organizing poor Blacks and Whites. But there is an even better opportunity to unite poor people today because so many Whites have become impoverished as a result of a recession and high unemployment. Poverty is officially defined as a family of four living off of $23,021 or less a year. Today, a record 46.2 million people –15 percent of the U.S. population – are considered poor. The Associated Press reported: · For the first time since 1975, the number of White singlemother households living in poverty with children has surpassed or equaled Black ones in the past decade. · Since 2000, the poverty rate among working-class Whites has grown faster than among working-class non-Whites, rising 3 percentage points to 11 percent. Still, poverty among workingclass non-Whites remains about double that of Whites. Mark Rank, a professor at Washington University in St. Louis, believes Dr. King was on to something when he sought to unite poor people across racial lines. “Poverty is no longer an issue of ‘them,’ it’s an issue of ‘us.’ he told the Associated Press. “Only when poverty is thought of as a mainstream event, rather than a fringe experience that just affects Blacks and Hispanics, can we really begin to build broader support for programs that lift people in need.” This is no time to keep Dr. King frozen in the memory of the 1963 March on Washington or his “I Have a Dream” speech while neglecting his true calling to eradicate poverty five years later. As he said, “If you can’t fly then run, if you can’t run then walk, if you can’t walk then crawl, but whatever you do, you have to keep moving forward.” George E. Curry, former editorin-chief of Emerge magazine, is editor-in-chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association News Service (NNPA.) He is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. Curry can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com. You can also follow him at www.twitter.com/currygeorge and George E. Curry Fan Page on Facebook. port a boycott if it were “directed, disciplined and focused.” He said it should be carefully planned, saying, “You got to hurt who has hurt us.” Jesse Jackson was less nuanced. “I would make the case that when Stevie Wonder and those a r t i s t s s a y l e t ’s b o y c o t t Florida, boycott it,” Jackson said to loud applause. “If we can boycott South Africa and bring it down, we can surely boycott Florida and bring it down.” The death of Trayvon Martin, the 17-year-old African American shot to death by George Zimmerman, was mentioned throughout the panel discussion as some leaders discussed how best to strike down Stand Your Ground laws, like the one in effect in Florida that imperils the lives of young Black men in particular. “We are now right back where we were 50 years ago, where states are superseding our federal civil rights,” Sharpton said. “Trayvon Martin had the civil right to go home. State law gave Zimmerman the legal right to say, ‘I can move without any resistance and kill him.’ The federal government must supersede that.” Jesse Jackson, quoting the first Black Supreme Court justice, added: “As Thurgood Marshall said, the law enslaved us, the law freed us, the law segregated us and now the law is leaving us unprotected.” Holder seeks to force Texas to ‘preclear’ voting changes (from Page 11) Holder explained, “… This has never been a partisan issue. Every reauthorization of the Voting Rights Act was signed into law by a Republican president. It’s a question of our values as a nation. It goes to the heart of who we are as a people. And it’s incumbent upon Congressional leaders from both parties to guar- antee that every eligible American will always have equal access to the polls; to ensure that we will never turn our back on the hard-won progress of the last hundred years; and to consider new solutions that are equal to the challenges of the 21st century. As this debate unfolds, it’s important for all Americans to note that – despite the Supreme Court’s flawed ruling – our voting rights NMA president happy with mission to help people of Liberia (from Page 8) natal resuscitation training for midwives, and school children physicals. A highlight of the NMA’s medical mission was meeting Her Excellency Madame Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, president, Republic of Liberia, the world’s first elected black female president, Africa’s first elected female head of state. In 2011, she was one of a trio of women to win the Nobel Peace Prize awarded “for their nonviolent struggle for the safety of women and for women’s rights to full participation in peace-building work. During her first tenure as president of Liberia, she focused on safety and security regarding weapons and gun violence. During her second tenure, her focus was mainly on healthcare reform- building new hospitals, and educating, training and recruiting more doctors. She encouraged Liberian doctors trained in the US and other countries to return home and train local doctors through a loan forgiveness program. The support she gave to NMA to improve the quality of healthcare meets NMA’s mission, “To advance the art and science of medicine for people of African descent through education, advocacy, and health policy to promote health and wellness, eliminate health disparities, and sustain physician viability.” In July, on NMA’s third trip to Liberia, it was my honor as the 113th president of NMA to present an outstanding service humanitarian award to Her Excellency Madame Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. Let’s rebuild Detroit (from Page 6) developmental stage and permanent hirees thereafter must be residents of Detroit. City and schools bus systems will be privatized as soon as possible. Revenue sharing will be between the new owners and the city. Ownership can be for the entire city or particular zones. The new Department of Transportation will be responsible for upkeep and repair of city streets, alleys, roadways and snow re- moval. A multiple or single privatization process will be applied with oversight done by a citywide commission. Well, I think the above is a good start. Any comments or additions are welcomed. Here’s to a safe, vibrant and family friendly Detroit – devoid of corruption and blessed by our Lord. Harry C. Alford is the co-founder, President/CEO of the National Black Chamber of Commerce. Website: www.nationalbcc.org. Email: [email protected]. By Victoria Horsford NYC EMPLOYMENT OPS There will be an August 1 hiring event. The Bureau of the Census is hiring Surveyors at the NY Public Library located at 224 East 125 Street. Applicants must be 18 years, an US citizen with some customer service experience, who must submit to a federal background check. HS diploma or GED preferred. US. Military veterans are encouraged to apply. Bring a current resume. Be prepared for an interview and testing on 8/1. For preregistration, call 212.534.5050. Harlem Week 2013 partners with the MTA Job and Career Fair which will be held at Columbia University, Lerner Hall, 2920 Broadway, Harlem, 10027, on August 8, from 10 am. to 2 pm. There are numerous job openings at NYC Transit, LIRR, Metro North, Capital Cons t r u c t i o n C o , a n d M TA Bridges and Tunnels. Dress for success and bring resumes. For more info, visit www. mta.info/ mta/employment. THEATRE NEWS The American theater classic THE TRIP TO BOUNTIFUL , now in revival on Broadway, starring Cecily Tyson, with Cuba Gooding Jr. and Vanessa Williams, originally scheduled for a limited engagement, will be extended through October 9 at the Stephen Sondheim Theatre. Tony award actor, Denzel Washington, returns to Broadway next year in a revival of A RAISIN IN THE SUN. The glamorous, ageless Diahann Carroll will play his mother. D e n z e l ’s l a t e s t m o v i e , “ 2 GUNS” with Mark Wahlberg opens this week. The John Grisham novel, A TIME TO KILL, a legal thriller was made into a movie, starring Samuel Jackson, during its second incarnation. The story, one of my favorite Jackson films, set in contemporary Mississippi, is about a Black man who takes the law into his hands in dealing with a white man, who violated his young daughter, is Broadway bound. It is a strange but psychologically satisfying piece in today’s America. No casting has been announced. BLACK ENTERPRISE According to allthingsdigital.com, Nigeriaborn Chinedu Echeruo, the founder of Hopstop.com which allows users to find their way around worldwide capitals via public transportation. The site also has mobile apps for iOS and Android. Echeruo sold the company to Apple for an un- disclosed sum, believed to be upwards of $1 billion, which is amount Google paid for Israel’s Waze. A Harvard B-School alum, Echeruo worked in merrgers and acquisition on Wall Street before launching his entrepreneurial career and raised $8 million to launch his hopstop.com and tripology.com. He is a partner of the Principal Investing Group, which is based in West Africa. Entrepreneur Armstrong Williams, conservative GOP commentator/writer, plans to buy WMMP-TV, in Charleston, SC, from the Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc. Earlier this year Sinclair agreed to sell two other TV stations to Williams’ company, Howard Stirk Holdings. Will Armstrong use these stations for his special brand of conservative advocacy journalism? Oprah Winfrey NEWSMAKERS Congrats to New Yorkers Susan Taylor and Ambassador Suzan Johnson Cook who were named honorary Delta Sigma Theta sorors as were actress Angela Bassett; former EPA chief Lisa Jackson and former NBC-TV senior management executive, Paula Madison. The new honorary sorors were named during the DST convention in Washington DC this month. Delta Sigma Theta is the nation’s largest African American women’s organization and it celebrates its centennial this year. Ruled by the sun, LEO is a fixed fire sign. Special birthday shoutouts to Leos: President Barack Obama, Halle Berry, Usain Bolt, Barry Bond, Kobe Bryant, Sandra Bullock, Bob Cambridge; Chuck D; Sarah Dash; Viola Davis; Ambassador Alice Dear; Robert DeNiro; Michael Ealy; Jocelyn Elders, MD; Patrick Ewing; Viveca Fox; Lorraine Gobern; Ramona Grey Harris and Barbara Harris; IMAN; Earvin Magic Johnson; Vernon Jordan; Jennifer Lopez; Madonna; Ken Norton; Alex Rodriguez; Soulja Boy; Winifred Walker; Rev Wyatt Tee Walker; and Weslie Snipes. REST IN PEACE: Inveterate New Yorker and beloved family matriarch, Gloria Wingate Taylor, died on July 29 in Richmond Virginia, her post-retirement home. Usain Bolt Armstrong Williams Diahann Carroll venues like the Apollo, the Studio Museum In Harlem and Harlembased NYC parks. Vi s i t www.Harlemweek.com or call 877.427.5364. A reception/fundraiser will be held for Newark Mayor Cory Booker’s bid for the US Senate, on Thursday, August 1, at the Liberty House Restaurant, located at 76 Audrey Zapp Driver, Jersey City, NJ. Media mogul Oprah Winfrey will attend as a special guest. General admission is $1000 per person or $2600 per person for a photo-op A Summer Stage music/theater work DIABLO LOVE, will be performed at Brooklyn’s Von King Park on August 3 at 8 pm. The show is dedicated to AfricanAmerican blues singer, Howlin’ Wolf, who ranks #51 on Rolling Stone’s List of 100 top artists. African American Tomas Doneker is the DIABLO LOVE music director. Rev Dr. Renee Washington Garner, Sr. Pastor of Harlem’s historic Memorial Baptist Church, located at 141 West 115 Street, announced its SUMMER REVIVAL 2013 with Rev. Dr. Lance Watson of Richmond Virginia, host of “Positive Power” program, on the WORD TV Network who will preach for 3 nights, August 5/7, and Bishop Liston Page Jr. of Paterson, NJ, who opens the REVIVAL on August 4. Call 212.663.8830 or visit [email protected]. The 2013 Harlem Fine Arts S h o w ( H FA S ) s u m m e r s o n Martha’s Vineyard at the MV Regional H.S, complete with 20-odd galleries showcasing works by worldwide artists. The HFAS preexhibit events includes an 8/5 Martha’s Vineyard Golf Classic and an 8/6 HFAS Brunch and chat w i t h To u r e , m o d e r a t e d b y fashionista/writer Harriette Cole. The HFAS MV Expo dates are August 7-11. Visit www.hfas.org or call 914.450.4269. The Association of Black Sociologists hosts it 43 rd Annual ABC Conference in NYC from August 8/10 and will be headquartered at the InterContinental Barclay Hotel on the East Side. For ABC Conference calendar of events, visit associationofblacksociologists.org. A management consultant, Victoria Horsford is a New York based writer and pop culture historian who can be reachable at [email protected] SUMMER PLEASURES HARLEM WEEK, the monthlong celebration of arts, culture, commerce and community, began on July 28 with its trademark A Great Day In Harlem party at Grant National Memorial Park, which was a preview of the characteristic festivities, and continues through August 24. Now in its 39 th year, the Harlem Week Festival boasts more than 100 events like an Outdoor film festival, Jazzmobile, a Tennis Classic, an auto show, an Economic Development Day, a Sr. Citizens Day, and an HBCU College Fair, at Alice Dear Chinedu Echeruo BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net WHAT’S GOING ON 17 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 18 NNPA Award Winner Enter tainment By Don Thomas Apollo Amateur Night Celebrates HARLEM WEEK 2013 with special guests Hip-Hop pioneer Kool Moe Dee; R&B singer Jeff Redd This August, the landmark Apollo Theater, located on West 125th Street in the Village of Harlem will celebrate HARLEM WEEK featuring two exciting editions of Amateur Night at the Apollo. The world famous venue will kick off its celebration on Wednesday, August 14th with Hip Hop pioneer Kool Moe Dee. The celebration will conclude on Wednesday, August 21st with R&B artist Jeff Redd. In addition to special guest artists, there will be scholarship and donation presentations made to area students and community organizations. This year’s Amateur Night Kool Moe Dee HARLEM WEEK celebration includes special guest acts that represent the range and vibrancy of Harlem’s community. Nearly 40 years ago, Harlem leaders created HARLEM WEEK to celebrate the rich legacy of the community. Since its inception in 1934, Amateur Night has been one of New York City’s most popular live entertainment experiences, launching the careers of thousands of performers and attracting audiences from all over the world. The Apollo Theater’s Amateur Night has long been revered by artists as a transformative experi- Jeff Redd ence where up-and-coming talent feels the power of the legendary performers who have come before them, and where audience response can help make or break a career. Harlem residents will receive the benefit of experiencing Amateur Night at the Apollo shows on August 14 th and August 21 st, for half-price. To receive this special offer, residents must present a valid photo ID and proof of residence when purchasing tickets at the Apollo Theater Box Office. Only two half-price tickets per Harlem resident, per show. Other restrictions may apply. Disc Chat Charles Wright’s CD ‘Let’s Make Love Tonight,’ dedicated to soulful music lovers According to the “free online dictionary,” the word expression means: The act of expressing, conveying, or representing in words, art, music, or movement; a manifestation: an expression of rural values. If you read further, you will certainly find the name Charles Wright associated with this interpretation! “Let’s Make Love Tonight,” is the newest recording by Wright, a producer, writer who has been heard the airwaves for more than 50 years. His current disc is receiving attention throughout the southeast, south and Midwestern parts of the United States. “I’m in Love,” and “Unseen Dirt,” are rapidly becoming favorites at Urban Radio stations. Charles’ “Let’s Make Love Tonight,” is dedicated to those who love soulful music, and can be used as a tool to rekindle the hearts of lovers everywhere. “I was especially pleased with the lyrics in this superbly orchestrated collection of songs that exude a persuasive sense of loving,” says Wright, the founder and leader of the legendary Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band, who penned the million-selling hit “Express Yourself.” Wright songs have been covered by legendary artists such as Ray Charles, Les McCann, Della Reese, Rodger Troutman & Zapp, Musiq (Soul Child), former Monkey’s Mickey Dolenz, The Ohio Players and The Swiss Longtime Symphony Orchestra. During the rise of Hip Hop in the 80s many rap artists lifted chunks of funk from Wright’s wax, including N.W.A., Brand Nubian Funk, Naughty By Nature, Gang Starr and Sean P. Diddy Combs. The Los Angeles Lakers showcased “Express Yourself” at their start-up games and the NBA featured the classic song in its 2004 “I Love This Game” TV Champaign. Kinko’s uses “Express Yourself” in its international marking strategy and Kohl’s Clothing Stores chose the tune for its Spring Fashion Champaign while the Jenny Jones Show used it as their theme for one entire season. “Express Yourself” also provided the theme for both the Democratic National Convention and the 2004 Olympic Games Celebration. By mid 2010 Coffee Mate had TV viewers stirring it up to the tune of “Express Yourself.” Other compliment to the unforgettable tune includes The PGA, U Draw; Tide Soap, Nike, Burger King, Singer Sewing Machine and the list goes on and on. Yet another compliment was made to the timeless appeal of “Express Yourself” when Good Morning America used it as a theme for their Advice Guru Talent Search. Whenever a motion picture film calls for an instantly recognizable sound track, Charles Wright classics have been utilized in films such as “Panther,” “The People vs. Larry Flint” and many others. His hit song “Do Your Thing” set the stage for a chilling plot turn in the 1970’s pornographic study of “Boogie Nights.” Wright’s music has been used not just in action films but in the comedy films because it makes the audience feel good. Movies such “Mr. and Mrs. Smith,” “Cheaper By The Dozen” and “The Little Fockers.” He re-arranged a version of “Express Yourself” with a message to youth to “Protect Yourself” from sexually transmitted diseases. He performed the tune for an audience at the first AIDS Walk Circle of Life Concert at the Los Angeles Greek Theater last year. Wright’s produced the documentary “Bring Back The Harmony” and the concert presentation of Live at the Ford Theater. Headed for the airwaves is his latest venture Express Yourself TV Show featuring guests Little Richard, Brenda Lee Eagar, Hank Dixon Charles Wright of The Originals and Charles McCormick of the group Bloodstone. The show will cover legends from various fields including entertainment. AUDREY’S REEL WHIRL with film reviewer Audrey J. Bernard Fruitvale Station poster Recently, the National Urban League hosted a Special Town Hall on Hip Hop Culture: Exploitation & Empowerment, as a part of its annual conference. The centerpiece of this discussion was Fruitvale Station’s phenomenal director Ryan Coogler along with Jeff Johnson (Politics365), MC Lyte, Big Daddy Kane, Aisha Winfield (Blues Babe Foundation), Dr. Michael Eric Dyson, Lita T. Rosario, Esq, Wise Intelligent and moderator Rev. Lennox Yearwood (President, Hip Hop Caucus). Coogler was embraced by an audience that’s mostly victimized by his account of a contemptible happening at Fruitvale Station which has shaken up race relations in America. Fruitvale Station is a gripping real life happening that follows the true story of Oscar Grant (Michael B. Jordan), a 22-year-old Bay Area resident who wakes up on the morning of December 31, 2008 and feels something in the air. Not sure what it is, he takes it as a sign to get a head start on his resolutions: being a better son to his mother (Octavia Spencer), whose birthday falls on New Year’s Eve, being a better partner to his girlfriend Sophina (Melonie Diaz), who he hasn’t been completely honest with as of late, and being a better father to Tatiana (Ariana Neal), their beautiful four year-old daughter. Crossing paths with friends, family, and strangers, Oscar starts out well, but as the day goes on, he realizes that change is not going to come easily. His resolve takes a tragic turn, however, when BART officers shoot him in cold blood at the Fruitvale subway stop on New Year’s Day. Oscar’s life and tragic death would shake the Bay Area – and the entire nation – to its very core. Coogler’s account of a real life story whose time has come will hopefully conjure up more dialogue and shed more light on how Black men in this country are unfairly targeted and how the unfortunate action of one trigger happy police officer stops short a fruitful life by shooting him dead. Coming right on the heels of the Trayvon Martin case, Fruitvale Station serves as a reminder of what young Black men face every time they walk out of their homes. Of the despair Black parents face not knowing once their child leaves home if they’ll ever return. What happened in Fruitvale Station should never happen again. But it did in the Martin case. Michael B. Jordan, Producer Nina Yang Bongiovi, Melonie Diaz Octavia-Spencer, Ryan Coogler, Melonie Diaz, Michael B. Jordan Cuba Gooding Jr., Michael B. Jordan Harvey Weinstein, BET's Debra Lee Harvey Weinstein, Michael B. Jor- Michael B. Jordan and his proud mom Donna Jordan dan Khalid Jordan, Michael A. Jordan, Michael B. Jordan, BET's Debra Lee Again, one more young promising Black man gone too soon. And the killer walks free. Shameful! The acclaimed cast attended the New York Premiere hosted by The Weinstein Company, BET Films and CIROC Vodka at the Museum of Moving Image (MOMA). Joining director Coogler were actors Michael B. Jordan, Octavia Spencer, Melonie Diaz, Trestin George, producer Nina Yang Bongiovi, and Harvey Weinstein. The thoughtprovoking film attracted A-List invitees including Motown musical director Charles RandolphWright, Tony Award winner Patina Miller, Malik Yoba, Omari Hardwick, Candice Bergen, rapper Fabolous, BET’s Debra Lee and Stephen Hill, Judy Marte, BeBe Winans, Bryan Terrell Clark, Bazaar Royale, Beverly Bond, Brian D’Arcy James, Julito McCullum, Vinny Chase, Kid Art, DJ MOS, and Heather B. Already, Fruitvale Station has won both the Grand Jury Prize for dramatic feature and the Audience Award for U.S. dramatic film at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and will be a strong contender at this year’s Academy Awards. Bravo Coogler! (Photos by Wilson Morales / Black Film.com) BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net Gripping Fruitvale Station leaves an indomitable mark 19 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 20 Review Sarah Dash is still a chameleon of the most musical kind By Christian John Wikane “Chameleon” (1976) was the last album that Labelle recorded in the ‘70s before group members Sarah Dash, Nona Hendryx and Patti LaBelle pursued solo careers in 1977. The back cover photograph depicted how, even through a cardboard sleeve, the group radiated a unique power. Music seemed to emanate from each of their faces. Sarah Dash, in particular, wore an expression of joy and elation on her flawless visage. Decades later, that same smile illuminated the second of Dash’s recent two-night stand at 54 Below as she opened her set with “I’m Still Here”, a self-penned ode to survival and perseverance. From the very first line—“Been through so much in my life, everyday a different fight”—the singer had a story to share. Accompanied by music director/pianist Terry Burrus, bassist Lonnie Plaxico and drummer Craig Holiday Haynes, Dash filled the room with a full-bodied tone. Hers was a voice that hardly needed amplification. The dozen white roses sitting atop the piano were a fitting backdrop for “I Only Have Eyes For You.” Each word fell sumptuously from Dash’s lips. “Millions of people go by, but they all disappear from view.” The way she caressed “from” made the well-known standard a delecThe comparable Sarah Dash table gift from Dash to the audience. Visiting the Cole Porter ecdote involving hairspray, hunt- the whole story). “I love Paris in the winter when songbook, Dash prefaced “I ing, and a Louis Vuitton bag (see Love Paris” with an amusing an- one of her future shows to hear it drizzles/I love Paris in the summer when it sizzles,” she sang turning “I” into a polysyllabic wonder. Porter himself would have been smitten by Dash’s interpretation of his song. Count Basie vocalist Helen Humes also would have been pleased by the singer’s sassy rendition of “Million Dollar Secret”, a tune that gave Dash plenty of occasions to inject some humor into the proceedings. A medley of “I Thought About You” and “What a Diff’rence a Day Makes” honored Carmen McRae, Sarah Vaughan and Dinah Washington—three artists that Dash said had “a profound effect on my life.” The singer’s tribute to three of jazz music’s most influential vocalists was one of the evening’s highlights. Through hand gestures and eye movements, she took no word or line of lyric for granted. Her trio summoned an appealing, late-night jazz club ambience while golden stage light signified the dawn of a new morning on “What a Diff’rence a Day Makes”. Towards the medley’s conclusion, Dash seamlessly intertwined the lyrics and melodies of the two songs. At moments, Dash’s concert seemed part of a larger show that could have been titled The Sarah Dash Story, for many songs seemed to hold a personal significance for the singer, whether lyrically or by virtue of representing a distinct time in her life. Her heartstopping performance of Laura Nyro’s “Buy and Sell” exemplified the latter. Dash recalled when Labelle met the singer and worked with her on the Gamble and Huff-produced “Gonna Take a Miracle” (1971). “She was just as eclectic as we were,” she said. “She wrote stories about when she lived on 8th Avenue. She wrote a song that says it all.” Dash took the very personal lyrics from “Buy and Sell” and rendered them like a snapshot of old New York. Terry Burrus captured the soul of Laura Nyro on piano. Sarah Dash captured her heart. To the sound of boisterous applause, Dash dedicated the next sequence to her years with Nona Hendryx and Patti LaBelle in Labelle. “We were the first Black group to play the Metropolitan Opera House,” she said, recalling the 1974 concert where audience members were attired in “something silver,” leading to a shortage of silver fabric throughout New York. “They had to buy rolls and rolls of aluminum foil.” Dash performed a trio of songs from the group’s classic mid-‘70s period that paved the way for theatrical artists like Janelle Monàe and Lady Gaga (though Labelle’s singular musicality has yet to be matched). Dash began the medley with “(Can I Speak to You Before You Go to) Hollywood”, a song penned by Hendryx that was often the emo- tional centerpiece of Labelle’s concerts. Singing the solo verses that she and Hendryx recorded on the original Pressure Cookin’ (1973) version, Dash proved that she’s retained every bit of vocal power that still makes the song so compelling 40 years later. “What Can I Do for You” and “Lady Marmalade” followed (“I know you know this lady,” Dash quipped). As a three-member unit, Dash’s musicians approximated the Meters’ original groove on Nightbirds (1974) to remarkable effect. Dash broke “What Can I Do For You” down, and prompted the audience to echo the song’s “love, love, love” refrain. Little cajoling was needed. Dash followed the Labelle medley with a stirring version of “Ballad of the Sad Young Men”, a song whose meaning has only multiplied over the years since its debut in The Nervous Set, the illfated Broadway musical inspired by the Beat generation that only ran for 23 performance in 1959. Vocalists have not only adopted “Ballad of the Sad Young Men” as a tribute to war veterans but also as a comment on pre-Stonewall gay subculture. Dash explained that the song “applies to our everyday situations” and also noted that it will appear in Continental (2013), a documentary she participated in that traces the history and impact of the Continental Baths. The somber tone of “Ballad of the Sad Young Men” shifted to the singer’s more lighthearted rendition of “Make Someone Happy”. She seemed to taste the words as she sang, savoring the flavor of lines like “once you’ve found it, build your world around it”. The life-affirming sentiment of the song also carried through to her encore, an inspiring version of Doc Pomus’ “There Is Always One More Time”. However, Sarah Dash did not disappoint those awaiting the song that fans consider her signature number, “Sinner Man”. The 1978 club hit came alive in the hands of the singer’s trio while she intoned t h e s o n g ’s s c a l e - d e f y i n g notes. Two members from the audience even joined Dash onstage for an impromptu dramatization of the lyrics. The song was especially appropriate given that 54 Below is actually the basement of the original Studio 54, where “Sinner Man” was often incorporated into set lists by the club’s most popular DJs. Few artists could so effortlessly navigate disco, glam funk, Broadway gems, jazz standards, and original compositions in one set (and kudos to 54 Below for supporting such versatility). Just like the title of that classic Labelle album intimated so many years ago, Sarah Dash is a chameleon of the most musical kind. KICKIN’ IT with Lifestyles & Society Editor Audrey J. Bernard New Orleans was on fire during the Essence Festival 2013 over the July 4 th weekend and Hennessy – everyone’s favorite brown booze — added to the heat with two blistering gatherings. First, actors Laz Alonso and Lance Gross hosted the scorching hot Hennessy V.S and London Boy Productions All White Affair at Republic. Gross was accompanied by his long time girlfriend, stylist Rebecca Jefferson. The two snapped photos together the entire night while they partied with their crew. Alonso was a fan favorite posing for many photos with them. Actor Pouch Hall was also in attendance and played emcee for the night welcoming people to the event over the microphone. The second event bringing the heat was the “Hennessy V.S Very Special Brunch” at New Orleans’s trendy International House where singer Avant surprised the crowd and performed his hit song, “Good Love.” Avant’s upcoming album, “Face the Music,” will be released in February, 2014. Fellow singers Glenn Lewis and Houston rap legend Bun B were on hand for the sexy performance. (Photos by Collins Metu & Marlen Adams Photography & Graphic Design) Laz Alonso, Lance Gross at White Party Lance Gross, Hennessy Girls at White Party Avant performs at Hennessy brunch Pouch Hall at Hennessy brunch Bun B at Hennessy brunch Lance Gross, Rebecca Jefferson and friends at White Party Lance Gross on stage at White Party Glenn Lewis performs at Hennessy brunch Avant, Rhonda Mcdonald from Hennessy and Glenn Lewis at Hennessy brunch BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net Very special cognac hosts very V.S special events at the Essence Festival 21 Flick Chat BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 22 ‘R.I.P.D.’ is a disappointing movie in terms of action and comedy By Kam Williams Senior Movie Critic Veteran detective Nick Walker (Ryan Reynolds) is very content between his 15year career with the Boston Police Department and being happily-married to the love of his life, Julia (Stefanie Szostak). However, his American Dream is irreversibly ruined the fateful day he is assigned to bring down a drug cartel conducting business out of an abandoned factory along the waterfront. For, greed gets the best of h i s p a r t n e r, B o b b y H a y e s (Kevin Bacon), after the ensu- (L-R) Jeff Bridges and Ryan Reynolds in scene from “R.I.P.D.” ing shootout, when they discover a stash of gold artifacts. And instead of taking the antique ingots back to headquarters, he decides to shoot Nick dead and blame the murder on the bad guys. To add insult to injury, Bobby consoles Julia and even has the temerity to put the moves on the grieving widow. Meanwhile, Nick finds him- self neither in Heaven nor Hell, but in a police purgatory where a proctor (Mary-Louise Parker) offers him a chance to return to Earth as a member of a squad of zombie cops called the Rest in Peace Department (R.I.P.D.). He leaps at the opportunity, and is immediately paired with a late, Old West lawman, a salty cowboy named Roycephus Pulsipher (Jeff Bridges). The grizzled gunslinger grudgingly agrees to work with a partner for the first time, and in the blink of an eye the two are teleported back to Beantown to round up renegade dead souls who have somehow evaded the afterlife. There, Nick conveniently also has an opportunity to check in on Julia and plot his revenge on Bobby. Like a poor man’s version of “Men in Black,” “R.I.P.D.” is a disappointing action comedy both in terms of action and comedy. Think “ghost” instead of “alien” adversaries and you have the basic idea of what director Robert Schwentke is going for. Unfortunately, the obsolete special f/x leave a lot to be desired, and the corny jokes fall flat. Another major structural flaw is the lack of chemistry between the protagonists, a no-no in any unlikely-buddies adventure. Ryan Reynolds looks lost opposite the drawling, generally unintelligible Jeff Bridges who behaves like he’s still on the set of True Grit. “R.I.P.D.” is D.O.A.! Fair (1 star). Rated PG-13 for violence, profanity, sensuality and sexual references. Running Time: 96 minutes. Distributor: Universal Pictures. On the TUBE Roland S. Martin to host News One Now Roland S. Martin TV One, which entertains, informs and inspires Black adult viewers, has announced the creation of News One Now, a live one-hour, weekday morning news program slated to premiere September 2013. Roland S. Martin, national award-winning journalist, will serve as host and managing editor of the program that will be a multi-platform experience on radio, television, and online. News One Now, culled from the third hour of a three-hour radio program to be syndicated on Radio One network stations, will provide viewers with a morning news program that for the first time in history, will offer news and analysis of politics, entertainment, sports and culture, from an African American perspective. The morning show, based in Washington, D.C., will feature a broad spectrum of experts, newsmakers and celebrities who will share their insights on current affairs with Martin. Additionally, the program will implement a “Skype Net” component giving various Radio One hosts a platform to provide daily weigh-ins on News One Now content, as well as inform the audience on hot topics in their respective regions. News One Now will be a three-screen experience, allowing viewers and listeners to experience the show on radio, TV and through NewsOne.com, a website from Radio One’s web division, Interactive One. Various studies show that African Americans have a high usage of social media, and News One Now will heavily in- corporate social media throughout the show (#NewsOneNow), allowing for a truly interactive experience with our audience. Martin, the 2013 National Association of Black Journalists’ Journalist of the Year, most recently served as the host of TV One’s long-running, award-winning weekly news program, Washington Watch with Roland Martin, which concluded its fouryear series run in May. Parallel to the creation of News One Now, TV One has signed an agreement with Martin’s media company, Nu Vision Media, Inc. “We are delighted to announce the launch of News One Now, which continues Radio One and TV One’s pledge to serving our audience with compelling, quality coverage of current news events, issues and trends affecting the Black community,” said Alfred Liggins, chairman of TV One and CEO and president of Radio One. “African Americans are some of the most highly engaged cable news consumers, and it’s vital that we meet that thirst with a daily morning show that speaks to our issues, our concerns, from our perspective. News One Now will launch as the pre-eminent destination for the pulse of Black America,” said Martin. Craig Henry will be the executive in charge of News One Now on behalf of TV One. (D.T.) Justin Timberlake New York, NY– One of this generation’s most-celebrated entertainers — Justin Timberlake – will expand The 20/20 Experience World Tour with new dates added in Brooklyn (Nov. 6), Newark (Nov. 9), Toronto (Feb. 13), and Chicago (Feb. 16) by popular demand! After dominating the global charts with the release of his acclaimed new album, The 20/ 20 Experience, Timberlake will bring his electrifying live shows to fans with a worldwide tour that will run starting this year on October 31 through 2014. The Grammy and Emmy Award-winning artist’s first tour in six years will visit dozens of countries throughout North America, Europe, South America and Australia. The 20/ 20 Experience World Tour is promoted worldwide by Live Nation Global Touring. The musical journey started on The 20/20 Experience will continue with the worldwide release of the new album on September 30, 2013. The 20/20 Experience World Tour will kick off in North America starting on October 31 in Montreal, Quebec. Tickets for the newly added dates will go on-sale Monday, July 29 at 10AM local time. Justin Timberlake’s all-new fan club, The Tennessee Kids (#TNKids), will have access to a pre-sale starting on July 24 at 10 AM local time. Fans should visit: thetennesseekids.justintim berlake.comto register for the fan club and receive a special code to access the pre-sale. A pre-sale for MasterCard cardholders will also begin on July 24 at 10 AM local time. Cardholders will also have access to exclusive after shows in select markets as a part of the MasterCard Priceless Cities program. Fans should visit: w w w. p r i c e l e s s . c o m / justintimberlake for more information. A full list of cities, venues and public on-sale dates is listed below. For the latest information regarding pre-sale and on-sale dates, please visit www.justintimberlake.com or www.livenation.com. Hashtag: #JT2020TOUR The 20/20 Experience is already hailed by critics as one of the year’s best albums and has seen massive US and international success. In the US alone, the certified double platinum album is currently on top in 2013 as the best-selling album, biggest Top 200, R&B album and Digital album debut, is the only album this year to surpass 2 million albums sold and reached #1 across 7 SoundScan charts (Top 200, Top Digital albums, Top R&B albums, Top Current albums, Top Vinyl albums, Top Physical albums and Top Internet albums). Additionally, the album marks Justin with the biggest male debut in 5 years as well as the biggest digital debut in US history by a male artist. The album held the #1 spot for both the Top 200 (3 weeks) and R&B album chart (10 weeks). In just its first week of release all 10 tracks charted on the digital songs chart and have sold over 5.2 million tracks. The album has reached platinum status in 3 other countries as well as gold status in 9 other countries. The soulful single, “Take Back The Night” has garnered rave reviews. Visit www.justintimberlake.com to hear “Take Back The Night.” (AJB) CLASSIFIED Adoption ADOPTION - Happily married, nature-loving couple wishes to adopt a child. We promise love, laughter, education, security, and extended family. Expenses paid. www.DonaldAndEsther.com. 1-800965-5617. ADOPT- Hoping to share our hearts and home with a newborn baby. Loving, nurturing home for your baby. Expenses paid. Married couple, Walt/ Gina 1-800-315-6957 ADOPTION: Affectionate, educated, financially secure, married couple want to adopt baby into nuturing, warm, and loving environment. Expenses paid. Cindy and Adam. 800.860.7074 or [email protected] Help Wanted Owner/ Ops: A. Duie Pyle offers excellent income with No Touch F r e i g h t ! ! H o m e We e k e n d s ! ! 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Call Marc in New York 1-800-959-3419 LEGAL NOTICES SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORKCOUNTY OF NEW YORK Index No. 306389/2013 — Date Summons Filed: 5/23/13 – SUMMONS WITH NOTICEPlaintiff designates New York County as the place of trial – Basis of venue is Plaintiff’s residence – Catherine Ko, Plaintiff, -against- De Ming Liang, Defendant.-ACTION FOR DIVORCE- To the above named Defendant: YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to serve a notice of appearance on the Plaintiff’s Attorneys within twenty (20) days after the service of this summons, exclusive of the day of service (or within thirty (30) days after the service is complete if this summons is not personally delivered to you within the State of New York); and in case of your failure to appear, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the notice set forth below. Dated: May 22, 2013, Leta Liou, Esq., The Law Firm of Liou & Maisonet, PLLC, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 124 Nassau Street, Suite 2, New York, New York 10038, (646) 587-0188. NOTICE: The nature of this action is to dissolve the marriage between the parties, on the grounds: DRL Section 170 subd. (2) the abandonment of the Plaintiff by the Defendant for a period of more than one year. The relief sought is a judgment of absolute divorce in favor of the Plaintiff dissolving the marriage between the parties in this action. The nature of any ancillary or additional relief demanded is: That either party may resume use of a prior surname; That the Court grant such other and further relief as the Court may deem just and proper; The parties have divided up the marital property, and no claim will be made by either party under equitable distribution. NOTICE OF AUTOMATIC ORDERS. Pursuant to domestic relations law section 236 part b, sec. 2, the parties are bound by certain automatic orders which shall remain in full force and effect during the pendencey of the action. For further details you should contact the clerk of the matrimonial part, Supreme Court, 60 Centre Street, New York, NY 10007 Tel (646) 386-3010. DRL 255 Notice. Please be advise that once the judgment of divorce is signed in this action, both parties must be aware that he or she will no longer be covered by the other party’s health insurance plan and that each party shall be responsible for his or her own health insurance coverage, and may be entitled to purchase health insurance on his or her own through a COBRA option, if available. Name Change 23 BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net Presenting Justin Timberlake 20/20 Experience World Tour BEACON, August 1, 2013 - August 7, 2013 newyorkbeacon.net 24 BEACON Marc Rasbury SPORTS Tune into the next episode of… By Marc Rasbury For a sports journalist, this is the story that keeps on giving. The sad saga of Major League Baseball versus Alex Rodriguez is taking on a life of its own. Sometime this week, MLB is expected to hand out its long-awaited decision regarding the beleaguered superstar. As of this moment (Tuesday, July 30, 2013), we do not know the outcome of that decision. The one thing that is for sure, one of the parties involved, Rodriguez, MLB or even the Yankees, will be very upset on how this tale plays out. Each of the aforementioned parties has a major stake in this outcome. A-Rod, who could face a lifetime ban for not only his steroid use that violated several terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, but for also violating baseball’s code of conduct. The four-time MVP could lose up to $120 million dollars if MLB lowers the hammer on him. Rodriguez has vehemently denied any wrongdoing beyond his admitted performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) use during his Texas Rangers playing days of the early 2000’s. There are several reports circulating out there indicating that baseball has overwhelming evidence that A-Rod has used several forms of PEDs since 2009. As matter of fact, those same reports claim that MLB has more evidence against A-Rod than they had against Ryan Braun, whom they suspended for the remainder of this season. Now based on the PED provision of the current CBA, MLB considers that A-Rod has two strikes against him, which would warrant a 100-game ban. He tested positive while in Texas and Commissioner Bud Selig has enough circumstantial evidence from the Tony Bosch Biogenesis case to assume that Rodriguez used PEDs since he has donned the pinstripes. The 100-game ban seems to be the minimum that could be handed down. However, there is a sentiment out there that MLB will go for the jugular with A-Rod based on the fact MLB feels that Mr. Rodriguez also attempted to tamper with evidence and intimidate witnesses. Once again there are reports out there that the Rodriguez camp tried to buy the incriminidating documents from the Biogenesis employees. When that did not work, they attempted to bribe and/or intimidate them. This is a clear case of obstruction of baseball’s investigation, which violates MLB’s code of conduct. In this case, Commissioner Selig has the right to invoke any punishment he feels fit as long as it is in the best interest of baseball. Many feel getting rid of Alex Rodriguez is in the best interest of the game. Although they claim that they want A-Rod’s bat in the lineup, the team has done everything in their power to demonstrate the contrary. Earlier in the season, Rodriguez tweeted out that he was cleared to play. That drew the ire of the Yankees general manager Brian Cashman, who responded with a four-lettered rant that was unbecoming of an individual in his position. After his rehab stint, he appeared Alex Rodriguez to be ready to rejoin the Bronx Bombers. Then a funny thing happened on the road to the Big Leagues. A-Rod complained about a slight pain in his leg. The team sent him to their medical staff for a MRI, which surprisingly revealed a Grade-1 strain. Rodriguez was stunned with the results and subsequently placed on the 15-Day Disabled List, delay- ing his return to the Bronx. The third baseman then went out and got a second opinion from a doctor that he did not even meet in person. Not only did this act violate the terms of his contract, since he did not request permission from the club to seek a second opinion, it also made A-Rod look like a desperate fool because he was hoping that a doctor who did not examine him would claim that he was fit to return to action based on simply looking at his MRI. One has to wonder why A-Rod did not follow the normal protocol by going to the Players’Association and filing a grievance if he felt that the Yankees have an ulterior motive regarding his return. Perhaps Rodriguez feels that MLBPA does not have his best interest in mind, nor do they support him anymore. MLBPA President Michael Wiener has already gone on record stating that the Association will not protect any player who has overwhelming evidence against them as regards to violating the PED provisions. It did not help A-Rod’s cause when the Captain Derek Jeter hit a home run with his first swing upon his return this past weekend. A-Rod just cannot win! Once again those same reports circulating out there claim that MLB is negotiating with A-Rod to come to a compromise on the lifetime ban. Rodriguez’s lawyer David Cornwall told ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith on Monday that no such talks have taken place. Regardless of what has taken occurred, we can expect MLB to come down hard on Mr. Rodriguez. This soap has more twists and turns than an USA Network episode of Suits. A-Rod, Anthony Weiner: Birds of the same feather By Derrel “Jazz” Johnson Two figures have dominated the media in New York City over the last week, and should continue to do so in the immediate future: Alex Rodriguez and Anthony Weiner. While they come from different worlds, Rodriguez a star baseball player for the New York Yankees, and Weiner a candidate for mayor in New York City, these two gentlemen have a lot of similarities, and are birds of the same feather. We all remember A-Rod’s press conference four years ago after it was revealed he was on a list for players caught using Performance-Enhancing Drugs, commonly known as PEDs. I remember watching it live on television, not believing a word he said. Rodriguez was only talking about his use of PEDs because he was caught, and he conveniently confessed to using them during the period in which he was found to be using them. He said he had let the pressure of his enormous contract of $250 million over 10 years force him to use PEDs, but also added he stopped when he was traded to the New York Yankees, where he would face more media attention and fans in the biggest city in the nation. That excuse didn’t fly with me, and I’m sure it didn’t fly with others, but nevertheless he was forgiven, and praised for his play in the 2009 season, in which he led the Yankees to a World Series championship. Anthony Weiner, who turns 49 in September, was a star politician on the rise. He began his career in politics as an aide to Chuck Schumer, and then went on to serve a successful term as a member of the City Council in New York. Weiner then was elected to the House of Representatives, and served the 9th congressional district for over 12 years. Unfortunately for New Yorkers who supported his political aspirations, he was rocked with a sexting scandal in a city that has seen numerous politicians behaving inappropri- Anthony Weiner ately. A-Rod, who turned 38 over the weekend, is now playing defense, waiting for Major League Baseball (MLB) to pursue discipline against him for any of a series of infractions. It should be to no one’s surprise that he was using PEDs again, but there are potential labor infractions that he may be guilty of as well. There is talk that MLB will seek to suspend him for the rest of this season, as well as the 2014 season, while other reports suggest MLB will seek to suspend the slugger for life. These options appear to be just fine with the New York Yankees, who owe Rodriguez four and a half years and well over $100 million after foolishly resigning him to a 10-year contract worth $275 million in December 2007 that expires when he is 42. Weiner, after leading the mayoral race in some polls, was rocked by a scandal again last week that saw him again sexting a woman using the ridiculous name of Carlos Danger. As with A-Rod, I am not surprised to see that Weiner continued his inappropriate behavior. I must say I am surprised that he lacked the creativity to come up with a poor name like Carlos Danger, but to the shock and dismay of many, Weiner has stayed in the race. The situations that Rodriguez and Weiner have landed in are all self-inflicted. Both are dishonest, and both have fooled many around them, and a good percentage of the general public. There is still a possibility of a happy ending for both Rodriguez and Weiner, with A-Rod returning to Yankee Stadium to a standing ovation and entering the Hall of Fame when his career concludes, and Carlos Danger securing the Democratic nomination for Mayor, then succeeding to run New York City. What is more likely, however, would be for A-Rod to never