Saturday, January 30, 2010

Muslims decry California councilwoman's Facebook post - USATODAY.com

Muslims decry California councilwoman's Facebook post - USATODAY.com: LANCASTER, California (AP) — Muslim advocates are demanding an apology from a California city councilwoman for posting anti-Muslim comments on her Facebook social networking page.

Muslim organizations in California on Friday called on Lancaster Councilwoman Sherry Marquez to apologize for a comment last weekend about the 2008 beheading of Aasiya Hassan in New York.

It included the comment, "This is what the Muslim religion is all about."

Kamal Al-Khatib, president of the American Islamic Institute of Antelope Valley, denounced the remarks as bigoted and divisive to the community 50 miles north of Los Angeles.

Marquez told the City Council this week she was horrified by the killing and apologized for the effect her comments had on the city.

Friday, January 29, 2010

Cal State Unveils Plan to Increase Graduation Rates for Students of Color


Cal State Unveils Plan to Increase Graduation Rates for Students of Color: An initiative aimed at increasing the graduation rates of under-represented students at the nation’s largest university system has critics concerned some provisions will dilute quality education and exacerbate existing gaps.

The California State University Board of Trustees on Wednesday unveiled the plan, part of the national Access to Success project, aimed at cutting by half the gap in the college-going and graduation rates of low-income and minority with that of Whites by 2016. CSU also wants to increase degree attainment by 8 percent overall, officials said. However, it remains to be seen how the state will implement goals with a strained budget.

All 23 campuses will be tasked with devising a strategy for their individual institutions to raise the six-year graduation rate from 46 percent to the national average of 54 percent. The goal is to graduate 7,000 to 8,000 more students each year, CSU Chancellor Dr. Charles Reed told the Los Angeles Times.

Civil rights museum now speaks for the Greensboro Four - USATODAY.com

Civil rights museum now speaks for the Greensboro Four - USATODAY.com: On Feb.1, 1960, Franklin McCain and three fellow African American college students walked into the F.W. Woolworth store in downtown Greensboro, N.C., sat down at the lunch counter and ignited a movement that re-shaped American society.

On Monday, exactly 50 years after that historic act, the new International Civil Rights Center & Museum opens in the former five-and-dime store. Almost 16 years in the making, the museum's centerpiece is the original lunch counter where McCain, Ezell Blair Jr., David Richmond and Joseph McNeil took a seat at the segregated facility and politely, but steadfastly, refused to leave. Eventually joined by others, they returned day after day to stage a sit-in that would continue until late July, when at last, the eating area was de-segregated. Their protest sparked similar sit-ins throughout the South, enlivening the civil rights movement.

Pilot considered the only ace Tuskegee Airman dies - washingtonpost.com

Pilot considered the only ace Tuskegee Airman dies - washingtonpost.com: NEW YORK -- Retired Air Force Lt. Colonel Lee A. Archer, a Tuskegee Airman considered to be the only black ace pilot who also broke racial barriers as an executive at a major U.S. company and founder of a venture capital firm, died Wednesday in New York City. He was 90.

His son, Roy Archer, said his father died at Cornell University Medical Center in Manhattan. A cause of death was not immediately determined.

The Tuskegee Airmen were America's first black fighter pilot group in World War II.

'It is generally conceded that Lee Archer was the first and only black ace pilot,' credited with shooting down five enemy planes, Dr. Roscoe Brown Jr., a fellow Tuskegee Airman and friend, said in a telephone interview Thursday.

Archer was acknowledged to have shot down four planes, and he and another pilot both claimed victory for shooting down a fifth plane. An investigation revealed Archer had inflicted the damage that destroyed the plane, said Brown, and the Air Force eventually proclaimed him an ace pilot.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Racial threat puts Ohio college on alert, on edge - washingtonpost.com


Racial threat puts Ohio college on alert, on edge - washingtonpost.com: NELSONVILLE, Ohio -- An attacker could find many places to hide at Hocking College, a campus carved into a forest in the Appalachian foothills. And with the threat of a mass killing looming over black students at the community college, Allen Edwards is steering clear of the trees.

'I don't feel too safe walking by the woods,' said Edwards, a 19-year-old black student from Canton. 'There's woods everywhere. And somebody could be out in them, and I don't know.'

The FBI is investigating a threat scrawled last week on a bathroom wall warning that black students would be killed Feb. 2. It bore the trademarks of just another casual - though chilling - threat of violence on a college campus, but students here aren't taking any chances.

'People's History' author Howard Zinn dies at 87 - washingtonpost.com


'People's History' author Howard Zinn dies at 87 - washingtonpost.com: ...During the civil rights movement, Zinn encouraged his students to request books from the segregated public libraries and helped coordinate sit-ins at downtown cafeterias. Zinn also published several articles, including a then-rare attack on the Kennedy administration for being too slow to protect blacks.

He was loved by students - among them a young Alice Walker, who later wrote 'The Color Purple' - but not by administrators. In 1963, Spelman fired him for 'insubordination.' (Zinn was a critic of the school's non-participation in the civil rights movement.) His years at Boston University were marked by opposition to the Vietnam War and by feuds with the school's president, John Silber.

Zinn retired in 1988, spending his last day of class on the picket line with students in support of an on-campus nurses' strike. Over the years, he continued to lecture at schools and to appear at rallies and on picket lines.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Girls May Learn Math Anxiety from Female Teachers

Girls May Learn Math Anxiety from Female Teachers: WASHINGTON — Little girls may learn to fear math from the women who are their earliest teachers. Despite gains in recent years, women still trail men in some areas of math achievement, and the question of why has provoked controversy. Now, a study of first- and second-graders suggests what may be part of the answer: Female elementary school teachers who are concerned about their own math skills could be passing that along to the little girls they teach.

Young students tend to model themselves after adults of the same sex, and having a female teacher who is anxious about math may reinforce the stereotype that boys are better at math than girls, explained ., an associate professor in psychology at the University of Chicago.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Panel Approves Justice Reform Bill

Panel Approves Justice Reform Bill: WASHINGTON – After months of inaction, a U.S. Senate panel has approved a comprehensive review of the nation’s criminal justice system, including issues such as the disproportionate share of minorities — particularly African-Americans — in U.S. prisons.

The action by the Senate Judiciary Committee sends the National Criminal Justice Commission Act to the full Senate for a vote later this year. Proposed by Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., the bill would authorize a blue-ribbon commission of experts who would undertake an 18-month review.

Minority Male Plight Demands Broad U.S. Action, College Board Says


Minority Male Plight Demands Broad U.S. Action, College Board Says: WASHINGTON — A College Board report highlighting the “overwhelming barriers” U.S. minority males confront in becoming educated and productive citizens recommends national strategies aimed at erasing “the disparities in educational attainment” and demonstrating “new ways of reaching the increasingly diverse U.S. student population.”

During a program co-hosted by the Congressional Tri Caucus at the U.S. Capitol, College Board officials on Tuesday released “The Educational Crisis Facing Young Men of Color,” a 42-page report that was produced by the board’s Advocacy and Policy Center. The report’s summaries, data and recommendations resulted from a series of meetings, known as “Dialogue Days,” that were convened in 2008 to explore secondary and postsecondary achievement among African-American, Hispanic, Asian-American and Pacific Islander, and Native American males.

Monday, January 25, 2010

World Bank Work Force Seeks Diverse U.S. Employees


World Bank Work Force Seeks Diverse U.S. Employees: WASHINGTON — Few organizations have as racially and culturally diverse a work force as the organizations that make up the World Bank Group. Of its 13,000 employees, nearly 60 percent of whom are located in downtown Washington, D.C., and the rest scattered across 160 offices around the globe, nearly every nation in the world is represented in the World Bank work force.

This past fall the World Bank launched a new chapter in its long-running diversity and inclusion efforts by inaugurating the US Minorities Working Group. The working group, which comprises World Bank officials and representatives from U.S. minority-serving organizations, has been meeting in Washington to devise strategies to spread awareness about the bank’s mission and to develop initiatives to increase African-American, Hispanic, Native American and Asian-American exposure to, as well as employment at, the World Bank.

Foreign students excluded from university union

Foreign students excluded from university union: MADISON, Wis. — International students won't be allowed to join a union for research assistants at the University of Wisconsin-Madison under a new policy that labor activists believe is the first of its kind in the U.S.

University officials insist the policy was meant to protect international students. They say the students' visas, which limit them to 20 hours of work per week, might be jeopardized, although union leaders say such problems haven't arisen at other universities.

The policy is part of a law signed by Gov. Jim Doyle last year granting UW-Madison research assistants the right to form a union starting in July.

Such a distinction between U.S. and international students is believed to be a first nationwide, according to representatives of labor unions and the university. The policy will exclude roughly 700 out of the 2,500 research assistants from unionizing at UW-Madison, long a national research powerhouse.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Blake Gopnik - Race issue a two-edged sword for black contemporary artists - washingtonpost.com


Blake Gopnik - Race issue a two-edged sword for black contemporary artists - washingtonpost.com: They are called 'knowledge cards' -- a glossy picture on the front of each, some factoids to explain it on the back -- and museums sell them in packs of 48, on all kinds of basic subjects: nature, the American presidency, the great buildings of Washington. The shop at the Smithsonian American Art Museum has added a new basic subject to the roster: It now sells a pack that features great works by black artists. The classic names are there: Henry Ossawa Tanner, Romare Bearden, Elizabeth Catlett. There are also a few more recent figures: Sam Gilliam and Alma Thomas, both abstractionists from Washington, as well as the New York expressionist Frederick Brown. The cards 'celebrate the loves and passions of a people,' according to their packaging, and tacitly assert that art by African Americans has become a new field of cue-card-worthy knowledge.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Brutality charged as Pittsburgh police defend 'fist strikes' on teen - CNN.com


Brutality charged as Pittsburgh police defend 'fist strikes' on teen - CNN.com: (CNN) -- An arrest in which several punches were thrown has triggered an accusation of brutality against Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, police from the mother of the 18-year-old honor student who was taken into custody.

Police, in a criminal complaint on the incident, say 'closed fist strikes' were used by the undercover police officers, but only to subdue the teenager as he tried to get away.

His mother said she plans to file a civil rights claim against the officers.

Terez Miles said her son, Jordan Miles, who is black, thought his life was in jeopardy when three white men jumped out of a car on the night of January 11 as he walked not far from his home.

'My son tried to run thinking his life was in jeopardy,' Terez Miles said. 'He made three steps before he slipped and fell.' After that, she said, the police used a stun gun and beat him, pulling out a chunk of his hair.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Higher Education Leaders Urged To Recognize U.S. Disparities, Their Impact on the Academy


Higher Education Leaders Urged To Recognize U.S. Disparities, Their Impact on the Academy: WASHINGTON – Barack Obama’s presidential election may have convinced some Americans that they’re living in a post-racial society, but societal disparities persist between racial groups and are accentuated in American higher education, said Dr. Ramon Gutierrez, a University of Chicago historian and expert on race, during a keynote address at the annual meeting of the American Association of Colleges and Universities.

Gutierrez’s address, “Talking About Race and Ethnicity in a Post-Racial America,” emphasizing the turbulent history of race relations between the U.S. Supreme Court’s Plessy v. Ferguson decision in 1896 and the Kerner Commission Report of 1968, helped set the tone for the three-day meeting, which has attracted more than 1,800 attendees. With this year’s theme, “The Wit, the Will, and the Wallet,” a number of conference sessions delved into how U.S. higher education confronts social inequities. The Washington-based American Association of Colleges and Universities champions the cause of undergraduate liberal education.

Duncan Urges NCAA To Look at Graduation Rates


Duncan Urges NCAA To Look at Graduation Rates: WASHINGTON – Education Secretary Arne Duncan on Wednesday said poor graduation rates among some college basketball programs would improve if the NCAA linked postseason play to the number of student-athletes getting their diplomas.

“They should make a rule that, if you're below a certain point, you don't qualify for the tournament,'' Duncan told reporters at the Capitol. “And I guarantee that would fix the problem in a hurry. I promise you that. We'd fix this thing overnight.”

Duncan, who played basketball at Harvard University, said 25 percent of men's basketball teams in last year's NCAA tournament graduated less than two out of five players.

“You had four teams that didn't graduate any African-American players. Zero. If that was my son, I don't know if I would want him playing there,” Duncan said. “And why did we allow them to play in this tournament, make all this money, be on national TV, and they're not graduating any kids?”

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Brookings Institution: Poverty is rising in D.C. suburbs - Washington Business Journal:

Brookings Institution: Poverty is rising in D.C. suburbs - Washington Business Journal:: Two recessions over the last decade have elevated the number of people living in poverty, with nearly half of the increase occurring in the suburbs of the nation’s biggest metropolitan areas, according to a report released Wednesday by the Brookings Institution.

The number of poor grew by 25 percent in suburbs from 2000 to 2008, almost five times the growth rate in primary cities, said the report. By 2008, there were 2.5 million more suburban poor than in 2000. By 2008, 13.2 percent of Americans lived below the poverty line. A $21,834 annual income for a family of four is considered the poverty level.

Making the Next Generation our Greatest Resource | EdExcelencia.org

Making the Next Generation our Greatest Resource | EdExcelencia.org: Sarita E. Brown, president of Excelencia in Education, writes that, 'As institutions or as a nation we cannot reach or advance underserved Americans without deliberate and intentional action. Decisive action is required to capture the promise of tomorrow offered America by the sheer size and thriving raw talent of the Latino community.'

This essay is an excerpted from the book, 'Latinos and the Nation's Future,' edited by Henry Cisneros, with John Rosales.

Growing What Works Database | EdExcelencia.org


Growing What Works Database | EdExcelencia.org: Identifying what works for Latino students in higher education is an important step to reach our national goals of degree completion, a highly competitive workforce, and civic leadership. The Growing What Works database is the tool to help you take this step.

This database provides information on promising practices at the associate, baccalaureate, and graduate levels at institutions across the country with evidence of effectiveness in improving Latino student success.

Taking Stock: Higher Education and Latinos | EdExcelencia.org


Taking Stock: Higher Education and Latinos |EdExcelencia.org: The focus of this brief is to reconcile what we know with what we hear to inform what we can do to address the realities facing Latino students in a manner integrated into the broader policy agenda and discussions in higher education. This brief takes stock of the current higher education environment and integrates the perspectives of elected officials, students, and service providers from interviews and focus groups with data to better understand the role of Latinos in the future access, persistence, and completion of higher education in the United States and puts this information together to articulate what we can do to address critical policy issues affecting Latino students in the current higher education context.

Schools Stop Teaching Foreign Languages — Except Chinese - NYTimes.com


Schools Stop Teaching Foreign Languages — Except Chinese - NYTimes.com: WASHINGTON — Thousands of public schools stopped teaching foreign languages in the last decade, according to a government-financed survey — dismal news for a nation that needs more linguists to conduct its global business and diplomacy.

But another contrary trend has educators and policy makers abuzz: a rush by schools in all parts of America to offer instruction in Chinese.

Some schools are paying for Chinese classes on their own, but hundreds are getting some help. The Chinese government is sending teachers from China to schools all over the world — and paying part of their salaries.

At a time of tight budgets, many American schools are finding that offer too good to refuse.

Americans' bias against Jews, Muslims linked, poll says - washingtonpost.com

Americans' bias against Jews, Muslims linked, poll says - washingtonpost.com: A poll about Americans' views on Islam concludes that the strongest predictor of prejudice against Muslims is whether a person holds similar feelings about Jews.

The Gallup poll, released Thursday, also finds that people who report going to religious services more than once a week are less likely to harbor bias against Muslims.

The poll, conducted in the fall, is the latest large-scale survey to find a high level of anti-Muslim sentiment in the United States. The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life released a poll in September showing that Muslims are thought to suffer more discrimination than any other U.S. religious group, by a wide margin. Jews were second.

The Gallup poll asked Americans about their views of Islam, Christianity, Judaism and Buddhism and found that 53 percent see Islam unfavorably.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Basketball league for white Americans targets Augusta

A new professional basketball league boasting rosters made up exclusively of white Americans has its eyes set on Augusta, but the team isn't receiving a warm welcome.

The All-American Basketball Alliance announced in a news release Sunday evening that it intends to start its inaugural season in June and hopes Augusta will be one of 12 cities with a team.

"Only players that are natural born United States citizens with both parents of Caucasian race are eligible to play in the league," the statement said.

Augusta Mayor Deke Copenhaver, who has publicly expressed his support for minor league teams in the past, said he would not do the same for this team.

"As a sports enthusiast, I have always supported bringing more sporting activities to Augusta," he said. "However, in this instance I could not support in good conscience bringing in a team that did not fit with the spirit of inclusiveness that I, along with many others, have worked so hard to foster in our city."

Clint Bryant, athletic director at Augusta State University, laughed when he heard the news.

Tameka J. Raymond: "She's Pretty for a Dark-Skinned Girl..."

Tameka J. Raymond: "She's Pretty for a Dark-Skinned Girl...": I am a dark-skinned African American woman with features that reflect my ancestry. Debates regarding Light vs. Dark and other biases have plagued our race for years and continues to impact millions of Black women. The deeply rooted intra-racial contempt that lies beneath this inane 'compliment' is the reason I've chosen to spark dialogue surrounding the topic of self-hatred in our culture. It saturates every aspect of our lives, dominating the perspectives of our generation as a whole. We culturally are so influential, at times inadvertently, that we affect all with the words we utter and the images we portray. It lends to the theory of systemic racism. I'm authoring this piece because I'm miffed by this reality and would like to share my views on these subjects.

Report: More Men Get Economic Boost From Marriage

Report: More Men Get Economic Boost From Marriage: NEW YORK – Historically, marriage was the surest route to financial security for women. Nowadays it's men who are increasingly getting the biggest economic boost from tying the knot, according to a new analysis of census data.

The changes, summarized in a Pew Research Center report being released Tuesday, reflect the proliferation of working wives over the past 40 years – a period in which American women outpaced men in both education and earnings growth. A larger share of today's men, as compared to their 1970 counterparts, are married to women whose education and income exceed their own, and a larger share of women are married to men with less education and income.

Lottery-winning Alumnus Donates $10 Million to South Carolina HBCU


Lottery-winning Alumnus Donates $10 Million to South Carolina HBCU: Not sure whether he was dreaming or not, the Rev. Solomon Jackson Jr. was careful to confirm each number — 14, 24, 31, 43, 51, and, finally, 27 — with a lawyer friend after purchasing a Powerball lottery ticket at a South Carolina gas station in August.

Jackson’s $2 investment reaped $260 million worth of blessings for the retired state employee, who pastors the New Shiloh Baptist Church in Columbia, S.C.

Hoping to spread the joy, Jackson donated $10 million of his “good fortune” — as he called it — to his alma mater, Morris College, a historically Black college in Sumter, S.C. It is the largest one-time individual donation in the school’s history, officials said."

Haiti's History Created Bond With Many U.S. Blacks

Haiti's History Created Bond With Many U.S. Blacks: A terrible earthquake anywhere in the Caribbean would have hit a sympathetic nerve in most Americans. But, as the first Black republic of the West, born when slaves overthrew White rulers, Haiti holds a unique place in the hearts of many American Blacks.

That's why Toussaint Tabb, a college student named after the Haitian slave-turned-general who led the revolution more than 200 years ago, was jolted when he saw televised images of the devastation in Haiti.

“They looked just like any other Black people over here in America,” said Tabb, a history major at North Carolina Central University. “They're the same people.”

“I would say it hit home harder because it was a predominantly Black country, and my name is Toussaint, and it's Haiti,' Tabb said.

Op-Ed Contributor - Shades of Prejudice - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Contributor - Shades of Prejudice - NYTimes.com: ...Dozens of research studies have shown that skin tone and other racial features play powerful roles in who gets ahead and who does not. These factors regularly determine who gets hired, who gets convicted and who gets elected.

Consider: Lighter-skinned Latinos in the United States make $5,000 more on average than darker-skinned Latinos. The education test-score gap between light-skinned and dark-skinned African-Americans is nearly as large as the gap between whites and blacks.

The Harvard neuroscientist Allen Counter has found that in Arizona, California and Texas, hundreds of Mexican-American women have suffered mercury poisoning as a result of the use of skin-whitening creams. In India, where I was born, a best-selling line of women’s cosmetics called Fair and Lovely has recently been supplemented by a product aimed at men called Fair and Handsome.

Pride And Privilege — And Prejudice — On Stage : NPR


Pride And Privilege — And Prejudice — On Stage : NPR: In U.S. dramas, African-Americans are often limited to portraying impoverished characters, like slaves or street thugs. So Lydia Diamond wrote a play about the opposite: An extremely wealthy black family vacationing on Martha's Vineyard.

The family in Stick Fly is old money — think the Kennedys. And yet, as Diamond says, 'They live in a world that doesn't even really know they exist.'

Take for instance the scene in which Flip, a plastic surgeon, tells his family about a time he was in Pottery Barn and a white salesgirl followed him around.

'What am I going to steal from Pottery Barn?' he asks.

'This isn't unlike the conversations that I've had with my own family,' Diamond said. 'Privilege doesn't necessarily shelter them from the prejudice that's woven into the fabric of our society.'

If Your Kids Are Awake, They’re Probably Online - NYTimes.com

If Your Kids Are Awake, They’re Probably Online - NYTimes.com: ...Many experts believe that media use is changing youthful attitudes.

“It’s changed young people’s assumptions about how to get an answer to a question,” Mr. Roberts said. “People can put out a problem, whether it’s ‘Where’s a good bar?’ or ‘What if I’m pregnant?’ and information pours in from all kinds of sources.”

The heaviest media users, the study found, are black and Hispanic youths and “tweens,” or those ages 11 to 14.

Even during the survey, media use was changing.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Scholar West Urges Holiday Audience Not to ‘Sanitize’ King's Legacy


Scholar West Urges Holiday Audience Not to ‘Sanitize’ King's Legacy: ATLANTA - A scholar and activist invoked the fiery side of Martin Luther King Jr.'s rhetoric Monday at the civil rights icon's church, urging the audience not to 'sanitize' King's legacy or let the president off the hook on issues like poverty.

Across the country, Americans marked what would have been King's 81st birthday with rallies and parades. And days ahead of the anniversary of his historic inauguration, President Barack Obama honored King by serving meals to the needy.

But in the city where the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize winner was born, it was Princeton University professor Cornel West who reminded listeners that King's message of nonviolence came with a fiery urgency. West delivered a passionate keynote address to hundreds at Ebenezer Baptist Church on the 25th federal observance of King's birthday.

Op-Ed Columnist - Blacks in Retreat - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Columnist - Blacks in Retreat - NYTimes.com: ...As the nation continues to wallow in the trough of widespread unemployment, black Americans are bearing a disproportionate burden of the joblessness. The election of a black president may have been important to African-Americans for myriad reasons, but it hasn’t done much for their bottom line, which continues to deteriorate.

For example, without a dramatic new intervention by the federal government, the poverty rate for African-American children could eventually approach a heart-stopping 50 percent, according to analysts at the Economic Policy Institute. Already more than a third of black children are living in poverty.

Present trends are not good. Communities of color are being crushed economically and the national news media have not fully focused on the carnage. The official unemployment rate for blacks is 16.2 percent and could well pass 17 percent before the year is out. The real jobless rate is far more ghastly. The Boston-based group United for a Fair Economy noted that even “college-educated black men are nearly twice as likely to be unemployed as their white, college-educated counterparts.”

In some poor neighborhoods, a man or woman with a traditional full-time job is the exception, not the rule. In five Midwestern states — Nebraska, Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin and Oklahoma — the jobless rate for blacks is at least three times as high as that for whites.

Songs Of The Civil Rights Movement : NPR


Songs Of The Civil Rights Movement : NPR: In 1964, Dr. Martin Luther Jr. delivered the opening address to the Berlin Jazz Festival.

'Jazz speaks for life,' King said. 'The blues tell the story of life's difficulties — and, if you think for a moment, you realize that they take the hardest realities of life and put them into music, only to come out with some new hope or sense of triumph. This is triumphant music.'

King was born in 1929. Thirty-six years later, in 1965, he led a march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., a march that was instrumental in the passing of the Voting Rights Act five months later. This year, on Jan. 20 — one day after the national observance of King's 80th birthday — we witness the inauguration of the first African-American president of the United States.

What follows are jazz and jazz/blues versions of some of the songs that sustained the civil-rights movement in the 1960s (and beyond) through the setbacks, the hardships, the failures and the many hard-won successes that have moved America ever closer to racial equality. If you feel inspired to sing along, you certainly won't be alone.

Lost King Speech To Be Heard After 50 Years : NPR


Lost King Speech To Be Heard After 50 Years : NPR: Officials at Bethel College in Newton, Kan., on Monday will play a recording of a speech by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. that hasn't been heard in half a century.

It's the only recording of the speech that exists, and until recently, school officials thought it was lost for good.

King gave the speech, about the future of integration, at Bethel College in south-central Kansas in January 1960. Bethel officials were working on commemorating this year's 50th anniversary of that speech when they realized that they didn't have a copy.

Are We Overlooking The Black Power Behind Obama? : NPR


Are We Overlooking The Black Power Behind Obama? : NPR: A year ago this week, Barack Obama stood on the steps of the U.S. Capitol to take the presidential oath of office.

That moment was described throughout the media as the climax of a journey that began 46 years earlier, at the other end of the National Mall, when Martin Luther King Jr. gave his 'I Have a Dream' speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

But Peniel Joseph, a historian at Tufts University, says not enough attention has been paid to the other main line of succession in African-American leadership — the one that leads from Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael and the black power movement.

'The connection between black power and Barack Obama doesn't fit a neat and simplistic national narrative about the success and evolution of the civil rights struggle,' Joseph tells NPR's Guy Raz.

The 'Post-Racial' Conversation, One Year In : NPR

The 'Post-Racial' Conversation, One Year In : NPR: With the election of President Obama, the phrase 'post-racial' gained wider use. One year in to Obama's term, Ralph Eubanks, author of The House at the End of the Road, and Duke University professor Mark Anthony Neal define the term and the conversation around it.

More wives are the higher-income spouse, Pew report says - washingtonpost.com

More wives are the higher-income spouse, Pew report says - washingtonpost.com: In a trend that researchers call 'the rise of wives,' women are increasingly better-educated than their husbands and have emerged as the dominant income-provider in one of five marriages, according to a new report released today.

Looking at the impact of nearly four decades of social change, the report shows that men increasingly get a significant economic boost when they tie the knot -- improving their household incomes and often pairing up with a partner who has at least as much education as they do. Compared to 1970, when men usually married women with less education and fewer wives worked, these changes have contributed to a "gender role reversal in the gains from marriage," the report said.

"What's radically changed is that marriage now is a better deal for men," said Richard Fry, co-author of the report, published by the Pew Research Center. "Now when men marry, often their spouse works quite a bit. Often she is better-educated than the guy." In 1970, unmarried men "had a higher economic status than married guys," he said, "but no longer."

People's racial biases can skew perceptions of how much help victims need

People's racial biases can skew perceptions of how much help victims need: ScienceDaily (Jan. 13, 2010) — When assessing the amount of help someone needs, people's perceptions can be skewed by their racial biases, according to a Kansas State University study.


Donald Saucier, K-State associate professor of psychology, and psychology graduate students Sara Smith, Topeka, and Jessica McManus, Maineville, Ohio, surveyed undergraduate students a year after Hurricane Katrina to examine their perceptions of the hurricane victims and the helping response.


The researchers created a questionnaire that evaluated the participants' perceptions of Hurricane Katrina victims. The questionnaire evaluated whom the participants perceived to be the victims based on measures like gender, race and socioeconomic status. The results showed that participants generally thought people impacted by Hurricane Katrina were black and lower class.


"What we wanted to do was see how perceptions of victims of Hurricane Katrina would interact with things like racism," Saucier said. "We wanted to look at how much the participants felt that the victims may have been to blame for their own situation in Katrina."


Monday, January 18, 2010

National Civil Rights Museum plans more interactive exhibits - USATODAY.com

National Civil Rights Museum plans more interactive exhibits - USATODAY.com: ... It's easy to understand the popularity of the bus — it's one of the few interactive exhibits at the museum, which opened in September 1991 and will undergo a renovation over the next three or so years with an estimated $10 million to $15 million cost.

Museum leaders 'are fond of saying, when we opened, we were using state-of-the-art laser discs,' says Tracy Lauritzen Wright, the museum's director of administration/special projects.

Another somewhat interactive exhibit involves a small room off to the side with two phones in it. Visitors can hear a conversation between President Kennedy and Gov. Ross Barnett about James Meredith, the black student who wanted to attend the University of Mississippi in 1962. Kennedy's frustration grows and grows as Barnett says he'll send 280 highway patrol officers to protect Meredith, but they won't be armed.

College students rent textbooks to save money - washingtonpost.com


College students rent textbooks to save money - washingtonpost.com: ... Chegg.com has rented more than 2 million books to students at more than 6,400 schools since it was launched nationally in 2007. Students can rent books by the semester, quarter or summer at rates that vary depending on the popularity of the title and when the semester starts. But the books are usually at least half off retail. Students hang on to the orange boxes and mail the rented books back at the end of the semester for free.

The site has gained popularity by infiltrating Twitter and Facebook, using student ambassadors who are paid $5 for every customer they recruit (one student has made more than $17,000) and promising to plant a tree for every book rented. It has also agreed to donate money to Haiti earthquake relief efforts for each order. "Students are very green, but they are also very socially aware," said Tina Couch, a spokeswoman for the company.

Students are also thrifty, especially with prices of textbooks steadily increasing and, in some cases, spiking because publishing companies have packaged the thick volumes with computer programs, workbooks or access codes to content-related Web sites. Estimates for a typical student's spending on textbooks range from $700 to $1,000 annually.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Historic Black Schools in the South Restored as Landmarks - NYTimes.com


Historic Black Schools in the South Restored as Landmarks - NYTimes.com: COLUMBIA, S.C. — Until 1923, the only school in the largely black farm settlement of Pine Grove was the one hand-built by parents, a drafty wooden structure in the churchyard. Anyone who could read and write could serve as teacher. With no desks and paper scarce, teachers used painted wood for a blackboard, and an open fireplace provided flashes of warmth to the lucky students who sat close.

This changed after a Chicago philanthropist named Julius Rosenwald, the president of Sears, Roebuck, took up the cause of long-neglected education for blacks at the urging of Booker T. Washington, the proponent of black self-help. By the late 1920s, one in three rural black pupils in 15 states were attending a new school built with seed money, architectural advice and supplies from the Rosenwald Fund.


“It was a big step up, going to a school that was painted and had a potbellied stove,” said Rubie Schumpert, 92, one of nine siblings who attended the Rosenwald school in Pine Grove — and one of three sisters who went on to college and careers as teachers.


If the desks and textbooks were hand-me-downs from white schools, at least there were real blackboards and rough paper for writing. If there was still no electricity, columns of windows maximized the natural light.


Today, this hard-used wooden building, which narrowly escaped demolition, is one of several dozen Rosenwald schools being restored as landmarks — newly appreciated relics of important chapters in philanthropy and black education. The schools were a turning point, sparking improved, if still unequal, education for much of the South, historians say.

Observers Say U. of Virginia Diversity Prowess Safe with Sullivan

Observers Say U. of Virginia Diversity Prowess Safe with Sullivan: When a highly selective institution garners an enviable diversity record as that found at The University of Virginia change at the top is bound to raise concerns. But those familiar with the school's new president say those concerns are unwarranted.

With a Black enrollment rate of nearly 9 percent and a Black graduation rate of 86 percent, according to UVa. data, the Charlottesville-based school has become the nation's student diversity success standard bearer. With the appointment this week of University of Michigan Provost Dr. Teresa Sullivan as president the question becomes can the university sustain its diversity record?

'I wouldn't even raise such a question,' said Dr. Clifton Wharton, who became the first African-American president of Michigan State University in 1970. Wharton mentored Sullivan at Michigan State.

10 great places to retrace the civil rights movement - USATODAY.com


10 great places to retrace the civil rights movement - USATODAY.com: Given the monumental impact of the civil rights movement, its landmarks — lunch counters, bus stops, schools and churches — are surprisingly ordinary. On the eve of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Jim Carrier, author of A Traveler's Guide to the Civil Rights Movement ($14, Harvest Books), takes USA TODAY on a tour to places that forced the nation to honor its founding creed that we are all created equal.

Serve.gov | Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service

Serve.gov | Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service: We are calling on educators and web professionals to join our new effort – the 2010 MLK Day Technology Challenge. The idea is simple: to connect schools with technology needs to IT and web professionals, developers, graphic designers and new media professionals who are willing to volunteer their skills for good, take on these technology projects and give back to a school in need.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said, 'Life's most persistent and urgent question is: what are you doing for others?” We ask that you answer his call in 2010 by participating in the MLK Technology Challenge.

Martin Luther King, Jr. Quiz: History of MLK for Kids

Martin Luther King, Jr. Quiz: History of MLK for Kids: Martin Luther King, Jr. Day honors the famous American civil rights leader on the third Monday in January.

The campaign to establish a holiday honoring King began soon after he was assassinated in 1968.

King’s career as a civil rights leader is well known. But what do you know about his early life?

Take this quiz excerpted from Don’t Know Much about History by Kenneth C. Davis.

MLKDay.gov

MLKDay.gov: On January, 18, 2010, people of all ages and backgrounds will come together to improve lives, bridge social barriers, and move our nation closer to the “Beloved Community” that Dr. King envisioned. Dr. Martin Luther King devoted his life’s work to causes of equality and social justice. He taught that through nonviolence and service to one another, problems such as hunger and homelessness, prejudice and discrimination can be overcome. Dr. King’s teachings can continue to guide us in addressing our nation’s most pressing needs---poverty, economic insecurity, job loss and education.

Volunteer with Americans across the nation on the 2010 King Day of Service and make a real difference in your community.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Experts: Time for a New Dialogue on Race


Experts: Time for a New Dialogue on Race: A diverse group of national leaders gathered on Capitol Hill on Tuesday and Wednesday to establish a new direction and tone for a more relevant dialogue on race in the U.S. The symposium was set to identify trends and determinants of racial disparities, develop consensus on policy needs and chart a racial agenda for 2010 and beyond.

Today's post-civil rights conversation about race is critical and significantly different from the past, said a panel during 'The State of Race in 2010: Defining a New Dialogue' session. They pointed to the election of President Barack Obama as igniting new discussions as ethnicity, color and religion were prominent factors in the election.

Panelists, who included policymakers, scholars, media experts and nonprofit and corporate leaders, noted that racism today is more complex. In the past, groups rallied around issues like segregation that they opposed. Now, the discussion about racism is being reshaped and extends further to changing mindsets as well as legislation.

Public Colleges Do Poor Job with Minority, Low-Income Students, Study Says

Public Colleges Do Poor Job with Minority, Low-Income Students, Study Says: Many of the nation's top flagship public colleges are 'turning their backs' on qualified low-income and minority students, the Education Trust said Wednesday in presenting data from a new report.

While the recession has hit large public colleges and universities hard, many of these institutions continue to devote large sums of institutional financial aid on more affluent students, the Washington, D.C.-based group reported. Overall, institutional aid provided by colleges to affluent students with family incomes of at least $115,000 a year increased 28 percent from 2003 through 2007.

'Too many flagship institutions are literally turning their backs on academically qualified, low-income and minority students in favor of the children of the elite,' said Education Trust President Kati Haycock.

'In some states, the top-ranked private university is now more diverse than the public flagship. It's almost as if some of America's best public colleges have forgotten that they are, in fact, public.'

In the study, Opportunity Adrift, the Education Trust says this trend is particularly harmful for low-income students. The typical poor student at public colleges has an unmet financial need equal to 70 percent of his or her family's annual income.

Texas debates the way history will be taught - washingtonpost.com


Texas debates the way history will be taught - washingtonpost.com: AUSTIN, Texas -- Students, parents and lawmakers lobbied Wednesday for more diversity in Texas' social studies curriculum, before the state board of education adopts new classroom standards that will determine how history is taught for the next decade.

In more than six hours of public testimony, dozens of people took their chance to help shape the way millions of Texas school children learn topics from the Roman Empire to the entrepreneurial success of billionaire Bill Gates.

The public hearing sets up a tentative vote Thursday on the new standards. But, as usual in votes before the conservative-led board, the wide-reaching guidelines are full of potential ideological flashpoints.

Early quibbles over how much prominence to give civil rights leaders such as Cesar Chavez and the inclusion of Christmas seem to have been smoothed over. Board Chairman Gail Lowe said at the start of the hearing that Chavez and Christmas will not be removed from the standards.

What does MLK's legacy mean to you? - Race & ethnicity- msnbc.com

What does MLK's legacy mean to you? - Race & ethnicity- msnbc.com: Martin Luther King Jr. is best known for his work to secure progress on civil rights for blacks in the United States. How has his legacy affected your life? Send us your stories and photos and we'll publish a selection on Martin Luther King Day.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34829571/ns/us_news-race_and_ethnicity

Nation's Oldest Black Fraternity Rocked By Hazing : NPR

Nation's Oldest Black Fraternity Rocked By Hazing : NPR: Alpha Phi Alpha, Inc, the nation's oldest black Greek-lettered fraternity, recently placed a moratorium on all membership intake. The decision comes after a prospective member was reportedly hazed and critically wounded following an initiation exercise, leading the group's president to denounce the behavior. But some say the strong rebuke is long overdue for a practice that is far too commonplace within some Greek-lettered organizations. Host Michel Martin speaks with Lawrence Ross, author of the book, The Divine Nine: The History of African American Fraternities and Sororities, about the significance of the decision. Ross is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha.

Defining Diversity: Beyond Race And Gender : NPR


Defining Diversity: Beyond Race And Gender : NPR: Just about every medium or large U.S. company talks about its dedication to diversity, whether in a prominent section of its Web site or in its corporate mission statement.

But the definition of what, exactly, these firms mean by diversity is often vague.

Only 30 percent of human resources professionals say that their company even has an official definition of diversity, according to a 2007 survey by the Society for Human Resource Management.

Gay In The Office: The Last Frontier Of Workplace Equality : NPR

Gay In The Office: The Last Frontier Of Workplace Equality : NPR: Federal law prohibits discrimination in employment based on race, color, religion and gender — but not sexual orientation. In fact, it is legal in 29 states for an employee to be fired for being gay. Follow the history of gay rights in the workplace, from the anti-gay witch hunts of the McCarthy era to pending anti-discrimination legislation today.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122483892

Howard senior honored as Allstate Give Back Day Hero - washingtonpost.com


Howard senior honored as Allstate Give Back Day Hero - washingtonpost.com: Sometimes Marquis Smith's friends have to remind him to eat or sleep.

The Howard University senior has a full course load and an internship, heads the School of Education's student council and volunteers throughout the District and the country.

Smith, 29, is one of four Allstate Give Back Day Heroes, a program honoring those who have followed in the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s footsteps.

'If I could get a degree in just helping people, that would be what my degree would be,' said Smith, wearing a T-shirt featuring a quote by Aristotle, 'Educating the mind without educating the heart is no education at all.'

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Analysis: Post-racial Era Yet to Dawn in America


Analysis: Post-racial Era Yet to Dawn in America: WASHINGTON - Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid's remarks about Barack Obama, only the latest such eruption since America's first Black president took office a year ago, probably say more about the state of race relations in the United States than they do about Obama.

The political uproar, not unexpected in today's fiercely partisan climate, flared immediately. But less examined is what Reid's words say about the latent and overt racism that envelops Obama and the country. The nation is far from the post-racial era some thought had dawned with the 2008 election.

Reid, D-Nev., has not disputed a new book that quotes him as saying during the campaign that he thought Obama was a good candidate because he was a 'light-skinned' African-American 'with no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one.'

Poll: Blacks optimistic about future - CNN.com


Poll: Blacks optimistic about future - CNN.com: (CNN) -- A year after the election of America's first African-American president, blacks in the United States are expressing optimism about racial progress not seen in a quarter-century, according to a new report by the Pew Research Center.

Thirty-nine percent of African-Americans said the 'situation of black people in this country' is better than it was five years ago, nearly twice the 20 percent who said the same in 2007.

The optimism is not limited to the present, but covers the future as well.

A majority of African-Americans polled, 53 percent, said that life for blacks in the future will be better than it is now. Two years ago, the number was 44 percent.

The historic election of Barack Obama to the White House appears to have played a role in the positive sentiment.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Race-based misdiagnosis still remains a health care problem

Race-based misdiagnosis still remains a health care problem: Race-based misdiagnosis emerged in the context of the civil rights era of the 1960s and 1970s, when activism became equated with mental illness, says Jonathan Metzl, an associate professor of psychiatry and women's studies.

Metzl examined archives of Ionia State Hospital for the Criminally Insane and learned that black men, mainly from Detroit during the civil rights era, were taken there and often misdiagnosed with schizophrenia.

'Some patients became schizophrenic because of changes in their diagnosis rather than their clinical symptoms,' said Metzl, a 2008 Guggenheim award recipient.

Rhode Island to Highlight African-American Memoir in Tours, School Curriculum


Rhode Island to Highlight African-American Memoir in Tours, School Curriculum: PROVIDENCE, R.I. - William J. Brown led a typical life for a free Black man in 1800s Providence. He was a shoemaker and a preacher, and through his church became a leader of the city's African-American community before dying at age 71 in 1886.

He likely would have been forgotten by history if he hadn't written a memoir, The Life of William J. Brown of Providence, R.I., published three years before his death. The book chronicles Brown's family history, including how his grandfather was brought to Rhode Island on a slave ship owned by the Brown family, for whom Brown University is named; the freeing of his father by abolitionist Moses Brown; and his own travels through the city, rubbing elbows with the White elite along the way.

Now, Brown's book is at the center of a yearlong project, funded by the Rhode Island Council on the Humanities, which seeks to raise his profile and further the public's understanding of African-American history in Rhode Island. The project will include events such as lectures and walking tours, and its organizers are asking dozens of book clubs and libraries to put the book on their reading lists this year.

University of Virginia Names First Female President


University of Virginia Names First Female President: The University of Virginia has named Dr. Teresa Sullivan as its new president starting Aug. 1. She will be the university's eighth president and the first woman to serve in the position. Sullivan, 60, is the provost and executive vice president for academic affairs at the University of Michigan.

On Monday, the university's Board of Visitors elected Sullivan to succeed President Dr. John Casteen. The 66-year-old Casteen will leave office after 20 years as the school's president. More than 100 candidates were nominated for the job at the university, one of the nation's top public institutions, founded in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Former Howard U. President James Cheek dies at 77


Former Howard U. President James Cheek dies at 77: WASHINGTON — James E. Cheek, who served as Howard University's president for 20 years and oversaw major expansions at the school, has died. He was 77.


University spokesman Ron Harris said Cheek died Friday at a hospital in Greensboro, N.C. Cheek died after a long illness, said Tanya Wiley, spokeswoman for Shaw University where Cheek earlier served as president.

Cheek presided over the historically Black Howard University from 1968 to 1989. During that time, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, in 1983.


“Dr. Cheek's vision and passion for the university and his view of Howard as a national treasure led to bold action, which eventually resulted in a dramatic boost in our budget with increased federal support,'' current Howard University President Sidney Ribeau said in a statement.

Minority-serving Institutions to Benefit from Education Department Budget Increase

Nearly three months into the federal fiscal year, Congress and President Barack Obama reached an agreement on a 2010 education spending bill that will increase funds for minority-serving institutions and student financial aid with the possibility of more gains ahead.

The bill approved in December would provide moderate to large increases for the Pell Grant program as well as federal programs for minority-serving colleges and universities. Hispanic leaders in particular were pleased with a 26 percent increase in the Hispanic Serving Institutions program, bringing total funding to $117 million. In addition, Congress provided $10.5 million for HSIs with graduate programs.

The funding “represents a major victory for HSIs,” said Dr. Antonio Flores, president and CEO of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities.

In the same bill, which funded many other federal departments, HSIs would receive $6.25 million from the Department of Housing and Urban Development to support community-development programs.

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Tribal College Educator Raises America’s Multiethnic Profile


Tribal College Educator Raises America’s Multiethnic Profile: Louie Gong, an education resource coordinator at Muckleshoot Tribal College in Auburn, Wash., is well-versed on issues of multiculturalism and mixed-race heritage but he isn't an expert and has no intentions of becoming one.

In fact, he's the 'anti-expert.'

As an emerging voice for mixed-race populations, Gong refuses to make sweeping generalizations about a diverse group of people in the way an expert might.

'There is no one mixed-race experience. You can't generalize what it is like to be a mixed-race person across geographical regions or socioeconomic statuses,' Gong says.

Gong, who has Native American, Chinese, Scottish and French heritage, is trying to assist a new generation in comprehending what it means to be multiethnic in America and he uses technology and the nonprofit organization he leads, called MAVIN, to do it.

NAACP, 3 ex-workers sue US Airways in Philadelphia - washingtonpost.com

NAACP, 3 ex-workers sue US Airways in Philadelphia - washingtonpost.com: PHILADELPHIA -- Three fired employees are suing US Airways, alleging the airline operated a racially hostile workplace in Philadelphia and fired black employees without grounds.

The local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People joined the suit filed Tuesday by three black women. They say the airline at Philadelphia International Airport assigned black workers to smaller terminals or flights with more black passengers.

Plaintiff Tiffany Salters of Sicklerville, N.J., also says she lost her management job in customer service in 2007 after being wrongly blamed for a small security breach.

Airline spokesman Morgan Durrant says US Airways is committed to diversity and nondiscrimination and investigates all related complaints.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Recession fuels shift from private to public schools


...It's too early to tell whether the recession has had a profound effect on public schools' educational mission. But parents and educators across the nation say it's already bringing subtle changes to the culture of many public schools as some families seek the personal attention they received from private schools.


Private-school parents typically find that the structure of public schools takes some getting used to. In most states, funding for public schools is calculated on a per-student basis, based on average student counts during the first few weeks of the school year. If a student drops out after 40 days, the funding that student generated stays with the school — even if he or she does not return to that campus.


Private schools, on the other hand, risk losing tuition payments once a student leaves.


"Private schools tend to treat you more like a customer than the public schools," Allyn says. Public schools are "going to get their tax dollars whether or not you as a parent are upset. If you're in a private school and you yank your kid out, that's a lot of money walking out the (private school's) door."


Enrollment figures for the current school year won't be available until next year, but the U.S. Department of Education's latest estimate finds that from 2006 to 2009, public school enrollment grew by nearly a half-million students, or about 1%, while private school enrollment dropped by about 146,000, or 2.5%.


Government projections find that private schools could lose an additional 28,000 students this year, while public schools should gain 246,000.

Monday, January 04, 2010

Students Begin Washington Trek for Immigrant Rights


Students Begin Washington Trek for Immigrant Rights: MIAMI - While their fellow college students recovered from the night's revelry, four South Floridians celebrated the New Year with a more active - and activist - approach.

The group set out Friday to begin a 1,500 mile (2,400 kilometer) journey they are calling the 'Trail of Dreams,' from Miami's historic Freedom Tower to Washington, D.C. The goal is to raise support for legislation that would include a path to citizenship for eligible illegal immigrants.

The four, all immigrants themselves, plan to walk the entire distance, no matter the weather. They expect students and other supporters to join them along the way and plan to arrive in the capital May 1, which has become a day of immigrant rights rallies in recent years.

All are top students at local colleges and campus leaders. Some are now here legally, some are not. All say they are willing to take the risks that come with bringing attention to the plight of students who, like themselves, were brought to the U.S. as children and are now here illegally.

Michelle Obama Images Part of U. Of Michigan Race Exhibition


Michelle Obama Images Part of U. Of Michigan Race Exhibition: DETROIT - Two contrasting images of Michelle Obama - wearing pearls and smiling, and as a rifle-toting revolutionary - are on display at the University of Michigan as part of an exhibit that considers race and visual representations.

'Reframing the Color Line: Race and the Visual Culture of the Atlantic World' includes a series of illustrations of Black people starting from the 18th century that range from highly demeaning to strongly sympathetic.

Taken together, the imagery 'reveals how racial stereotypes were perpetuated, and in many ways, continue to exist,' co-curator Dr. Martha S. Jones writes in an essay in the university's online journal Montage.

Saturday, January 02, 2010

Youth trek from Miami to DC for immigrant rights - washingtonpost.com


Youth trek from Miami to DC for immigrant rights - washingtonpost.com: MIAMI -- While their fellow college students recovered from the night's revelry, four South Floridians celebrated the New Year with a more active - and activist - approach.

The group set out Friday to begin a 1,500 mile journey they are calling the 'Trail of Dreams,' from Miami's historic Freedom Tower to Washington, D.C. The goal is to raise support for legislation that would include a path to citizenship for eligible illegal immigrants.

The four, all immigrants themselves, plan to walk the entire distance, no matter the weather. They expect students and other supporters to join them along the way and plan to arrive in the capital May 1, which has become a day of immigrant rights rallies in recent years.

All are top students at local colleges and campus leaders. Some are now here legally, some are not. All say they are willing to take the risks that come with bringing attention to the plight of students who, like themselves, were brought to the U.S. as children and are now here illegally.

Friday, January 01, 2010

Hispanic Caucus Aims To Shift Focus To Immigration : NPR


Hispanic Caucus Aims To Shift Focus To Immigration : NPR: ...Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, vowing to put the issue front and center, have come up with their own proposal for what they call comprehensive immigration reform.

'Just because we have been patient doesn't mean we could wait forever,' Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) said at a recent news conference while surrounded by Latino children wearing T-shirts that read 'future voter.'

He and the caucus introduced a bill that would put undocumented workers on a path to citizenship — if they pay a $500 fine, learn English and undergo a criminal background check. The bill would also provide more training for border guards and seek better conditions at immigration detention centers.

But after a conservative backlash sent the last major immigration overhaul effort down in flames in 2007, Gutierrez says, he knows what he's up against.

'Opponents of immigration reform will use it as a wedge issue and will blame everything from unemployment to rising health care costs on immigrants,' he says. 'Of course, why stop at jobs and health care? Global warming? Rough stock market? Bad traffic? Lousy weather? Too many immigrants!'

Fla. detention officer fired for joining the KKK - washingtonpost.com

GAINESVILLE, Fla. -- An Alachua County Sheriff's Office corrections officer who acknowledged being a member of the Ku Klux Klan has been fired for belonging to a subversive or terrorist organization, a violation of the agency's code of ethics.

Wayne Kerschner was fired Tuesday following a 10-month internal investigation.

The investigation revealed that Kerschner applied online for membership to the United Northern and Southern Knights of the Ku Klux Klan a year ago, paid $30 a month for access to a members-only Klan Web site and that the group did a thorough background check that included his credit history before allowing him to join.