anti obama feeling
Transcription
anti obama feeling
New York Beacon website: NewYorkBeacon.com Vol. 16 No. 33 Showing the Way to Truth and Justice August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 E-Mail newyorkbeacon@yahoo.com 75 Cents ANTI OBAMA FEELING Is toting guns at town hall meetings a civilized act to you? ON THE ROAD — President Barack Obama takes health care fight on the road. (See Story On Page 3) (CREDIT: White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson) Lowery continues search for justice at awards gala (See Story On Page 3) Bloomberg appoints 8 members to NYC panel for educational policy NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 2 Troy Davis Supreme Court grants Troy Davis evidentiary hearing The NAACP applauds the United States Supreme Court for ordering a federal judge in Georgia to grant death row inmate Troy Davis an evidentiary hearing to prove his innocence. The evidentiary hearing would allow the testimony of seven witnesses who have recanted or contradicted their original eyewitness statements to be heard and examined in a court of law for the first time. “We commend the Supreme Court for this just decision to step back from the brink of executing a man who is probably innocent. Troy Davis has spent 18 years on death row for a crime he likely did not commit. Thanks to the wisdom of the Supreme Court he will get his long overdue day in court,“ says Benjamin Todd Jealous, NAACP President and CEO. “It is the unjust reality of the death penalty in our nation that far too many innocent men who are executed– a travesty that cannot be rectified or reversed – are poor or people of color. The Supreme Court’s decision today affirms the integrity of our criminal justice system when it works as it should,” states Jealous. Troy Davis has been on death row for 18 years for the killing of Mark MacPhail, a white police officer in Savannah, Georgia. “The NAACP along with many other groups have been working tirelessly on behalf of Troy and the MacPhail family to bring the real killer of Officer MacPhail to justice and to bring closure to both families,” concluded Benjamin Todd Jealous. “The Georgia State Conference is pleased with today’s Supreme Court decision. Finally Troy Davis will be able to have a fair and balanced hearing to prove his innocence,” says Edward Dubose, NAACP Georgia State Conference President. Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has appointed eight members to the Panel for Educational Policy, which was re-established when Governor Paterson signed the New York City school governance legislation into law on Tuesday. The eight members, whom the Mayor announced on his weekly Friday morning radio show on WOR Radio, are Philip A. Berry, Linda Lausell Bryant, Joe Chan , David Chang, Tino Hernandez, Richard L. Menschel, Tomás D. Morales, and Gitte Peng. The Panel’s primary responsibilities include approving educational policies proposed by the Chancellor as well as the Department of Education’s budget, the school capital plan, certain contracts, labor agreements, proposals for closing failing schools and other significant changes in how schools are utilized. Each Borough President has one appointee to the Panel, and members will elect a chair at the first meeting. The Panel previously existed from 2002 until the school governance legislation lapsed earlier this summer. “The work of the Panel for Educational Policy is critical to maintaining the bold reforms we have initiated since gaining control of schools in 2002, and to making sure that each student has access to a quality public school education,” said Mayor Bloomberg. “This marks the last step in re-establishing the school governance that has allowed our schools and students to make so much progress over the last seven years and will allow us to keep working to improve our schools.” The eight members appointed by Mayor Bloomberg are: Philip A. Berry is the president of the management consulting firm Philip Berry Associates LLC and the vice chair- Michael Bloomberg man of CUNY Board of Trustees. He brings more than 25 years of experience in human resources management to a school system with more than 136,000 employees. Linda Lausell Bryant, who has a child in a public middle school in Brooklyn, is the executive director of Inwood House, a nationally-recognized innovator in teen pregnancy prevention, youth development and family support programs. She manages and directs the nonprofit’s dayto-day operations, including the 36-bed maternity residence and other programs helping some 4,000 youth annually. Joe Chan, who has one child in a public Pre-K program in Brooklyn and a second in a Brooklyn public elementary school, was appointed as the first president of the Downtown Brooklyn Partnership in September 2006. As president of the Partnership, Chan works closely with City agencies, elected officials, businesses, cultural organizations, and the real estate industry to spur new and continued investment in (the city). David C. Chang, the chancellor of the Polytechnic Institute of New York University, is an internationally-recognized scholar in the fields of engineering, science, and electromagnetics. As president of Polytechnic University in Brooklyn prior to its reorganization, Chang increased enrollment by sixty percent. Tino Hernandez is president and chief executive officer of Samaritan Village, Inc. one of the largest nonprofit providers and community-based, substance abuse treatment services in New York . He is responsible for the administration and oversight of the Agency’s ten facilities which include drug-free residential, methadone-to-abstinence and out-patient modalities, as well as homeless and senior services. Richard L. Menschel is senior director of Goldman Sachs, a firm he joined in 1959. He is director and president of the Charina Endowment Fund, a member of the Dean’s Council at the Harvard School of Public Health, chairman emeritus of the Board of Trustees for the Hospital for Special Surgery, and a Vice President and Trustee of the Morgan Library & Museum Tomás D. Morales was appointed by the Board of Trustees of the City University of New York to serve as the third president of the College of Staten Island in June of 2007. An educator and administrative leader in higher education for over 32 years, Morales is one of the few higher education administrators in the United States who have held senior administrative positions at the three largest public university systems in the nation. Gitte Peng, a new mother and an independent documentary filmmaker and field producer for Better Than Fiction Productions, served for five years as the senior education policy advisor to Deputy Mayor Dennis Walcott. There she played a lead role in crafting and implementing the school governance reform legislation establishing mayoral control of the schools, advised on all issues of education policy and reform, and developed and oversaw education strategies and initiatives throughout the system. Ex- Gov. Dean calls public option indispensable Former Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean, a leading figure in the liberal wing of his party, said Monday he doubts there can be meaningful health care reform without a direct government role. Dean urged the Obama administration to stand by statements made early on in the debate in which it steadfastly insisted that such a public option was indispensable to genuine change, saying that Medicare and the Veterans Administration are “two very good programs that have been around for a long time.” Dean appeared on morning news shows Monday amid increasing indications the Obama White House is retreating from the public option in the face of vocal opposition from Republicans and some vocal partici- pants at a town-hall-style meetings around the country. The former Vermont governor was asked on NBC’s “Meet the Press” about President Barack Obama’s statement over the weekend that the public option for insurance coverage was “just a sliver” of the overall proposal. Obama’s health and human services secretary, Kathleen Sebelius, advanced that line, telling CNN Sunday that a direct government role in a system intended to provide virtually universal coverage was “not the essential element.” Dean, a physician, argued that a public option is fair and said there must be such a choice in any genuine shake up of the existing system. “You can’t really do health reform without it,” he said. Dean maintained that the health insur- Howard Dean ance industry has “put enormous pressure on patients and doctors” in recent years. He called a direct government role “the entirety of health care reform. It isn’t the entirety of insurance reform ... We shouldn’t spend $60 billion a year subsidizing the insurance industry.” Dean also said he doesn’t foresee any Republican support for a public option. “I don’t think the Republicans are interested and in order to have a bipartisan bill, you’ve got to have both sides interested,” he said. The shift in the administration’s stance on a government-run insurance program leaves open a chance for compromise with Republicans that probably would enrage Obama’s liberal supporters but could deliver a muchneeded victory on a top domestic priority. Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., who is co-chairman of the Middle Class Caucus, said that “leaving private insurance companies the job of controlling the costs of health care is like making a pyromaniac the fire chief.” Officials from both political parties are looking for concessions while Congress is on an August recess. Facing tough audiences, lawmakers and the White House are looking for a way to cover the nation’s almost 50 million uninsured while maintaining political standing. Sebelius said the White House would be open to co-ops instead of a public option — a sign that Democrats want a compromise so they can declare a victory. Under a proposal by Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., consumer-owned nonprofit cooperatives would sell (Continued on page 33) The New York Beacon (USPS 011-156), serving Metropolitan New York is published weekly by Smith Haj Group 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:NewYorkbeacon@yahoo.com, The New York Beacon Subscription rate: $35.00 per year. Rev. Joseph Lowery Lowery continues search for justice at awards gala By Hazel Trice Edney NNPA Editor-in-Chief WASHINGTON (NNPA) – Within the same hour that Rev. Joseph Lowery received America’s highest civilian honor, the civil rights icon – still at the White House – declared war on the “myth” that America is now a “post-racial” nation. “The concept of a post racial era is a myth created by media and it ought to be dispersed,” said Lowery, responding to a question from the NNPA News Service in the White House press room. “We are not post racial.” Among 16 people to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Barack Obama, America’s first African-America president in the East Room of the White House on Aug. 12, Lowery – awarded for his pio- neering and lifetime achievements in fighting for civil rights – told a group of reporters that the struggle is not nearly over. “I haven’t done nearly as much as I should have done. None of us have. …In spite of all the progress we’ve made – and we’ve come a long way - we still have a mighty long way to go,” he said. He said the arrest of Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates by Cambridge police officer James Crowley in his own home was “clear evidence that race is still a significant factor in life in America and they still don’t get it.” He explained, “I remember when I used to lecture young people on how to deal with the police: ‘If the police confronts you, keep your hands in the air and say a little prayer.’ And that (Continued on page 22) Sydney Poitier About a dozen people carrying guns, including one with a military-style rifle, milled among protesters outside the convention center where President Barack Obama was giving a speech Monday — the latest incident in which protesters have openly displayed firearms near the president. Gun-rights advocates say they’re exercising their constitutional right to bear arms and protest, while those who argue for more gun control say it could be a disaster waiting to happen. Phoenix police said the guntoters at Monday’s event, including the man carrying an AR15 semi-automatic rifle slung over his shoulder, didn’t need permits. No crimes were committed, and no one was arrested. The man with the rifle declined to be identified but told The Arizona Republic that he was carrying the assault weapon because he could. “In Arizona, I still have some freedoms,” he said. Phoenix police Detective J. Oliver, who monitored the man at the downtown protest, said police also wanted to make sure no one decided to harm him. “Just by his presence and people seeing the rifle and people knowing the president was in town, it sparked a lot of emotions,” Oliver said. “We were keeping peace on both ends.” Last week, during Obama’s health care town hall in Portsmouth, N.H., a man carrying a sign reading “It is time to water the tree of liberty” stood outside with a pistol strapped to his leg. “It’s a political statement,” he told The Boston Globe. “If you don’t use your rights, then you lose your rights.” Police asked the man to move away from school property, but he was not arrested. Fred Solop, a Northern Arizona MADAM SECRETARY — President Barack Obama greets Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s former secretary Helen Kogel Denton during the 110th Veterans of Foreign Wars National Convention Monday, Aug. 17, 2009, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Matt York) University political scientist, said the incidents in New Hampshire and Arizona could signal the beginning of a disturbing trend. “When you start to bring guns to political rallies, it does layer on another level of concern and significance,” Solop said. “It actually becomes quite scary for many people. It creates a chilling effect in the ability of our society to carry on honest communication.” He said he’s never heard of someone bringing an assault weapon near a presidential event. “The larger the gun, the more menacing the situation,” he said. Phoenix was Obama’s last stop on a four-day tour of western states, including Montana and Colorado. Authorities in Montana said they received no reports of any- one carrying firearms during Obama’s health care town hall near Bozeman on Friday. About 1,000 people both for and against Obama converged at a protest area near the Gallatin Field Airport hangar where the event took place. One person accused of disorderly conduct was detained and released, according to the Gallatin Airport Authority. Heather Benjamin of Denver’s Mesa County sheriff’s department, the lead agency during Obama’s visit there, said no one was arrested. Arizona is an “open-carry” state, which means anyone legally allowed to have a firearm can carry it in public as long as it’s visible. Only someone carrying a concealed weapon is required to have (Continued on page 22) Finally, King of Pop will be laid to rest among the famous Joe Jackson, the father of the late pop icon Michael Jackson, said Monday the famous star will be buried in Holly Terrace in Forest Lawn Memorial on Aug. 29, which would have been Michael’s 51st birthday. The Great Mausoleum at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, Calif., is burial chamber of famous Hollywood screen legends that include Clark Gable, W.C. Fields, Red Skelton and Jean Harlow among many others. The private ceremony will be limited to family and close friends, a family member said. All of Michael’s five brothers plan to be pallbearers. The family had delayed burying Michael for weeks, fearing the ghouls could try to desecrate the Michael Jackson gravesite. Meanwhile, a judge on Monday traveling exhibition dedicated to approved a deal for the sale of the King of Pop, amid objections Michael Jackson merchandise, but from the singer’s mother. delayed making a decision on a Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff, who is overseeing matters related to Jackson’s estate, approved the deal between the co-executors of Jackson’s will and Bravado International Group, a division of Universal Music Group owned by Vivendi SA. But Beckloff postponed until Friday a decision on whether to approve concert promoter AEG Live’s plans for a traveling exhibition of Jackson memorabilia. He did so amid objections from attorneys for Jackson’s mother, Katherine, who said the planned exhibition may not bring enough money to the estate. On Aug. 7, Beckloff approved a deal between Jackson’s estate, AEG Live and Columbia Pictures, a division of Sony Corp, for a movie to be released October 30 using footage from the pop star’s final rehearsals. The executors of Jackson’s will, longtime attorney John Branca and music executive John McClain, have (Continued on page 22) NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com A man openly carrying assault 3 weapon attends Obama protest Clinton brokers lower HIV drug prices with pharmaceutical firms NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 4 By J. Zamgba Browne Special to NY Beacon C. T. Vivian C.T. Vivian marks birthday with star studded events The C. T. Vivian Leadership Institute hosted the 85th birthday celebration for the Reverend Dr. C. T. Vivian on Friday, July 31, at the Sheraton Atlanta Hotel. Dr. Vivian, a renowned minister, author, educator, community activist, and humanitarian, was a close friend and lieutenant of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. during the American Civil Rights Movement. His birthday commemoration, themed Leadership Now: Passing the Torch, included a full day of activities including a Discussion Summit ; a Networking Mixer; and the main attraction, Narratives of my Life: A Spiritual Journey , which featured passing the torch to a new generation of leadership. The Discussion Summit — Leadership Now: Passing the Torch, hosted by Angela Yvonne Robinson, Derrick Boazman, and Alisha Thomas Morgan, offered an occasion to recall some of Dr. Vivian’s history-making moments in time such as the confrontation at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, AL.,. Featured speakers and presenters at this event included Warren Ballentine, Elizabeth Omilami, Dick Gregory, Phyllis Yvonne Stickney and Isaiah Washington. Alisha Thomas Morgan, Georgia State legislator; Jovita Moore, WSB TV anchor; and Isaiah Washington, actor, hosted the evening dinner party Narratives of My Life: A Spiritual Journey. Presentations were made by Monica Pearson, George Andrews, Henrietta Antoinin, Derrick Boazman, and others. Leadership Torches were passed by Rev. Dr. Teresa Hairston and Rev. Dr. Gerald Durley to those individuals who participated in the “passing the torch” discussions earlier in the day. Entertainment for the event was provided by Sinfo-Nia Youth Orchestra and the Youth Ensemble of Atlanta. “Narratives” of Dr. Vivian’s life were written and published in a journal that is offered for sale by the C. T. Vivian Leadership Institute, the non-profit organization founded by Dr. Vivian. The Institute is committed to developing minority communities and organizational leaders through relevant issues and meaningful programs. With his family surrounding him, the evening closed with Dr. Vivian giving his own narrative and recalling stories about his life and the people who influenced him. Commenting on the program, the exuberant Dr. Vivian said, “I really like this (the format). I never thought about doing this before; but it’s very effective. It’s more personal and allows people a close-up view of my life in the movement.” For additional information about the C. T. Vivian Leadership Institute, please contact ctvivianleadership@yahoo.com or visit the website at www.ctvivian.org . New data says Detroit No. 1 in unemployment DETROIT (NNPA) - The 82 percent Black Detroit region continues to lead the country’s metropolitan areas in unemployment with a rate of 17.1 percent, according to data recently released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor and Statistics. The Detroit-Livonia-Dearborn area reported a rate of 18.5 percent, the Warren-TroyFarmington Hills area reported a rate of 16.2 percent and Michigan’s overall unemploy- ment rate recently rose to 15.2 percent. Senate Democrats have been pushing to pass the unemployment modernization legislation that would secure $138.9 million from federal funds to help Michigan’s displaced workers. The House passed their two-bill unemployment modernization package months ago, but the bills have been ignored in the Senate Committee on Commerce and Tourism since. Former President Bill Clinton has reached an agreement with two pharmaceutical companies, Pfizer and Mylan to lower their prices of medicines for patients with drug-resistant HIV in developing countries. Pfizer commits to improve access through a 60 percent decrease to $1 per dose on drug to treat tuberculosis in patients taking second-line HIV/AIDS medications. The new agreements on HIV and TB – the leading cause of death of people with HIV – reinforce calls for more integrated prevention and treatment of the two diseases. “Thanks to the work of my foundation’s HIV/AIDS Initiative, two million people living with HIV/AIDS are now able to access lifesaving treatment, said President Clinton. “But their continued survival depends on uninterrupted access to medicines and quality and affordable health care throughout their entire life,” he added. The former President said Monday’s announcement will help ensure “we can sustain treatment over a lifetime and better treat patients with both HIV and TB, two key steps in Bill Clinton turning the tide of the global HIV/AIDS pandemic.” Addressing the need for more affordable second-line ARVs, Mylan and Matrix, a Mylan company, are making available four drugs – atazanavir (ATV), ritonavir (RTV), tenofovir (TDF), and lamivudine (3TC) – needed to enable once-daily treatment of patients who have developed resistance to standard first- line ARVs. The four drugs will be available in pills, with tenofovir and lamivudine combined into a single bill. The three pills were made available this week as separate products, with a total price of less than $475 annually. Matrix will also sell the pills together in one package – a “second-line-in-box” – at $425 annually starting in 2010. The products and prices will be available to governments that are members of the Clinton Foundation’s Procurement Consortium across Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean. Mylan Chief Executive Officer Robert J. Coury said, “Ensuring sustainable access to effective treatments in the developing world is a critical element in the global fight against HIV/AIDS.” “Mylan and Matrix are proud to continue our commitment of creating and introducing innovative and affordable pharmaceutical solutions. “This includes our ‘secondline-in-box,’ which will reduce patient pill burden and facilitate patient compliance. Our affordable, heat-stable version of ritonavir also represents another advance in the development of products that can withstand environmental conditions in parts of the world where treatment is desperately needed,” he added. NAACP urges end to disruptive strategies over health care debate By J. Zamgba Browne Special to NY Beacon The nation’s leading civil rights organization has called for an end to what it described as the “disruptive strategies” designed to distract from a serious discussion needed over health care and encourages a fair and civil debate. “Opponents of health care reform and partisan activists have gone too far by stooping to deplorable antics during these discussions” said NAACP President Benjamin T. Jealous. “Their intent to disrupt the political process, and employ racially offensive tactics, including painting of a Nazi swastika on Rep. Scott’s door, are deplorable, unproductive and flat out wrong,” he added. Instead of spinning a web of myths and mistrusts about health care, Jealous said opponents of the current plan before Congress should be engaging in thoughtful, productive discussion with their elected officials. Hilary O. Shelton, director of the NAACP’s Washington Bureau said the country’s health system is badly broken, and that what is even sadder is that instead of engaging in thoughtful and productive dialogue, President Obama adversaries are turning to “hate mongering, sensationalism and shout-downs to try and prevent an informed discussion and sway the court of public opinion through fear and intimidation. “Opponents of health care reform need to move away from intimidation and name calling and allow the American people to engage their elected representatives on the crucial issue of health care reform,” he added. While health care reform moves through Congress, the NAACP said it is working hard to ensure that any health care reform package provides full health care coverage that is affordable to every individual, family and business and covers all pre-existing conditions. The NAACP also wants the plan to contain standard, comprehensive health care benefits that meet everyone’s needs, from preventive to chronic care, provides individuals with choice of a private or public health care plan. The NAACP also wants an initiative that includes a new public health care plan that will provide guaranteed backup which will always be there to ensure quality, affordable health care coverage no matter what. Also a plan that will ensure quality in health care access, treatment, research, and resources to people and communities of color and stronger health services in low-income communities. “In the U.S. today, Shelton said skin color, ethnic background and where one lives can not only influence an individual’s health care and quality, they can determine them.” He said while medical science has made a lot of advances over the last 10 years, the gains made by the discovery of new drugs and treatments have not passed on to the deprived segments of the nation’s population. 5 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Ex-Congressman Jefferson is found guilty on 11 of 16 counts NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 6 Tommy Defoe sued for his right to wear Confederate garb to high school. (Courtesy Photo) Judge tosses student suit to wear Confederate flag Special to the NNPA from the Varlan said in his decision Afro-American Newspapers that Defoe’s free-speech rights to display the Confederate (NNPA) - A federal judge last battle flag in 2006 were propweek threw out a free-speech erly limited by school officials lawsuit brought by a former who “reasonably forecasted a Tennessee high school stu- material and substantial disrupdent who wore clothing bear- tion to the school environment” ing the Confederate flag. if the clothing was permitted. Tommy Defoe sued after he “We’re going to provide a was sent home and then sus- dress code that is conducive to pended for insubordination in learning and that it will not bring 2006 for wearing a T-shirt and attention to one individual or a belt buckle with the flag to group of individuals,” Larry Anderson County High School Foster, Anderson County outside Knoxville, Tenn. Defoe School Superintendent, told a claimed he wanted to display local Tennessee TV station. pride in his Southern heritage. H o w e v e r, i n t h e B l o u n t The case was tried a year ago County case, racial tensions led and ended with a hung jury. A t o a f i g h t a n d a s c h o o l new trial had been scheduled, lockdown, Defoe’s attorney, but in his decision U.S. District Van Irion, told the TV station. Judge Tom Varlan cited a fed“We came close to winning at eral court ruling which upheld the last trial and this ruling is a Confederate flag ban result- essentially saying you have no i n g f r o m a c a s e i n n e a r b y chance of winning,” Irion said. Blount County. “We are stunned.” Special to the NNPA from the Louisiana Weekly NEW ORLEANS (NNPA) William Jefferson, Louisiana’s first Black congressman since Reconstruction, was found guilty on 11 of 16 counts in a high-profile case that attracted national attention after federal investigators recovered $90,000 in cash hidden in a freezer in the congressman’s home. After the decision was announced on Wednesday, Aug. 5, in Alexandria, Va.,, U.S. Attorney Dana Boente told the small army of reporters outside the courthouse, ”Congressman Jefferson had a contract with the citizens of Louisiana and the people of the United States and he owed them his honest services and he violated that trust. He sold his office and that’s what brought us here today.” “It should be a clear signal that no public official — and certainly not a U.S. Congressman — can put their office up for sale and betray that office. It cannot be tolerated,” Boente added. “No person, not even a congressman, is above the law. Ninety-thousand dollars in a freezer is not a gray area. It’s a violation.” “I’m holding up,” a visibly shaken Jefferson told reporters who asked him how he was doing after the verdict. His attorneys said they plan to appeal the conviction. “We didn’t think they proved that case, we didn’t think they proved anything,” Jefferson defense attorney Robert Trout said with Jefferson at his side. “We have very strong legal issues to appeal on, we’ve been fighting this issues since the day of indictment and feel very strong about them.” Sentencing was scheduled for Oct. 30. Jefferson faces up to 150 years in prison. The former congressman can appeal his conviction and was not taken into custody. Jurors returned to court and decided that Jefferson must forfeit $470,000 in alleged bribes and 30 million shares of Former Congressman William Jefferson stock he received through two technology companies — iGate and W2-IBBS, Limited. The former congressman, his wife and daughters helped promote iGate as a company that could deliver affordable, highspeed Internet access to underdeveloped countries in Africa that might otherwise not be able to afford it. W2-IBBS, Limited was a company established by the Jefferson clan under the ownership of Lori Mody, who later turned out to be a key FBI informant. Less than two hours after the verdict was read, federal prosecutors released FBI tapes showing a conversation Jefferson had in a hotel restaurant with Moody as well as footage of Moody handing over a briefcase to the congressman that was kept in the trunk of her car. For some, Congressman William Jefferson’s rise to power was the quintessential rags-toriches story. One of nine children born in Lake Providence, Louisiana to parents who did not complete high school, William Jennings Jefferson used education to lift himself out of poverty. After graduating from G. W. Griffin High School in 1965, Jefferson went on to earn a bachelor’s degree from Southern UniversityBaton Rouge. After Southern, Jefferson was commissioned a second lieutenant in the United States Army and served in a reserve capacity until 1975. He earned a law degree from Harvard University in 1972 and an LLM in taxation from Georgetown University Law Center in 1996. He began practicing law in the early 1970s while still serving as a clerk for Judge Alvin B. Rubin of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. Jefferson served as a legislative assistant to U.S. Senator J. Bennett Johnston, Jr., of Louisiana from 1973 to 1975. Jefferson moved to New Orleans in 1976 and was elected to the Louisiana Senate three years later, where he served until 1990. He launched two unsuccessful bids to become mayor of New Orleans , losing first to incumbent Dutch Morial in the election of 1982, and subsequently (Continued on page 35) NAACP mourns passing of first woman chair of Directors Bd. The NAACP last week issued a statement about the death of Margaret Bush Wilson, an activist lawyer, who became the first Black woman to the chair the NAACP board of directors. “ The NAACP family is saddened by the passing of Margaret Bush Wilson, an activist and lawyer who was the first African American woman to chair the NAACP Board of Directors.,” the statement said. Mrs. Wilson died on Aug. 11 at the age of 90. “Margaret Bush Wilson’s passion for legal equity and social justice provide the framework for which many of our civil rights victories have been fought and won” said NAACP Chairman of the Board of Directors Julian Bond. “The NAACP has lost a champion and the world has lost a pioneer. Margaret Bush Wilson served as an NAACP board member and board chairman and a path breaking Missouri lawyer.” The importance of the NAACP and its mission were instilled in Wilson early in life, as both of her parents were active in the St. Louis Branch of the NAACP, of which she became a member as a youth. Following her graduation from Talladega College, in 1940, she entered Lincoln University School of Law in Missouri, set up one year earlier after the Supreme Court ruled that Black stu- Margaret Bush Wilson dents must be admitted to the University of Missouri Law School or provide equal educational opportunities elsewhere. In 1953, following her graduation, she incorporated black brokers, organized by her father, who brought the successful Shelley vs. Kramer case to the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1956, she began work as volunteer for the St. Louis Branch NAACP when they formed a Job Opportunity Council to get local white businessmen to hire black citizens. In 1958, she became president of the St. Louis Branch. In early 1960, she organized the first statewide NAACP Conference in Missouri which became the Missouri State Conference of NAACP Branches of which she also served as president. She was later elected to the NAACP Board of Directors in 1963 and was a member for the next 12 years, until her election as chairman in 1975 and served in this position for nine years through 1983. After her election as chairman, when male board members inquired “What shall we call you? chairperson? chairlady? she responded “As long as you recognize that I‘m chairman of the board, I don’t care what you call me.” “Margaret Bush Wilson was the consummate NAACP leader, and her steadfast commitment to the Association was unparalleled,” (Continued on page 35) 7 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 8 Editorial They don’t dislike health care, they dislike Obama New York Beacon By Julianne Malveaux Walter Smith: Publisher & Editor-in-Chief Miatta Haj Smith: Co-Publisher & Executive Editor William Egyir: Managing Editor Michael Vick has paid his dues By George E. Curry NNPA Columnist When it was announced that Michael Vick had been signed by the Philadelphia Eagles, echoes of “Who Let the Dogs Out?” became popular again. Bigmouths on sports radio, proposed some new lyrics for the Eagles’ fight song: “Die, Fido, die…” The auction site eBay offered Michael Vick chew toys for dogs. Some fans threatened to cancel their prized and limited season tickets and others were standing in line, hoping they would follow through on their threat. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), the animal rights groups, made clear that it plans to continue hounding the pro quarterback. “PETA and millions of decent football fans around the world are disappointed that the Eagles decided to sign a guy who hung dogs from trees. He electrocuted them with jumper cables and held them under water,” PETA spokesman Dan Shannon told the Associated Press. There was no doubt that Vick’s treatment of dogs was horrifying and I described such acts in detail in an August 27, 2007 column. http://www.georgecurry.com/ columns/michael-vick-let-thedogs-out But some so-called animal rights hypocrites remain critical of Vick while refusing to challenge state laws that provide licenses to those who hunt deer and other innocent animals. And the “animal rights” groups are not the only cowards. As a nation, we like to say how much we believe in forgiveness and pat ourselves on the back for giving someone a second chance. In reality, however, there is a strong revenge streak that remains even after a person has paid for his or her offence. Vick was the No. 1 draft pick in the 2001 draft. The Atlanta Falcons signed him to a 10-year, $130 million contract, making him the highest paid player in the league. After the dog fighting charges surfaced, Vick was banned indefinitely by the NFL and eventually filed for bankruptcy. He was part of an underground dog fighting ring in rural Virginia and pled guilty to running an operation that killed at least eight dogs that failed to do well in test fights. He decided to plead guilty after his three co-defenders had agreed to testify against him. Vick served a year and a half in federal prison. During that period, he was visited by Tony Dungy, the former coach of the Indianapolis Colts. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has conditionally reinstated Vick on July 27, meaning the earliest he can play in the preseason is Aug. 27. The most inspiring part of the Vick saga is the role played by Eagle quarterback Donovan McNabb. He told ESPN.com, “I pretty much lobbied to get him here. I believe in second chances and what better place to get a second chance than here with this group of guys.” When was the last time you lobbied your company to hire someone who could possibly replace you? And McNabb’s enthusiasm rubbed off on Head Coach Andy Reid, who lobbied Team President Joe Banner and owner Jeffrey Lurie. The Eagles signed Vick to a two-year deal: $1.6 million and a second-year option worth $5.2 million, plus incentives that could total up to $3 over the two years of the contract. Ironically, while the NFL is gradually bringing Vick back into acceptance, it has wasted no time exploiting his name. Even though Vick has yet to be fully reinstated, NFLShop.com is already selling replicates of Vick’s Eagles jersey. As sports blogger Jeff Schultz notes, “The NFL is not ready for Vick to be the face of the league – but it is ready for Vick to be the face on the ledger.” Of course, the Eagles could have avoided an unneeded public controversy by staying away from Vick. While they don’t go looking for controversy, they don’t run from it. Don’t forget that this was a team that took a chance on controversial wide receiver Terrell Owens. (Continued on page 33) NNPA Columnist I am fascinated by the town hall meetings that are happening around the country and the ire, real or imagined, that is being heaped on members of Congress who are simply attempting to share information with their constituencies about ways our government hopes to help 50 million uninsured Americans get health insurance. There are some Americans who honestly oppose a government role in providing health care, some who dishonestly (like Sarah Palin) have twisted provisions to end up with “death panels” that do not exist but frighten many people, and some who have no problem with health care, per se, but have jumped in on this one as a way of pouncing on a weakness they perceive in the Obama Administration. They don’t dislike health care, they dislike President Barack Obama. They see blood in the water and so, like the sharks they are, they are going after it. Here’s the evidence – the discussion is shrill and uncivil. It is long on emotion and short on facts. I hesitate to say that there is a racial element in this opposition because those who oppose national health insurance were pretty nasty when the Clintons were attempting to implement those policies (remember Harry and Louise?). Still, I never thought a debate about health insurance could turn so vituperative, and in sleepy August, too. While politics is the art of compromise, President Obama and his team should hold the line on health insurance. It is an essential part of economic recovery and economic vitality. How many people file bankruptcy because, uninsured, they have encountered health care bills for an unplanned illness? How many allow small illnesses to become large ones because they can’t get to a doctor? We know there are 50 million uninsured adults and children. What kind of productivity drain exists because people don’t have the health insurance they need? After being battered by the astroturf organizations playing at real opposition, President Obama seems ready to step back and perhaps abandon the idea of giving Americans the option of government-run insurance. This represents capitulation on a key point, preserves the so-called free market forces that Republicans want, and postpones the reckoning that must take place about health care until a future time when another leader (or perhaps this one in a second term) is able to deal with comprehensive reform. One in seven of our GDP dollars are spent on health care, and it is inexcusable that so many Americans are pushed to the periphery of the system. Those of us with jobs that provide benefits clearly have the best health insurance options, while those who are gainfully self-employed have some options, but pay more dearly for insurance. Those who are separated from the labor market and those who work at low wages often do not have health insurance, or they simply can’t afford it. In some cases, premiums will take up to a third of a worker’s paycheck. That’s when people decide to take a chance and pray they won’t get sick. While the government-run insurance option is not the central fact of the Obama plan, it is an important part of it. There are Democratic members of Congress who will not support health care without this feature. Why? Because the private sector has heretofore been unwilling to insure the uninsured. Government is stepping in because the market hasn’t worked for everyone. But the free market advo- (Continued on page 33) Protestors are testing President Obama’s fortitude By Ron Walters NNPA Columnist It is time for testing on several fronts as the health care debate becomes the platform for a general uprising over President Barack Obama’s governing program. His very life is being tested, as people, like William Kostric, show up to a New Hampshire Town hall meeting with a gun strapped to his leg. In an interview with Kostric, he claimed his right under New Hampshire law, to carry a weapon openly, but he also had a sign with him carrying the words saying that “it is time to water the tree of lib- erty.” This was a phrase from Thomas Jefferson (which) inferred that liberty often required the shedding of blood, and it had been the same phrase carried by Timothy McVeigh when he blew up the federal court house in Oklahoma City several year ago. The strange thing about this is that there are no news reports of the Secret Service securing this individual quickly, given that the President of the United States was there. Federal law, which should taken precedent in that case, prohibits any citizens from threatening the President of the United States and Kostric most certainly would have seemed threatening having a loaded weapon on his person. When I saw that, my mind went back to 1988 when the Secret Service uncovered a plot by some White supremacists in St. Louis to kill Rev. Jesse Jackson when he was running for President. Their admitted motive, captured on tape by an informant was that, he was getting too close to being the president. Barack Obama is already the president and one doesn’t have to think too much to sense the haters plotting to do harm whenever they have a reasonable opportunity. Rather than the media denouncing such practices and the vitriol that has accompanied these town hall meetings, they appear to want more drama, following the President out to town hall meetings in the Mid-West in anticipation that he will be confronted personally. He has done well in those settings, but you could not tell it from the subsequent reportage. Rather than praising him for his clarity in explaining difficult concepts of health care that are on the table, he is being chastised for not having said this or that, done this or that, and taking little leadership. Where have these people been? What guides their conclusions? I understand the polling that has taken place much better than the opinions of the pundits. The questions in recent polls have asked how has Obama handled the health care debate have found him at 43 percent, with 48 percent thinking he could have done better. But it is more difficult to handle a debate where fear-mongering is the most potent resource and where the confusion around the lack of a settled piece of legislation feeds into the fear and indecision. The insurance industry is a master at this. They have fielded television ads that appear to support reform, but are larded with subtle questions that propose to support a “bi-partisan” solution, meaning (Continued on page 33) 9 Obama is bringing back Title VI of the Civil Rights Act By Harry Alford NNPA Columnist Oh, it has been a long drought in Washington, DC. One of the most precious components of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 has been diminishing at a constant rate at the federal level. It didn’t matter who was President or Attorney General. This law was being ignored, diverted and misrepresented. It was just a shame and all civil rights groups seem not to know exactly what it is. Their focus is on Title VII which deals with employment and promotion. Title VI is the standard for all affirmative action programs concerning procurement, funding, and other business activity. All of the affirmative action programs within the Small Business Administration, US Department of Transportation, etc. evolved from implementation of Title VI. The main watchdog and enforcer of Title VI is the Civil Rights Division, U.S. Department of Justice. The responsibilities are the management of the Assistant Attorney General in that office. In essence, if we are to see a turnaround in Title VI enforcement it will come from Attorney General Eric Holder with the blessing of President Obama. There are encouraging signs that show that is starting to happen. After the Honorable Parren J. Mitchell (D – Maryland) wrote and carried through Congress the pieces of legislation that started the development of minority businesses in the federal procurement programs, our businesses started to grow. It even brought the emergence of Black Enterprise Magazine’s Top 100 Black Business listing. Growth was ever present and the foes also entered the scene. The Reagan Administration came into power and Title VI started to be in danger. Attorney General Ed Meese decided to strip the staff of the Title VI department of the Civil Rights Division. It shrunk to one person and his/her duties were to be solely on the Americans with Disabilities Act. That’s right the main focus on Title VI was now people with disabilities not affirmative action for minority and women businesses. In essence, the enforcer of Title VI, the Department of Justice, became negligent of that duty. The Bush Administration followed the two Reagan administrations and it was no better. The neglect carried on. If fact, he threatened not to renew the whole Civil Rights Act when the renewal fell before him. However, he recanted under pressure and extended it. The first Clinton Administration came in and Deval Patrick, now the democratic Governor of Massachusetts, took the reigns of Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights. He was brilliant. He replenished the staff and began shaking things up. It appeared that the good days President Obama were going to return. Progress lasted through the first Clinton Administration but things started to change as he neared re-election in 1996. The Clinton Administration started to back pedal in face of strong Republican attacks on affirmative action. Deval Patrick would announce that he was leaving and we started to see things falling apart. The final betrayal came after Minister Louis Farrakhan successfully pulled off the Million Man March. It was like President Clinton decided to do the push back himself by telling the nervous opposition “Don’t worry, I will push back and they are not going to improve their status. He then began his “mend it, don’t end it” program on affirmative action which was, in fact, a sharp lessening of the enforcement. He did it in front of all of us and to this day I am still embittered that the Congressional Black Caucus went along with it without one defection. President George W. Bush would succeed the Clinton Administration and he didn’t have to do a thing. The horror was already in place. There were few gains through the Bush Administration as it was not friendly to construction unions who by the way discriminate against minority businesses, particularly Black ones. Also, his Secretary of HUD Alphonso Jackson broke procurement records for utilization of Black, Hispanic and female businesses respectively. These two actions actually created a good crop of new million dollar businesses within our communities. Still, the Title VI office of the Department of Justice was just a shell. Now comes the Obama Administration and things appear to be changing rapidly under Attorney General Eric Holder. The Acting Assistant Attorney General, Loretta King, under direction of Attorney General Holder has issued a directive to all federal agencies. In that three page directive she makes it very clear that a new day has come and they are bringing Title VI back into enforcement. Not just threatening to cut off funding to those who don’t comply but she is prepared to start litigation to make examples of those who still think it is a joke. This directive can be found on the home page of National Black Chamber of Commerce website. We are motivated and will start to fight again for Title VI and re-open the doors of opportunity at long last. Harry Alford is the co-founder, President/CEO, of the National Black Chamber of Commerce. Website: www.nationalbcc.org. Email: halford@nationalbcc.org Life and death and child health reform By Marian Wright Edelman Child Watch As a child, Devante Johnson’s future seemed to be full of promise. He made excellent grades in school and was a help around the house. His mother, Tamika Scott, worked hard, managing to raise three boys while pursuing a career, buying a house and completing a college degree. Mrs. Scott had a 401(k) retirement fund and private health insurance and was confident she was prepared for unforeseen emergencies. At 29, she took comfort in the belief that her family was secure. But as we reported two years ago, her family’s middle class security crumbled when her doctors told her she had Multiple Sclerosis and strongly urged her to leave her job because the stress of work would make her condition worse. With the dramatic loss of income and insurance, everything she was building began to slip away as she cashed in stocks and used money from her retirement fund to pay bills. Fifteen months later, her problems worsened. Her oldest son, Devante, then 10, was diag- nosed with advanced kidney cancer. Because of the family’s reduced income, the six months of chemotherapy treatments Devante received were covered by Medicaid. At the end of the treatments, the doctors pronounced him cured. Six months later, the cancer returned. Devante and his mother were then told that a new three-year course of chemotherapy, radiation and constant monitoring were critical to Devante’s recovery. As a testament to his character, Devante remained upbeat and optimistic about the new treatment. Tamika Scott didn’t plan to rely on government supported health insurance to protect her children but she had no other option. Devante’s Medicaid coverage was essential for him to receive the life-saving care he required. Two months before the expiration of his Medicaid coverage, she submitted an application for Medicaid renewal to the Texas Department of Human Services, confident that two months was more than sufficient time for the application to be processed to allow her child’s health care to continue without any interruption in coverage. One month before the deadline, she became concerned because she hadn’t received notice that the application had been approved. But there was still time she thought. However, to be on the safe side, Tamika Scott submitted two more completed applications, followed up with dozens of phone calls, and faxed supplemental information. After six weeks, she found out that Devante’s Medicaid application had not been approved and that it was going to be sent for verification of eligibility in the Texas Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP). When she contacted the CHIP agency to check the status of Devante’s application, she was repeatedly told they hadn’t received it. The expiration date for Devante’s coverage came shortly thereafter, and his access to life giving care was cut off. His treatments immediately stopped. Tamika Scott re-mailed and re-faxed the application as she watched her son get sicker with no way to get him the treatment needed to save his life. Devante’s growing tumor became a visibly protruding lump on his back. His pain increased and walking became difficult. He lost twenty pounds. He had to rely on free samples of experimental drugs as the only treatment available to him. But he didn’t give up and never complained. Mrs. Scott inquired on numerous occasions about the status of his application but never got a satisfactory answer. For four months, no one in the Department of Human Services told her the application was lost in the system and had never been processed. With no where else to turn, she appealed to her state representative. Through his intervention, Devante’s health coverage was restored in one day. He was transferred to the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center where he received first rate, comprehensive care. But it was too late. Devante Johnson, courageous to the end, died on March 1, 2007. He was 14. The medical cause of death was complications from advanced cancer. He also died from a shameful and preventable failure of state and federal systems and the lack of a commitment to make sure every child in America gets the health coverage for which they are eligible. That’s why I’m calling on each of you to join us now in demanding that Congress enact child health care reform legislation that simplifies children getting and staying enrolled in health care regardless of where they live in America. To avoid more deaths like Devante’s, access to health care must be simple and seamless. Currently, six million of the nation’s nine million uninsured children are eligible for but not enrolled in Medicaid and CHIP largely because of state-imposed barriers that Congress can and must eliminate this year. These include known obstacles to enrollment like waiting lists and face-to-face interviews. Ultimately, the bill Congress passes must leave children better off than they are now, and in no case should any child be worse off. Congress is not there yet and they need to hear from you. Marian Wright Edelman, whose new book is The Sea Is So Wide And My Boat Is So Small: Charting a Course for the Next Generation, is president of the Children’s Defense Fund. For more information about the Children’s Defense Fund, go to http://www.child rensdefense.org/. NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Opinion African Scene NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 10 Zuma marks 100 days as prez U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton waves as she boards her plane in Abuja, Nigeria, Thursday, Aug. 13, 2009. Clinton departed Nigeria for Liberia Thursday to show the Obama administration’s support for Africa’s first democratically elected female leader, President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. Liberia is the sixth leg of Clinton’s sevennation tour of Africa aimed at promoting democracy and development. Clinton: US sent ‘tough love’ message to Africa By Matthew Lee SANTA MARIA, Cape Verde – Winding up an 11-day African tour, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said Friday she’s optimistic about its future and voiced no regrets about “tough love” messages she gave to government leaders there. “I love coming to Africa,” Clinton said at a joint news conference in Cape Verde with Prime Minister Jose Maria Pereira Neves as she prepared to head back to Washington. “I have been overwhelmed,” the secretary said of her visits to Kenya, South Africa, Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria and Liberia, as well as Cape Verde. “I have been filled with hope and I have seen despair. But I come away with an even greater level of commitment than I had before,” Clinton said. She used the tour to reinforce a message that President Barack Obama brought to Africa earlier this year, a call for leaders to fight corruption, promote democracy, and combat civil strife, disease, violence and squalor wherever it exists. Responding to Clinton, Neves said that “we represent a new and emerging Africa” with progress in the areas of free press, free speech and the rule of law. U.S. officials have said that Cape Verde, a former Portuguese colony off the coast of West Africa, could serve as a model for other African nations as it has held numerous free and fair elections and has taken measures to ensure account- (Continued on page 33) Kenya church leaders speak out against greed (GIN) - Protestant churches in Kenya are warning that greed is destroying the country’s environment, bringing drought, famine, hunger, malnutrition and general scarcity. “We are today reaping the fruits (of) greed and imprudence sowed in the past,” said the Rev. Peter Karanja, of the National Council of Churches on Aug. 6. He urged citizens in the east African country to adopt tree planting as an act of religious and social restoration. Karanja, an Anglican priest, announced the church council’s commitment to planting one million trees each year as the Kenyan government unveiled a power rationing program for the forthcoming three months. The country has been rationing water due to falling volumes in dams. This, according to Karanja, has rendered many businesses useless. “We are incensed ... this outcome is borne by the politicians and political appointees who, because of greed built on a culture of impunity, deliberately continue to destroy our country’s environment by allocating to themselves and their cronies land in our water towers,” said Karanja. At the same time, Kenya’s newly elected Anglican Archbishop Eliud Wabukala, in an August pastoral letter confessed that human beings had not always allowed the earth and its creatures to flourish. “We have too often abused and brought death to the land. We confess that we, especially as churches, have often been indifferent to environmental degradation and that, as a result, we have participated in the destruction,” said Wabukala. South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma is marking his first 100 days in office. Since Mr Zuma was inaugurated the country has slipped into recession and there have been nationwide strikes over pay and protests over services. Opposition parties have criticized Mr Zuma for a lack of leadership and a failure to tackle rampant crime rates. But analysts are giving him cautious approval, and officials say he needs more time to deal properly with the complex problems South Africa faces. Mr Zuma’s party, the African National Congress (ANC), won its fourth consecutive landslide election victory in April. Perhaps the real assessment time will be post World Cup Arun Mehta, Mumbai, India He came to power promising to create thousands of jobs and alleviate poverty, but the recession has hampered his government’s ability to tackle those issues. Strikes over wages and protests by poor South Africans who want better access to basic services such as housing, water and electricity have also tested his government. Trade unions and opposition Mr Zuma visited poor communities during tense protests parties called for drastic action from the ANC, which has been in power for 15 years. Mr Zuma’s response to the unrest was to visit poor communities for a first-hand account of their grievances. He also called for patience from workers who were staging strikes throughout the country. The BBC’s Pumza Fihlani says he seems to have won some fa- vor with the country’s poor who have been desperate to make their voices heard. The main opposition the Democratic Alliance has applauded Mr Zuma’s honesty about the challenges facing the country but say he has not shown “clear leadership” in dealing with them. They say Mr Zuma should be prepared to make enemies to do what is right. Clinton shows U.S. support for Liberia U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Thursday offered high-profile support for Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Africa’s first democratically elected female leader. Torrential rain met Clinton as she arrived in the capital Monrovia, where hundreds of drenched people lined the streets to welcome her, waving American and Liberian flags and holding banners, some of which proclaimed that she was a “woman of substance for Liberia.” Clinton was presented with a key to the city and went immediately into talks with Sirleaf and other top officials and lawmakers to reaffirm U.S. backing for the recovery of the country that was embroiled in back-to-back civil wars from 1989 to 2003. Her visit is also aimed at offer- ing personal support for Sirleaf, a Harvard-trained economist and former finance minister, who has been publicly sanctioned for her past financial support of one of the country’s rebel groups. Liberia’s truth and reconciliation commission has also recommended barring Sirleaf and 50 other high-profile figures from public office for three decades for such support. Sirleaf, 70, acknowledged before the commission in February that she gave up to $10,000 to a rebel group headed by Charles Taylor, viewed by many as the chief architect of Liberia’s conflict. Taylor is now on trial for war crimes committed in neighboring Sierra Leone. Sirleaf, who was elected in 2005, has apologized and said the money she sent while an expatriate was meant for humanitarian services and that she was never a member of his group. Liberia’s wars killed an estimated 250,000 and displaced millions. Liberia’s postwar government set up the truth commission, modeled on the one in post-apartheid South Africa, inviting both victims and perpetrators to retell their version of events. If the legislature approves the commission’s recommendations and they become law before the 2011 presidential poll, it would block Sirleaf’s chance at a second term. Liberia has historically close ties with the U.S. It was founded in 1847 by freed American slaves. Clinton is here on the sixth leg US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, right, of a seven-nation tour of Africa speaks as Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf in aimed at promoting democracy and development. Washington, DC 11 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 12 Opinion: Health care, climate and the progressive movement By Ted Glick The last week or so has been the right-wingers-at-townmeetings moment, and it looks like it’s going to be supplemented by something similar but different: rallies organized by fossil-fuel-supporting corporations in these states: Texas, Georgia, Michigan, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Colorado, Tennessee, Indiana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Florida, South Carolina, Alaska, Illinois, West Virginia, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Nebraska, Missouri and Arkansas. Two days ago Greenpeace released a memo written by the head of the American Petroleum Institute (API) apparently sent to Greenpeace by a lessthan-loyal employee of one of the API member companies to whom it was sent. In the memo it referred to a “series of ‘Energy Citizen’ rallies in about 20 states across the country during the last two weeks of Congress’s August recess. . . API will provide the up-front resources to ensure logistical issues do not become a problem. . .Please indicate to your company leadership your strong support for employee participation in the rallies.” “Energy Citizen,” of course, really means ‘Fossil Fuel Citizen.” Working with groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers, American Farm Bureau, American Conservative Union, Freedom Works and Americans for Tax Reform, you can be sure that the rapidly deepening climate crisis, or the millions of jobs created by a shift to a clean energy economy, or energy independence, or the national security threat of being dependent on Middle East oil—none of these issues will be on the agenda of these particular “energy citizens.” It would be a good thing— more than that, it is imperative— to have a presence of progressive activists at these events, just as it is important that we are at the town hall meetings focused on health care where the right-wingers are attempting to hijack the debate over how we fix a broken and expensive health care system. We need to show them and show the media that the progressive movement, the climate movement and the health care reform movement are not just sitting back, putting our faith in President Obama and Democratic members of the House and Senate to do the right thing. Obama and the extreme right By Bill Fletcher NNPA Columnist I am hoping that you have been reading and watching the news. You may have come across stories about these right-wing mobs that have attempted to disrupt town hall meetings that congress people have organized to discuss healthcare. There are some interesting things about these disruptions: they are virtually all white; they have completely mischaracterized the issue of healthcare and the proposals that President Obama is suggesting; they are openly and subtly racist; and they are angry and threatening to the point of being lunatic. The extreme political Right, largely out of desperation, has decided it must take disruptive measures in order to derail the Obama administration. It is doing this through a combination of appeals to racial fears on the parts of whites (particularly white men) along with tapping into the larger insecurity that nearly everyone is feeling in the context of the current economic crisis. On one level this should not be surprising since the extreme political Right always emerges during times of crisis. What should concern us, however, is that this rabid political Right does not disappear on its own. Their objective is power, and not simply the elimination of Obama and the Obama administration. President Obama, on the other hand, has the tendency to ignore his base and to attempt to BEGIN all negotiations by going to the middle ground. Anyone familiar with negotiations knows that this is a losing strategy. Think about going to buy a car. If the cost of the car is $25,000 and you offer what you believe that the dealer will finally settle on, the dealer will feel no need to actually bargain with you. Instead they will play hard ball and force you off of your position. This is precisely what President Obama has been experiencing. Case in point: national healthcare. President Obama eliminated single-payer national healthcare from the field of negotiations from the beginning, despite the fact that not very long ago, he had supported it. [Note: “single-payer” would be a government system that eliminates the insurance companies and allows individuals to get their healthcare from any medical facility they wish.] Claiming that single payer would never pass, he immediately went to the middle ground. Needless to say, the right-wing defenders of the status quo felt no need to shift their position. A similar problem has emerged around both Iraq and Afghanistan. In the case of Iraq, President Obama has been carrying out a withdrawal. Yet little mention is being made of the US mercenaries still on the ground! In the case of Afghanistan, President Obama, despite significant domestic and international advice, presses ahead with deeper (Continued on page 33) And we need to be there to talk face to face with those from the other side. I am certain, based on many experiences doing just this kind of thing, that if we talk to them with respect and patience, a small number will be willing to consider what we have to say and a larger number will begin to have some doubts. Unfortunately, too many progressive people seem to have the attitude that Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress can take care of things, and they’ve been having it for the last seven months, since Obama took office. I remember hearing about the low turnout at a national conference of the Campaign for America ’s Future, a Democratic thinktank/action center, in early June. The reports that I saw were that there were about half as many people at this event as was true the year before. Then there were the anti-war demonstrations in D.C. and NYC in March on the 6th anniversary of the invasion of Iraq . Taken together, there were a maximum of 10,000 people present, and that may be generous. It is not surprising that after Obama’s historic victory the hundreds of thousands of progressives who worked hard on his campaign would step back from the kind of intense activism many of them engaged in during 2008. This is a normal response when a person’s candidate for President, or any office, wins when it comes to the bulk of campaign volunteers. It does make you wonder, though, about the effectiveness of the Organizing for America operation that Obama handed over to the Democratic National Committee soon after taking office. A front-page article in yesterday’s New York Times, “Health Debate Fails to Ignite Obama’s Web,” explored this issue and, based upon research done in Iowa, came to the conclusion that there is “a sense of fatigue among volunteers being recruited for [the health care] battle.” Could this just possibly have something to do with people’s concerns about the power and influence of the Pentagon, the banks, coal companies, health insurance companies and other powerful corporations within the Obama administration and especially within Congress? You betcha, it sure seems to me. This is why I was pleased to see in my email box today an editorial from the upcoming August 31 issue of The Nation magazine. Entitled “Blue Dog Daze,” it criticized the “conservative” and “Blue Dog” Democrats as “the epitome of a Washington captured by moneyed interests. They aren’t working to ensure that health care reforms are paid for; they are laboring on behalf of insurance companies to protect their obscene profits.” The editorial goes on to say that “what the country needs—what Obama needs, whether he realizes it or not—is an independent, mobilized, progressive citizen’s movement that takes on the corporate lobbies, from Big Pharma to Big Oil to Wall Street; challenges the legislators who are in their pockets; and demands affordable national healthcare, renewable energy, empowerment of workers, regulation of Wall Street and more. That movement should go after the conservatives and the compromised in both parties—anyone who stands in the way of reform.” During these “dog days” of August and into September, a good place for independents who agree with this sentiment to start is the town meetings and ‘Energy Citizen’ rallies. We should be present to speak the truth about what we need, to peacefully confront those who lie and obstruct democratic dialogue, and to engage in just that dialogue with those fellow citizens who are willing to talk. Ted Glick is the policy director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network (http://www.chesapeake climate.org). His past columns and other information can be found at (http://www.tedglick.com). Rape: Torture in the Congo By Nicole C. Lee NNPA Columnist As Secretary Clinton closed her trip to Africa, I was struck by the importance of her trip to Congo and her focus on the rape of women throughout the current brutal conflict. Rape is an absolute violation of sovereignty. I have met many people over the years that have been abused or tortured. I can tell you in no uncertain terms that rape is the most destructive form of torture ever invented. It can destroy the soul of the victim, their family and commu- nity. The insidious way that rape is used in war proves professionals’ claims that rape is an act of violence, not of sex. The rape of women (and sometimes men) in the Congo is the most talked about issue in human rights, but with minimal action. Frankly, for people of African descent, a part of the silence and inaction is our own shame. Let’s get real: these are Black men raping Black women. Militias, paramilitaries, even government troops go into towns and villages and systematically rape and abuse the women and girls. Sometimes the injuries are so severe that the details can’t be printed. No police, no judge, and no judicial system bring these criminals to justice. But we still find it hard to talk about this level of Black-onBlack crime. It is unfathomable how a generation of Central African men have become such villains and women such victims. As people who care about the dignity of Africa, it is imperative that we try to understand this complex situation in order to have an impact in the lives of the people of Congo. First, the seeds of exploitation in the Congo were planted long ago. The first wave of rape began with the rape of the country’s resources beginning in the 1800s. Europeans, in par- ticular the Belgians, came to the Congo to exploit its vast natural resources and to enslave the population. The violation against Congo’s land and people is one of the most vicious untold stories in our recent history. Between 1885- 1905, Congo’s black population was reduced by half because of the vicious treatment at the hands of the Belgians. Congo achieved its statehood in the 1960s, but the exploitation of its natural resources and people continue until this very moment by U.S., European and Chinese corporations. The corporations’ usable investments are minimal, illustrated by the lack of passable roads in the Congo. I am not suggesting that the acceptance of this exploitation automatically leads to the systematic rape of women, but I am saying that the constant degradation and victimization of Congo’s society has left its citizens extremely vulnerable. The realities of the last 20 years have made the women of Eastern Congo particularly vulnerable. Paramilitary groups and government forces fight for control of the Eastern Congo, particularly in the North Kivu province. Many of these groups, such as the Interahamwe, had already committed mass murder and other (Continued on page 33) Pharoh Martin NNPA National Correspondent Michael Vick Michael Vick signs with Philadelphia Special to the NNPA from the St. in preseason practices, workouts and meetings and can play in the Louis American final two preseason games. Once (NNPA) - Quarterback Michael the season begins, Vick may parVick has signed a two-year deal ticipate in all team activities except with the Philadelphia Eagles. The games, and Goodell said he would first year of the deal is for $1.6 consider Vick for full reinstatement million with an option for the sec- by Week 6 (Oct. 18-19) at the latond year at $5.2 million. Vick can est. “I’m a believer that as long as also earn an additional $3 million in incentives over the two years people go through the right process, they deserve a second of the contract. Vick was the No. 1 draft pick in chance,” Eagles coach Andy Reid 2001 by the Atlanta Falcons and said. “He’s got great people on his once the highest-paid player in side; there isn’t a finer person than football. But he has not played Tony Dungy. He’s proven he’s on since 2006 when his career came the right track. “The Eagles went tumbling down. He was con- to the playoffs last season under victed in August 2007 of con- quarterback Donovan McNabb, spiracy and running a dogfight- and are still looking for their eluing operation, sentenced to 23 sive first Super Bowl win. McNabb has led the Eagles to months in federal prison and suspended indefinitely by the five NFC championship games and NFL. one Super Bowl appearance in the But after serving his time and last eight years, and was rewarded being released from home con- with a $5.3 million raise in the finement July 20, NFL commis- offseason. The Eagles tore up his sioner Roger Goodell condition- old contract with two years remainally lifted Vick’s suspension, al- ing, and gave him a new deal worth lowing him to sign with a team. $24.5 million over the next two seaVick can immediately take part sons. WASHINGTON (NNPA) “Seniors have sacrificed” the commercial begins before highlighting hardship experiences unique to the “Greatest Generation” such as World War II and the Great Depression. “And now, seniors are now being asked to sacrifice again. Congress plans to pay for healthcare reform by cutting $500 billion dollars from Medicare.” The commercial was produced by health care reform opponent, 60 Plus Association, a nonprofit organization that bills itself as the “conservative alternative to AARP”. That advertisement goes on to claim that America’s seniors will endure longer waits for care and that cuts will be made to vital medical tests such as cat scans and MRIs. It also rehashes former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin’s controversial and false claims of government-sponsored “death panels” by saying that the government will decide “if older patients are worth the cost”. While 60 Plus Association did not respond to repeated requests by NNPA for an interview, President Obama addressed that specific claim head on during his town hall meeting in New Hampshire on Aug. 11. “A myth that we’ve been hearing about is this notion that somehow we’re going to be cutting your Medicare benefits,” Obama said at the town hall. “We are not. AARP would not be endorsing a bill if it was undermining Medicare, okay?” It is true that President Obama called for a reduction in spending for Medicare and Medicaid to offset the absorbent cost of health care. But the cost is up to $300 billion over the next decade and coverage and benefits will not go anywhere, says Nancy-Ann DeParle, director of the White House Office of Health Reform. While AARP has not endorsed a particular bill per se, AARP says it absolutely supports the cuts as they are meant to streamline Medicare and weed out costly the waste, fraud and abuse that is currently stifling the health care system. ON THE ROAD — President Barack Obama takes health care fight on the road. (CREDIT: White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson) President Obama’s town hall was part of the White House’s stepped up efforts to address the inaccuracies and so-called “myths” that are being circulated by critics trying to derail health care reform. And death panels aren’t the only untruths raising public concern. Vegetative wait periods for care and dire warnings that the push for health care reform will open the door to fullfledge socialism are among much of the misinformation being put out from right wing propagandists to stir public ire and spark incessant anger at town halls. A majority of these claims are false, according to fact-checking website Politifact.com. The White House and supporters of health care reform such as AARP are touting such rhetoric as “baseless smears” and are confronting conservatives head-on with heavy-handed campaigns aimed at debunking such nonsense. The White House recently rolled out a new website www.whi tehouse.gov/realitycheck . And AARP followed suit on its own site as well. The president erred when he stated that AARP endorsed the proposed health care bill. That’s not true according to a statement released by the country’s largest member organization for seniors. “While the President was correct that AARP will not endorse a (Continued on page 35) Palin stands by her discredited ‘death panel’ claim By Matthew Daly WASHINGTON – Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin refused to retreat Thursday from her argument that a proposed health care overhaul would create “death panels,” even though a provision of the bill she cites merely authorizes government reimbursements to doctors for voluntary end-of-life consultations. In a Facebook posting late Wednesday night, Palin argued that the elderly and ailing would be coerced into accepting minimal end-of-life care to reduce health care costs based on the Democratic bill in the House. She criticized President Barack Obama who has said the legislation would not create “death panels” or “basically pull the plug on grandma because we decided that it’s too expensive to let her live anymore.” In the posting titled, “Concerning Death Panels,” Palin wrote: “With all due respect, it’s misleading for the president to describe this section as an entirely voluntary provision that simply increases the information offered to Medicare recipients,” and added, “It’s all just more evidence that the Democratic legislative proposals will lead to health care ra- Sarah Palin tioning.” In fact, the provision in the bill would allow Medicare to pay doctors for voluntary counseling sessions that address endof-life issues. The conversations between doctor and patient would include living wills, making a close relative or a trusted friend your health care proxy, learning about hospice as an option for the terminally ill, and information about pain medications for people suffering chronic discomfort. The sessions would be covered every five years, more frequently if someone is gravely ill. The American Medical Asso- ciation and the National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization support the provision. Yet it has created such a furor that senators decided to exclude it from their version of health care legislation. Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa, the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said in a statement that they “dropped it entirely because of the way they could be misinterpreted and implemented incorrectly.” Palin’s posting comes one day after Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska said that (Continued on page 35) 13 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Obama sets out to debunk health care myths by so-called 60 Plus Association 14 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com children and adolescents healthy Student interns at work with hospital staff North General Hospital hosts summer students The North General Hospital last week hosted 21 students from the New York City Department of Youth and Community Development (DYCD) Summer Youth Employment Program (SYEP) 2009. The seven-week El Barrio Fight Back program, dedicated to disadvantaged youth in the East Harlem community, is funded through the Obama Administration’s economic stimulus program. The program’s goal is to provide NYC youth with summer employment and educational experiences that will enable them to acquire good work habits and develop employment-related skills. The mission of DYCD is to foster quality youth development, promote self-sufficiency and build sustainable communities in New York City through a continuum of youth and community programs by community-based organizations. The 21 North General local students worked in various medical, administrative, and clinical departments. They also attended SYEP educational classes that included workplace readiness, financial literacy, career exploration, higher education exploration, and health education. In addition, North General students are participating in weekly workshops that range from community nursing to financial literacy which the students, with the social services department, planned themselves. Cyril Poindexter, volunteer services coordinator at North General remarked, “Here at North General the students are exposed to all aspects of day-to-day hospital administration from the Diagnostic and Treatment Clinic (D&TC) to health information systems and several are interested in volunteering in the fall after school”. The students work in a wide variety of hospital departments, nursing, rehabilitative medicine, surgery, special services, pathology and operating room (OR) administration. North General also hosted students from he National Health Care Workers’ Union 1199 which is a yearly summer intern program at the hospital. North General Hospital offers a continuum of healthcare. Recognized as a medical and community leader in Harlem, North General Hospital provides its varied communities with state-of-the-art healthcare services, highly qualified doctors and quality treatment centers. In addition to primary healthcare for children, adults and the aging, it offers comprehensive treatment programs in diabetes, obesity, asthma, hypertension, HIV/AIDS, heart disease, stroke, Hepatitis C, cancer, psychiatric disorders and addiction. For more information, please call us at (212) 423-4000 or visit our website at www.northgeneral.org. Interns in a memorable picture with hospital staff The majority of children and adolescents who struggle with behavioral health issues go on to lead healthy and happy lives as adults thanks to the use of safe and effective medications and therapeutic services. That’s the message from Charles Herrick, MD, chair of psychiatry at Danbury Hospital, and the behavioral health experts at the hospital’s new Children’s Health and Wellness Center at 79 Sand Pit Road in Danbury. “Most of the cases we see involve kids who are experiencing a bump in the road and just need some help and support to get back on track. They are not as bad off as their parents perceive,” said Dr. Herrick. “At the other end of the spectrum, we can identify more serious problems that need to be addressed more aggressively.” Pediatric psychiatry is among the many pediatric specialty services available at the Children’s Health and Wellness Center opening this summer. The child-friendly facility brings pediatric subspecialists under one roof, making it more convenient for families in Connecticut and New York to access high-quality, specialized care. The Center includes pediatric specialists in psychiatry, endocrinology (diabetes), pulmonology (asthma), cardiology, genetics, physiatry and gastroenterology. The facility consolidates Danbury Hospital’s pediatric psychiatry services at one location. Children and adolescents with mental, emotional and behavior problems have access to two child-adolescent psychiatrists and two licensed social workers. The staff provides a full range of services, including evaluations, medication management, individual and group therapy, and a family support group. Enhancing care through collaboration In addition to treating behavioral health problems, the psychiatric staff will be on hand to assist patients who have chronic medical problems. “One of the biggest challenges kids with chronic illnesses face is accepting their condition and adhering to the prescribed medication regimen,” said Dr. Herrick. “We can help patients change their perceptions about their medical conditions. Our ultimate goal is to assist pediatric subspecialists in supporting children and families to develop comprehensive treatment plans that improve patient outcomes.” Take action at first sign of problems Like adults, children and teens can experience a variety of behavioral health problems, including depression, panic attacks, anxiety, attention deficient hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), bipolar disorders, substance abuse and more. Dr. Herrick encourages parents to see past the stigma attached to mental health issues and seek professional advice if they suspect their child has a problem. “Kids and teens are exposed to all kinds of stressful situations these days—academically, so- cially, even the economy,” noted Dr. Herrick. “Withdrawing from life and friends, falling grades, and being less communicative with parents are all signs that a problem may be brewing.” Help is readily available Fortunately, children and adolescents with behavioral health issues can find relief with timely and appropriate treatment and supports. “Many times, kids who are afraid to share with their parents feel comfortable talking with a professional in a private and confidential setting,” said Dr. Herrick. “By working together,” he added, “families and mental health professionals can help children and adolescents restore their health.” Danbury Hospital is a 371-bed regional medical center and university teaching hospital associated with New York Medical College, the Yale University School of Medicine, the Connecticut School of Medicine and Columbia University Medical Center. The hospital provides centers of excellence in cardiovascular services, cancer, weight loss surgery, orthopedics, digestive disorders and radiology. It also offers specialized programs for sleep disorders and asthma management. Medical staff members are board certified in their specialties. In the area of cardiac care, Danbury Hospital is ranked number one in Connecticut for cardiac surgery and in the top 5 percent nationally for overall cardiac care by HealthGrades. This is the second consecutiveyear for the national award. The yin and yang of wellness By Master Tony Rogers I’ve written about how the Taoist concept of the dynamic interface between yin and yang is the foundation of all things. Modern science has proven that everything in existence vibrates. You must have a dynamic interface between a negative and positive (yin & yang) to create a vibration which is energy. Last week I wrote about the human energy field and how modern science and ancient wisdom agree that vital energy can dictate the degree of our well-being. In Taoist energy wellness treatments, human organs are divided into yin organs and yang organs. The lungs, spleen/pancreas, heart, and liver are yin organs. The large intestine, stomach, small intestine, bladder/urinary tract and gallbladder are yang organs. When there is a balance in the flow of energy in our body we are well. When there is an imbalance of the flow of energy in our body we become ill. Negative emotional stress is a major cause of illness, and the imbalance of yin and yang organs. Sorrow and grief can cause an imbalance in the large intestine and lung. Worry can cause an imbalance in the stomach and spleen/pancreas. Over excitement can cause an imbalance in the heart and small intestine. Fear/apprehension can cause an imbalance in the bladder and kidney. And anger/frustration can cause an imbalance in the gallbladder and liver. We all suffer from negative emotional stress because we are very seldom in the present. All too often our thoughts are on the frustrations and grief of the past, or the fear and anxiety of the future. When the vital flow of energy is blocked by negative emotion, or stress, it is important to turn that stressed voice in our head off, and experience the harmony and balance of the present. The ancient Korean art of Chunsoo is an excellent way to bring balance to the flow of vital energy in the body. Ki energy masters use sound vibration and touch to open energy blockages; allowing the body’s electromagnetic energy to flow through interlocking energy channels, creating the feeling of relaxation and harmony. Allegra Taylor writes in her book, Healing Hands, that “The energy that activates another human being’s failing recuperative powers of life-force has been called unconditional love. It is nonjudgemental and compassionate. By creating a channel through which this loving energy flows…a healer can speed up, sometimes to an astonishing degree, the revitalizing process”. The foundation of Chunsoo treatments is unconditional love. The treatments will relax you and allow your body to rejuvenate. Relaxation can be very healing, but most people just don’t know how to relax. A major reason why so many suffer from stress related illness. If you’d like to experience a Ki Energy Chunsoo treatment, make an appointment any Wednesday, between the hours of 11am and 6pm, at Toni’s Touch Day Spa (www.tonistouchdayspa.com), located at 2364 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd. between 138th and 139th Streets (by appointment only - call 212 234-1171). For more information on Ki Energy Treatments and Training and for Midtown appointments call 917 8061801. NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Health Behavioral health: Keeping our 15 16 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 17 Sharpton, Gingrich and Secretary of Education plan education tour Columbia University representatives Joe Ienuso, LaVerna Fountain, Philip Pitruzzello, Marcelo Job training participants from NonTraditional Employment for Women and the School of Cooperative Technical Education and Columbia representatives Philip Pitruzzello and Marcelo Velez. Columbia partners with locals to create green jobs As part of its continuing commitment to environmental sustainability and to providing employment opportunities to its neighbours, Columbia University hosted a “green” salvage and reuse on-the-job training program this summer in Harlem. Utilizing about 40 men and women from two local job training and placement programs, Columbia began the process of carefully deconstructing a university building on West 125th Street called Reality House. Approximately 40 tons of surplus materials office and classroom furniture, file cabinets, electronic equipment, lighting fixtures, scrap metal and wood ¯ was removed. Ninety percent of the materials were suitable for recycling and were donated both locally and internationally. “This project enhances the university’s commitment to environmental sustainability while reusing materials and creating green job opportunities within our community,” said Joe Ienuso, Columbia’s executive vice president for facilities. “We hope to emulate the success of these types of win-win projects in the future.” Job opportunities requiring skills taught on this project ¯ salvage, reuse and surplus management –– are growing. The Reality House project provided an ideal training site for both of the local training programs. One of the programs was Nontraditional Employment for Women, a non-profit organization that trains women for jobs in the construction trades, with a major focus on green construction practices. The other was the School of Cooperative Technical Education, which provides job training to at-risk young men and women in Upper Manhattan. The month-long salvage project was managed by the Institution Recycling Network. It specializes in construction-site recycling and planned reuse of surplus office and classroom furniture, and works to ensure that all materials are recycled or discarded in compliance with state and federal waste and privacy regulations. In the past, Columbia worked with the network during renovation projects in residence halls and at Faculty House, the university’s premier event venue. The network partnered with Build It Green! NYC, the city’s largest building materials reuse center, which received approximately eight tons of building materials and furniture. As a direct result of the success of the project at Reality House, the network is hiring a crew of workers from Nontraditional Employment for Women for an upcoming project on Governor’s Island. “This project had it all from green job training and building materials reuse in the community, to recycling and surplus materials shipped to countries in need such as as Haiti and Nicaragua,” said Mark Lennon of the Institution Recycling Network. “I’ve seen a lot of recycling projects, but not a single one with so many winners.” On Friday, August 7, Columbia hosted a small reception to thank workers from Nontraditional Employment for Women and the School of Cooperative Technical Education for their participation during the Reality House project. A workday photo is shown below.) Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Civil Rights leader Al Sharpton will join Education Secretary Arne Duncan on a tour of four cities to highlight the Obama administration’s efforts to reform public education, spur innovation and discuss challenges facing America’s school systems. The tour, an outgrowth of their meeting with President Obama last spring, will include school visits, stakeholder meetings and media briefings. The goal of the tour is to stimulate discussion and community engagement around issues of education reform. Secretary Duncan described Gingrich and Sharpton as, “Two of the most candid people I have ever known. They are willing to challenge conventional thinking and I can absolutely promise some provocative conversations on education reform.” The tour will take them to Philadelphia on Sept. 29, New Orleans on Nov. 3, and Baltimore on Nov. 13. Duncan said that the cities were chosen Al Sharpton both for logistical reasons and for what they can show about school reform. More stops, including a rural site, will be added as the tour progresses. “Fifty-five years after the historic Brown v. Board of Education decision we still find that education is unequal in our nation. I agree with President Obama that we must use new methods to close the achievement gap so we do not continue to fail our children,” said Sharpton. “President Obama has shown real courage on the issue of charter schools. I strongly believe that when you can find common ground, we should be able to put other differences aside to achieve a common goal,” said Gingrich. Al Sharpton is a Baptist minister, civil rights leader and a radio talk show host who advocates for economic and educational equity through two organizations he founded, the National Action Network and the Education Equality Project. Newt Gingrich is a former Speaker of the House of Representatives, author, history professor, political analyst and the founder of American Solutions, a tri-partisan grassroots action organization. Rev. Sharpton is in Atlanta for National Action Network’s Summer Conference and available for interviews. Thompson: DOE continues to exclude parents, public in education planning New York City Comptroller William C. Thompson, Jr. last week expressed strong concern regarding the Department of Education’s (DOE) failure to release detailed information relating to its proposed 2009-2010 Contract for Excellence (CFE) plan and to hold mandated public hearings on how $645 million in CFE funds are being spent. “As you know the 2007 Education Budget and Reform Act mandates that DOE provide reasonable notice and detailed proposed contract information so the public can offer input at hearings held within each of the City’s five boroughs,” Thompson said. In a letter to Chancellor Joel Klein – available at www.comptr o l l e r. n y c . g o v – T h o m p s o n noted that DOE is required by law to develop its annual Contract for Excellence through a public process. “This is done for a compelling reason,” Thompson added. “Timely public review and transparency is essential to ensure that the funds are used to address six specifically identified strategic areas using the best possible practices.” Thompson highlighted that other large New York State school districts held their 2009- William Thompson 2010 CFE contract hearings as required: Buffalo on June 9, Yonkers on June 17, Rochester on June 24 and Syracuse on June 30 “It is unfortunate that with the 2009-2010 school year about to start, CFE funds already are being allocated to schools without the benefit of this critically important, and legally required, public input,” he said. In May, Thompson issued a report entitled Powerless Parents, which documented how DOE continues to ignore the mandates of the Education Law that require the participation and approval of District Community Education Councils and DOE’s attempt to eviscerate the lawful role of School Leadership Teams. “This failure to hold CFE hearings in a timely manner is yet another illustration of how this administration discourages parental consultation in important educational policy decisions,” Thompson said. Lastly, Thompson noted that the school governance law the Governor signed this week contains additional provisions intended to ensure that New York City public school parents have a meaningful voice in educational policy decisions that affect our City’s schools. “In the spirit of these new provisions, and in light of DOE’s previous failures to adhere to existing mandates, I urge that DOE at long last adopt a new approach to parental and community participation in school governance, an approach that truly values the input of those who have the most direct stake in the success of our public schools,” Thompson said. NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Education NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 18 AUDREY'S SOCIETY WHIRL Tony Bennett sings Happy Birthday to Chairman Charles B. Rangel By Audrey J. Bernard Lifestyles/Society Editor A gorgeous gumbo of beautiful people attended the always fabulous annual birthday celebration for Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee and Dean of the New York Delegation, Congressman Charles B. Rangel, on Tuesday, August 11, 2009 at lofty Tavern on the Green in Central Park. The natal celebration is the hottest ticket in town and attendees always enjoy the best of the best in food, booze and inestimable entertainment. This year’s special musical performances were by Grammy awardwinning singers Tony Bennett and Wyclef Jean. With his lovely wife Alma by his side, the always natty Chairman Rangel was hemorrhaging happiness. “This party is the most fun I have all year and I Tony Bennett cannot begin to tell you how much it means to me that so many friends, neighbors and fellow New Yorkers are here to celebrate with me,” he exclaimed! Funds raised from the birthday gala will benefit the Rangel Victory Fund — a joint fundraising committee of Rangel for Congress, and the National Leadership Political Action Committee. Chairman Rangel will use these two committees to protect vulner- able Democratic candidates and support challengers in targeted districts across the country. The success of past parties has enabled Chairman Rangel to play a significant role in the historic victories of 2006 and 2008. The Chairman’s campaign committees contributed to more than 150 candidates last cycle and over $3.5 million to party committees and Democratic organizations nationwide. Honorable Charles Rangel and Mrs. Alma Rangel Dr. Lucille McEwen, Susan L. Taylor, Dr. Chester Gov. David Paterson, Honorable David N. Voza Rivers, Barbara Bolden, Billie HollidayRedhead, Pat Ramsay Dinkins Hayes, Lloyd Williams Ruth Clark, Billy Bryant Honorable H. Carl McCall Honorable Charles Rangel, Kenneth J. Knuckles Audrey J. Bernard, Dr. Marcella Maxwell Barbara Minch, Honorable Inez Honorables Shelly Silver, Joe Dickens, Judy Wexler, Moises Perez Dr. Muriel Petioni Crowley and Keith Wright (standing) Sandy Jamison, Leslie Wyche, Marlene Ledford, George Hulse, Gail Allen, Kirk Ortega, Joann Skeete (seated) Linda Zango-Haley, Jackie Jim Skeete, Susan L. Taylor, Honorable David N. Dinkins, Lee Archer Fisher, Jim Skeete, Ruth Hunt Robin Verges, Lorraine Watson (Photos: Gideon Manasseh) Reflections on Harlem Week celebrations Thirty-five years ago I was 27 years old, working as an intern in the law office of Hope R. Stevens. I was also attending the City College of New York majoring in Philosophy/PreLaw. Hope Stevens was the first person of color elected as president of the then Uptown Chamber of Commerce (later to be renamed the Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce) one of the oldest business organizations in New York City. The Honorable Percy E. Sutton was the Manhattan Borough President at that time. Mr. Sutton wanted to bring business and economic development opportunities north of 96th Street. In August 1974 the Uptown Chamber of Commerce, under the leadership of Lloyd Williams who was the executive vice president of the Chamber, created Harlem Day. The main purpose of the first Harlem Day was to promote the positive things that were taking place in Harlem, even as all of New York City was experiencing major financial problems. There was a high rate of unemployment and businesses were closing down. One-hundred and twenty-fifth Street was full of closed storefronts, and New York City was a major landlord and caretaker of abandoned buildings in Harlem. Many people had given up on the most well known urban community in America. As many of you know, I truly believe that there is no such thing as a coincidence. All things happen for a reason. As I reflect (on it), there was a purpose for that dedicated group of Harlemites from all walks of life, in both the private and public sectors, to create the first Harlem Day - which was titled “The Second Harlem Renaissance”. I was part of that group, and it has always been an honor to say that I was a founding member of what is now one of the largest urban cultural/economic development festivals in America. Many things have changed in Harlem since the first Harlem Day, but as the saying goes, “the more things change, the more they stay the same”. America’s economic melt-down has hit all communities hard, but urban communities like Harlem seem to suffer more. Yet, like what happened 35 years ago, positive things have been known to develop under economic turmoil. NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com By Tony Rogers 19 Sunday, August 16th will be the 35th anniversary of Harlem Day. And, while we are all experiencing the economic issues currently facing America, people are still coming together to develop strategies to collectively address issues such as health, unemployment and small business maintenance and development. As in the past, Harlem Week serves as a local, national and international platform to explore solutions for these issues. It’s been a wonderful journey. I’ve had the opportunity to meet some extraordinary people and see how a few dedicated people can truly make a difference. For more information about Harlem Week, explore the full schedule of events in your copy of this paper, or visit www.harlemdiscover.com . Harlem Day has evolved into a little more than a month of activities, so there is still a lot to do. I hope you come out and help celebrate. William Tony Rogers is a co founder of Harlem Week, the senior vice Ppresident of the Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce and the President/ CEO of Urbanology Systems a Multicultural Marketing and Strategic Management Group. Bookin’ It In G.O.D. we trust, ‘A Black New World Order’ By Walter Smith SENIORS JUBILEE—The Greater Harlem Chamber of Commerce held its annual seniors jubilee luncheon at the Harlem State Office Building honoring Bernie Miller, 97; (left) of Federation of Black Cowboys, and Cornelius Watson, 97, (far right) for his 22 years of voluntary service at the Harlem Hospital’s Pharmaceutical Department. Also honored but not in the picture is Maria Garcia, 101. Middle (in the picture) is Vivian Jones of Congressman Charles Rangel’s office. Economic crunch affecting HBCU enrollment this fall By J. Zamgba Browne Special to NY Beacon Historically black colleges and universities across the nation are experiencing the economic pinch and many are expecting their enrollment to shrink this fall because students cannot afford the rising cost. Spelman College President Beverly Tatum said on Monday that every college and university is asking the same question, “What will our enrollment be next year? not because of a change in institution, but because families are being hit by the economy.” Tatum said many students want to come, but are unable to afford it. President Obama has increased Pell Grant funding to a maximum of $5,500 per student with stimulus and budget funds, but some parents say this might not be enough to solve the problem. Since 2004, $238 million in federal funding has been earmarked annually for historically black colleges. In the last two years, those institutions benefited from an extra $85 million each year under the College Cost Reduction and Access Act. When that program ends in May 2010, these institutions may feel the squeeze. “We are under resourced,” said Clark Atlanta University President Carlton Brown. “We try to keep our costs as low as possible. That means that our margins are always very tight,” he added. In the Atlanta area alone, Brown noted that Morehouse College has laid off 25 adjunct professors, Spellman is eliminating 35 jobs next year, and Clark Atlanta University’s budget ax fell mid-semester with 70 professors and 30 staff members let go. Beverly Tatum Raising money remains the major challenge for a Black president or chancellor. Private Black colleges are struggling to keep their funding sources viable and to fight off financial starvation in an increasingly competitive environment. Raimundo Thomas, a product of Chicago’s Southside, turned author and philosopher, has written a book based on his life’s experiences and his association with the works of Spike Lee, Curtis Mayfield and Brian Fleming. The theme of his book, “A Black New World Order” was inspired by the Curtis Mayfield s o n g “ N e w Wo r l d O r d e r ” , which he co-wrote. The book grabs one’s attention from just reading the cover. Once inside, it’s impossible to retreat from the descriptive “In G.O.D. We Trust? Black New World Order” until the very end, page 127. What’s unique about this book is it doesn’t condemn the white man for the condition of African Americans. The book suggests that African Americans begin building new families and communities with the resources currently available to them. There have been suggestions for the past 50 years that Black organizations such as the NAACP, Urban League, NNPA, Deltas, Congressional Black C a u c u s , K a p p a ’s , O m e g a s , Churches, etc, refrain from having conventions for one year and donate the money one would anticipate spending on any one convention, to a fund to build a hotel in central America that could service all Black organizations. This never happened. Black organizations continue to spend billions each year in the various hotel chains on conventions and various other functions with no financial interest in any of them. African Americans should own a 3000 room hotel to hold their functions. Like a seasoned leader or avid follower of our most vocal community activists, he carefully wades through the history of African Americans, citing setbacks, accomplishments, deploring the drug trade and the many evils that retard the mind. Meanwhile the good and bad experiences are stored and categorized to develop a plan for the future. The plan, slowly unveiled in the book began with rebuilding the family in 41 person units while constructing and energizing a national bank. One million Black millionaires adopt 40 persons each and mentor that family in acquiring the skills to support the family and rebuild strong communities. This builds a support mechanism for every Black person in America. This effectively eliminates the destructive elements that are so pervasive in our communities today. The book based on personal knowledge, self help and faith in God is a must read. For more information call 404 207-0544 or 678 353-7863. NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 20 Beacon On The Scene 4th Annual Harlem SummerStage Living Legends of 2009 tribute rocked at the ACP plaza CLOCKWISE: Honorees, The Manhattans, Presenter New York State Senator Bill Perkins and Don Thomas, Blue Magic, Chuck Jackson, Mel’isa Morgan, Billy Mitchell, Carl Ramsey, Florence (Flo) Anthony, Millie Jackson (Photos: Ronnie Wright) By Jim Carroll An overcasted afternoon didn’t deter the hundreds who attended the 4 th annual Living Legends 2009 tribute, produced by promoter Chris Curry, founder of “So You Want To Be Star” productions. The event emceed by WBLS’ Dr. Bob Lee took place on Thursday, August 13 th at Harlem’s SummerStage located on the plaza of the Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. State Office Building on West 125 th. This years honorees included African American recording artists Me’lisa Morgan, Blue Magic, Chuck Jackson, Ray, Goodman & Brown, The Manhattans and media correspondents Don Thomas, entertainment editor of the New York Beacon and Florence (Flo) Anthony, publisher of Black Noir, who cover the gamut of entertainment. Also honored was Billy Mitchell, the Apollo Theater’s noted historian and Carl Ramsey, former New York Knicks sports commentator. New York State Senator Bill Perkins (District 30), presented the proclamations to Thomas for his outstanding coverage of entertainments most influential people and community talents that the mainstream seldom focus on. Publisher Florence (Flo) Anthony was also the recipient of the illustrious award. She covered the recent untimely death of superstar Michael Jackson and the celebration of his transition Memorial. She was also cited for always being on the scene in the entertainment world. R&B living legend Chuck Jackson was honored for his numerous years in the music industry. A major surprise took place as the incomparable soul singer/ actress Millie Jackson, appeared center stage announcing to the massive crowd that she is still as vivacious as ever. She received a thunderous applause as they screamed out “We love you Millie” She was recognized for her 40 plus years in entertainment. There was also an unexpected special appearance by Tony Award-winning Melba Moore, who belted out a soulful acapella rendition of the Negro national anthem “Lift Every Voice And Sing.” Following the awards ceremony the honorees and crowd were treated to outstanding musical performances by megastars Alyson Williams, Lester Fons Bell, Force MD’s, GQ, The Joneses, Full Force, The Ultimate Persuaders, Tony Brooks of Harold Melvin and The Bluenotes and Raheim (formerly of GQ). The internationally renowned Manhattans brought the Living Legends 2009 Tribute to an awesome finale as the belted out several of the million-selling hits including the monster classic “ L e t ’s J u s t K i s s A n d S a y Goodbye.” 21 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 22 Lowery continues search for justice at awards gala (From page 3) is the nature of the historicity of the experience and every Black person brings that to a confrontation and White and Black police officers ought to understand that. Until they understand that, the tension is always going to be there.” Obama initially said at a press conference that the Cambridge police “acted stupidly” in making the arrest. Though the president later softened his language, Lowery said “he was right” the first time. Lowery was among three Black men who received the coveted Medals, draped around their necks by Obama himself. Pioneering actor Sidney Poitier and heroic cleric and human rights leader Bishop Desmond Tutu were also honored. The only one of the three who accepted reporters’ invitations to visit the press room after the ceremony, Lowery said Obama’s award to a civil rights leader in his first class of Presidential Medal awards said more about Obama than about himself. “I think it’s a credit to President Obama that in his first class of awardees he included in it someone who can be viewed as a symbol from the struggle,” Lowery said. “To include me in the first class when you want to put your best foot forward says something about the nature and character of the man.” He referred to himself as a “small town preacher who’s just an ordinary fellow.” His receiving the award ought “to encourage others like me to go ahead and serve the common good.” Lowery’s medal citation states, “Reverend Joseph E. Lowery has marched through life with faith and purpose, carrying with him the legacy of a movement that touched America’s conscience and changed its history. At the forefront of the major civil rights events of our time — from the Montgomery bus boycott to protests against apartheid — he has served as a tireless beacon for nonviolence and social justice. As a pastor and civil rights advocate, he co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and championed the cause of peace and freedom around the world. The United States proudly honors this outstanding leader.” Sidney Poitier’s medal citation states: “Ambassador and actor, Sidney Poitier has left an indelible mark on American culture. Rising from the tomato farms of the Bahamas, his talent led him to Broadway, Hollywood, and global acclaim. In front of black and white audiences struggling to right the nation’s moral compass, Sidney Poitier brought us the common tragedy of racism, the inspiring possibility of reconciliation, and the simple joys of everyday life. Ultimately, the man would mirror the character, and both would advance the nation’s dialogue on race and respect.” Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu’s medal citation states: “With unflagging devotion to justice, indomitable optimism, and an unmistakable sense of humor, Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Mpilo Tutu has stirred the world’s conscience for decades. As a man of the cloth, he has drawn the respect and admi- A man openly carrying assault (From page 3) a permit. Paul Helmke, president of the Washington, D.C.-based Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said people should not be allowed to bring guns to events where Obama is. “To me, this is craziness,” he said. “When you bring a loaded gun, particularly a loaded assault rifle, to any political event, but particularly to one where the president is appearing, you’re just making the situation dangerous for everyone.” He said people who bring guns to presidential events are distracting the Secret Service and law enforcement from protecting the president. “The more guns we see at more events like this, there’s more potential for something tragic happening,” he said. Secret Service spokesman Ed Donovan said armed demonstrators in open-carry states such as Arizona and New Hampshire have little impact on security plans for the president. “In both cases, the subject was not entering our site or otherwise attempting to,” Donovan said. “They were in a designated public viewing area. The main thing to know is that they would not have been allowed inside with a weapon.” Representatives of the National Rifle Association did not return calls for comment ration of a diverse congregation. He helped lead South Africa through a turning point in modern history, and with an unshakable humility and firm commitment to our common humanity, he helped heal wounds and lay the foundation for a new nation. Desmond Tutu continues to give voice to the voiceless and bring hope to those who thirst for freedom.” The other 13 medal recipients are: Nancy Goodman Brinker, who – “drawing strength from tragedy”, has “transformed the nation’s approach to breast cancer”; Dr. Pedro José “Joe” Greer Jr., who “devoted his career to improving medical services for the uninsured”; Stephen Hawking, who “dedicated his life to exploring the fundamental laws that govern the universe, and he has contributed to some of the greatest scientific discoveries of our time; Jack French Kemp, who, as a statesman and a sports icon, “advocated for his beliefs with an unwavering integrity and intellectual honesty”. U. S. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, who “has boldly fought for equal opportunity, fairness, and justice for all Americans” for more than four decades; Billie Jean Moffitt King, tennis champion, who “has advanced the struggle for greater gender equality around the world”; Joseph Medicine Crow, who, as a Native American, became “a warrior and living legend” who “is a symbol of strength and survival”; Harvey Bernard Milk, as an openly gay elected official, “dedicated his life to shattering boundaries and challenging assumptions”. Sandra Day O’Connor, retired Supreme Court justice and first woman to serve on the court, who “paved the way for millions of women to achieve their dreams”. Chita Rivera, who on stage and screen, “has captured America’s imagination with her magnetic presence and radiant voice”; Mary Robinson, “a trail-blazing crusader for women’s rights in Ireland and a forceful advocate for equality and human rights around the world”. Dr. Janet Davison Rowley, “the first scientist to identify a chromosomal translocation as the cause of leukemia and other cancers - considered among the most important medical breakthroughs of the past century”; Professor Muhammad Yunus, with his belief in self-reliance, “has altered the face of finance and entrepreneurship.” Finally, King of Pop (From page 3) said the deals will generate millions of dollars for the estate. Separately, Michael Jackson’s father said his son’s body will be buried at a Los Angeles cemetery on Aug. 29, which would have been his 51st birthday, the New York Daily News reported on Monday. Joe Jackson told a Daily News reporter the plan was finalized in recent days. Media reports last week said Jackson, who died June 25 of cardiac arrest, was buried in a private ceremony in early August. But those reports were based on unnamed sources and never confirmed by Jackson family representatives. A Jackson family spokesman did not return calls seeking comment Monday, nor did a spokesman at Los Angeles’ Forest Lawn Park. New York Beacon Showing the Way to Truth and Justice YES, I would like to subscribe to New York Beacon. Enclosed is my check/money order for $35.00 Name: Address: City: Telephone: Area Code State: Zip: Number Please mail completed form to The New York Beacon, 237 W. 37th Street, Suite 203, New York, New York 10018 Tel. (212) 213-8585 Fax. (212) 213-6291 Council Member Stewart holds Seniors Day in Paerdegat Park The weather reports threatened thunder and lightening. There were flood warnings. But it was the day of Council Member Kendall Stewart’s annual Senior Day in Paerdegat Park, and Mona declared emphatically that she was going. “I have a brave heart,” this 83-year-old Trinidadian mother of 11 and grandmother of 33 told her daughter. She was having her day in the park no matter what! Well, the Gods smiled on Mona and the other seniors who were undaunted by the weather reports because, despite some brief light drizzle, the weather turned out just fine for a picnic. As bus after bus of seniors rolled up from Fort Greene Senior Action Center, St. Marks Senior Center, Remsen Senior Center, Glenwood Senior Center NPDC and Fort Greene Hazel Brooks Senior Center and additional seniors arrived on foot, DJ ning vocalists, including Maryam Amatullah-Wali, Martin George, the Wallace Sisters and the East Flatbush Ecumenical Community Choir. Five absolutely adorable young tap dancers from Colorful Futures, performing under the direction of Monique ChandlerWaterman, put big smiles on everybody’s faces, and the Mildred Forde Dancers rounded out the entertainment with their praise dancing. The New York City Department of Transportation Safety Education Division was also on hand, giving out goodie bags with pedometers and valuable information on how to walk around and cross the city streets most safely, and Downstate Medical Center conducted free blood pressure tests and provided material on other common health issues such as diabetes, cholesterol and heart health. Looking around at all the seniors enjoying themselves, Council Member Stewart said, “I do Council Member Kendall Stewart serves up bake to his picnic guests. Brave hearted Mona dances with Council Member Kendall Downstate Medical Center nurse and health educator Sarah Marshall tests senior’s blood Stewart during Senior Day in Paerdegat Park. pressure. Gavin kept the mood just right with his dynamic musical selections. Millennium Development Midwood Active Program welcomed the seniors with refreshing snow cones. As they settled in, the seniors were entertained by the sweet sound of CASYM Steel Orchestra. Their music proved so irresistible that it pulled several people up out of their seats to dance, much to the delight of all who watched. After some juicy watermelon had been passed around to wet the appetite, Council Member Stewart invited his guests over to the serving tables that practically groaned with the weight of all the delicious Caribbean food and beverages waiting to be consumed. While they ate, the seniors enjoyed some wonderful performances by several award-win- love seniors. For one thing, they have paved the way for the rest of us. They have protected our society and built up our communities. So I feel that the least I can do is hold this picnic for the seniors each year to let them know how much I value them,” he continued. “It’s always a real pleasure to come out here and feed the seniors, entertain them and laugh and talk with them.” Stewart also thanked the many companies, individuals and his district office staff who helped make the festivity possible. Benefactors included business owner Mohammad Iqbal, Dave Gayle, owner of the Tropical Paradise Ballroom and Miss Deny as well as Community Board 17, Golden Krust, Sharper Vision and Standard Shipping. Rebecca James provided the delicious homemade Roy, from Fort Greene Senior Action Center, can’t help but dance to the infectious muMauby. sic of CASYM Steel Orchestra. (Photos by Donna Lamb) NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com By Donna Lamb 23 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 24 YOU GO, GIRL! Winner of Gospel Dream – Melinda Watts – is ‘So Good’ on debut album People Get Ready Edited by Audrey J. Bernard Lifestyles/Society Editor Melinda Watts, the season three winner of Gospel Music Channel’s popular reality talent search series, Gospel Dream, realized her life long desire when her debut CD, People Get Ready, made its way to a Top Twenty slot on the Billboard’s Top Gospel Chart. The gospel star’s freshman album was released nationwide on July 28. Watts who beat out thousands of contestants is signed with Razor & Tie Entertainment for a worldwide multi-album deal. People Get Ready is the first fruit of that desire — yet another milestone in a legacy that has already impacted thousands for a greater cause, one soul at a time. People Get Ready is a bright and dynamic album that showcases Watts’ vibrant vocals along with strong contemporary production. The celebratory first single, “So Good,” has already made waves at Gospel radio. The upbeat pop track defies you to get up and dance. Slick grooves, hopeful lyrics, and an exuberant vibe are interwoven throughout the album, which recalls other leading ladies of urban gospel like Coko, Mary Mary and Kierra Sheard. From the explosive, dancefriendly tracks of “Say Yes,” and “Happy” to intimate worship songs like “Available To You,” there is no doubt as to why she won over judges and audiences alike. Watts is presently on a promotional tour in support of the release with stops in New York, Atlanta, Chicago and Philadelphia. She’s already been chosen to tape an upcoming episode BET’s “Lift Every Voice,” and will be a part of the Gospel Music Channel’s Gospel Dream 2009 season that began airing in June. “I’ve always had a love of music and I have been singing in church my whole life,” the anointed singer explains. “God’s grace brought me here. A lot of faith in God and remembering that it’s okay to dream even when you feel you can’t.” When asked about her expectations for her first God-kissed album Watts who has a high wattage smile that would light up any congregation said, “I want people to walk away saying, ‘I really believe.’ These songs are a testament to my faith — that there is a God who loves you and cares for you.” That same message lies at the core of People Get Ready, a clarion call to live life more abundantly in the here and now, while looking forward to an eternity on the Earth made new. In the same spirit of its rallying title track, a thumping rendition of the 1996 Crystal Lewis classic, the album is a dynamic extension of Watts’ phenomenal run on the American Idol-styled Gospel Dream, while asserting her as an artist with much more than just an exceptional voice. A singer/songwriter in her own right, Watts self-penned the majority of People Get Ready, ing about moving past a difficult situation, and the celebratory first single “So Good,” a reggae-infused summer jam where Watts gets testimonial about the many ways God has brought her through in ing from Sacramento, CA, the gospel crusader began singing at the age of six. Her powerhouse vocals and warm bravado have captured the hearts of millions of fans, when she won the American Idol-esque In addition, Watts oversees Project Sunday, an afterschool program she started while working as a teacher in California. Through daily affirmation and a curricular component, the program was eventually adopted by “People ask me all the time if I’d choose working with kids over music or vice versa. I honestly can’t answer that question. I think both are really a gift. They come from the same well. It’s not like I’m a singer trying to teach on the side, or a teacher trying to sing on the side. This is really who I am as an artist.” – Melinda Watts tag-teaming with some of gospel’s biggest hitmakers — among them, award-winners Smokie Norful, Aaron Lindsey, J. Moss, Myron Butler, and Bernie Herms — for a batch of songs that are at once faith-affirming, current, and relevant to the times that we live in. “All of these are songs from way back,” says the Jersey-born Rutgers University graduate, who earned degrees in sociology and women’s studies and went on to become a teacher before venturing out into her Gospel Dream adventure. “This was the time that God saw fit to release them.” Influenced by a wide-ranging crop of power vocalists — including Shirley Caesar, Yolanda Adams, Natalie Grant, and Reba McEntire, among others — Watts infused People Get Ready with a cross-platform appeal that normally takes up-and-coming artists several albums to perfect. “My parents weren’t musical people but they really exposed me to different types of music,” she says. It really shows. On the one hand are the urban-flavored pop anthems, like the reassuring “Try Again,” a potent hit-in-the-mak- her personal walk. Both of these do a fine job of displaying Watts’ motivational side, much like a younger Yolanda Adams. On the other end of the spectrum is the singer’s respect for the sounds of yesteryear, evident in her cover of the Carlis Moody Jr. staple “Available to You,” a duet with J. Moss, and the stirring “Faith That Conquers,” a modern-day take on the Vanessa Bell Armstrong classic. “That song carried me through the whole recording process,” Watts says. “I had a lot of fear about how people would respond to the music. The main thing was I wanted God to be pleased. I wanted people to walk away from the songs being uplifted.” Watts, who is managed by Mitchell Solarek of Maximum Artist Management, is a former high school English teacher and active member of her Sacramento community, started the nonprofit organizations Project Sunday and Heaven’s House to address the great need for mentoring and ministering to young women in her community. Born in New Jersey and hail- show. Influenced by legends CeCe Winans, Natalie Grant and Shirley Caesar, Watts shares a love of music and her church. Mature beyond her years, the budding gospel singer didn’t initially intend to audition for the 2008 season of Gospel Dream. It took some convincing on her sister Kisha’s part for the singer to take a leap of faith and see God’s big picture. “There was always this small voice inside of me telling me that if I wanted to inspire kids to follow their dreams, I needed to follow my own dreams,” says Watts, who at the time was pregnant with her daughter, Lyric, and had every intention to put her life on hold to focus on motherhood. But God had different plans. Since she was crowned the champ of Gospel Dream, the former English teacher has used her new platform in gospel entertainment to advance her philanthropic efforts, especially the work of her own nonprofit, The About Face Network, and Heaven’s House for Girls, an organization that nurtures young women to fulfill their potential in society and become everything God wants them to be. the state of California to empower at-risk girls from impoverished areas to break out of the cycles and patterns that keep them from getting ahead in life. All of the above render Watts, hands down, one of the most purpose-driven performers to ever grace the reality-singing circuit — a singer who puts her money where her voice is. As for where Watts sees herself in the future, she is leaving it all in God’s hands. Just don’t ask her which of her two life callings is her favorite. “People ask me all the time if I’d choose working with kids over music or vice versa,” Watts says. “I honestly can’t answer that question. I think both are really a gift. They come from the same well. It’s not like I’m a singer trying to teach on the side, or a teacher trying to sing on the side. This is really who I am as an artist.” In the realm of primetime talentsearch shows, the quest for fame and fortune is usually the name of the game. In the case of Gospel Dream victor Melinda Watts, her vision for competing was much more far-reaching: She never wanted it to be about her, but about inspiring others to touch the sky through her music and ministry. New Tween apparel Mad Style by True Jackson is inspired by hit TV series True Jackson Keke Palmer On Monday, August 17, 2009, Nickelodeon/Viacom Consumer Products (NVCP) launched “Mad Style by True Jackson,” a new tween apparel and accessories line inspired by the trendy fashions worn in Nickelodeon’s hit live-action series, True Jackson, VP, starring Keke Palmer. The fall fashion show for the newest tween dream clothing line “where the runway meets the school hallway” took place at The Lodge at 1515 Broadway followed by a meet & greet session with Palmer. Nickelodeon’s chief marketing officer, Pam Kaufman, opened the Mad Style by True Jackson show with warm welcoming remarks. An adorable fashion show followed that was as well orchestrated as the ones held under the big tent in Bryant Park during fashion week. Young fashionistas modeled the Mad Style by True Jackson Tween Apparel Line featuring long sleeved henley t-shirts; layerable knit tees featuring graphics with positive messages like ‘be true to you’; fashion leggings with novelty buttons; jumper dresses with removable straps; tunic dresses with pre-scrunched sleeves; Mary Jane shoes; bal- Nickelodeon’s presentation of the Mad Style by True Jackson Tween Apparel Line on August 17, 2009 in New York City let flats; and sneakers. “True Jackson, VP inspires girls to dream big and embrace their individuality and creativity,” said Hal Snik, senior vice president, domestic licensing, NVCP. “The Mad Style line embodies the spirit of the show and the clothes are comfortable and affordable enough so that girls can follow the trends or create a look totally in their own style.” In true high fashion form, the line’s fashionable creator, Jane Siskin, president and chief executive officer of L’Koral, LLC, looking great in a little black dress with red high heels, told the young fashionistas that she was thrilled to be able to create a line exclusively for Walmart stores. “Mad Style is a fashion collection filled with classic styles with a twist that can be customized to fit any tween’s style mood,” said Siskin. “Bringing the design aesthetic of the True Jackson, VP character to life through this line was a great experience for me – this is a great way for girls to express themselves.” The Mad Style by True Jackson Tween Apparel Line show was hosted by Palmer who appeared on stage looking as adorable as ever in a chic little black dress and black high heel shoes. The pretty young role model gushed with pride and happiness as she spoke about the new line and how excited she was that the line was patterned from her hit TV show. Palmer encouraged her young fans to shop at Walmart stores for Mad Style by True Jackson. “Every item from sneakers to dresses retails at $14 or under and draws inspiration from the series. The apparel line incorporates elements that make each piece unique and customizable at everyday low prices and is available exclusively at Walmart stores.” One of the hottest and fastest-growing shows for kids, True Jackson, VP is one of the top two rated programs on Saturday nights on all of broad- Shively). True navigates her very first job, battles real-world obstacles like competitive co-workers and corporate politics and builds new friendships and romantic interests – as well as her niche as a style maven. NVCP manages the world’s third largest licensing business, representing leading properties such as SpongeBob SquarePants and Dora the Explorer, and managing merchandising for Nick Jr., Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, MTVN International, and Spike TV. Nickelodeon, now in its 30th year, is the number-one entertainment brand for kids. It has built a diverse, global business by putting kids first in everything it Keke Palmer and fashion designer Jane Siskin pose with models Chief marketing officer, Pam Kaufman, SVP of domestic licensing for Nickelodeon, Hal Snik and Keke Palmer cast and basic cable television with kids 2-11, kids 6-11 and tweens 9-14 — behind only Nickelodeon’s iCarly — and averages 7 million total viewers each week. True Jackson, VP follows True’s adventures as she balances work life and social life in and around the Mad Style ofwith her best friends Lulu True Jackson, VP star SVP of domestic licensing for Nickelodeon, Hal Snik, fices (Ashley Argota) and Ryan (Matt Keke Palmer Keke Palmer, fashion designer Jane Siskin does. The company includes television programming and production in the United States and around the world, plus consumer products, online, recreation, books, magazines and feature films. Nickelodeon’s U.S. television network is seen in more than 99 million households and has been the number-one-rated basic cable network for 15 consecutive years. (Photos by Scott Gries/PictureGroup/Nickelodeon) 2009 Viacom, International, Inc. All Rights Reserved) 25 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com CATWALKIN’ with Fashion & Beauty Editor Audrey J. Bernard NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 26 AG gets annual WHAT’S GOING ON Georgia’s Obama Leadership Award By Victoria Horsford WEEK IN REVIEW Congratulations to fine artist/ writer/philanthropist Danny Simmons who was named interim chairman of the New York State Council for the Arts by Governor David Paterson. Brooklyn-based Simmons is vice chair and co-founder, with his brother Russell, of the Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation, which nurtures and provides access to fine arts programs for disadvantaged urban youngsters……. Congrats to Howard Bingham photographer/film producer/author on his latest book, a pictorial essay titled BLACK PANTHERS, published by L.A. based Ammo Books…Did you see 11-year-old student/journalist Daman Weaver who interviewed President Obama , querying him last week. For this wonderful close encounter between our present and future, visit YOUTUBE, and input their names.…. A 14 –year-old neurosurgeonin-progress, Tony Hansberry, developed a stitching technique used to reduce complications following hysterectomies. He presented his findings at a conference of doctors and board certified surgeons, held at the University of Florida……NY Times 8/16 Rahm Emanuel article “Emanuel Wields Power Freely, And Faces the Risks: More Chief Than Staff” is a good read, lending insights into one of the most powerful Obama White House players. It reveals how Rahm killed Secretary of State Hillary Clinton proposed appointment of Sid Blumenthal; Rahm interfaces with Congress, from which he is an alum; the much improved relationship between Rahm and African-American special adviser Valerie Jarrett, who was profiled in the NYT Magazine a few weeks ago. South of the border, the Caribbean twin island nation of Trinidad and Tobago will celebrate its 47th Independence Anniversary on Aug. 31. Visit www.thetntalliance.com for full local TnT independence activities. …….. Last week Britain suspended the Turks and Caicos government, legislature and constitution and restored direct rule. Action was taken after a Brit investigation of the T&C government, led by former Prime Minister Michael Misick, which was adjudged rife with corruption. Londoner Gordon Weatherell was named T&C governor, for approximately two years. Displeased by the British action, T&C islanders view it as a return to colonization. Turks and Caicos islands, southeast of the Bahamas, are British territories. BUSINESS AFFAIRS Wanted: A Chief Financial Officer for the NYS Dormitory Authority, DASNY. Send resumes to headhunter Bill Burgess at resumes@theburgessgroup.com. According to my research, based on an independent Auditor’s Report, the DASNY President John Atta-Mills has total assets of $40.5 billion. The National Minority Business Council, NMBC, in partnership with a substantial investment fund has launched a financing initiative, targeted to small and medium-sized businesses, to assist them in obtaining permanent funding to grow their enterprises. Applicants must meet the following criteria to qualify for this MNBC initiative. 1) 3 years of continuous operation 2) financial statement for past 2 years prepared by an outside accountant 3) profitable operation in the past year. Email application request to nmbc72@yahoo.com OUT OFAFRICA Ghana is Africa’s rising media star this year. It is the first subSaharan country that President Obama visited. It was the subject of an 8/9/09 Sunday NYT Travel Section cover story , THE TWO FACES OF GHANA, which is equal parts travelogue and modern history. On Monday, Sept. 21, 2009, the AfricaAmerica Institute (AAI) will host its 25th Annual Awards Gala at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Battery City, Manhattan. The 2009 AAI gala honoree for African National Achievement are the People of Ghana. His Excellency, John Evans Atta Mills will accept the award on behalf of his countrymen. Other AAI 2009 honorees are DeBeers Chairman Nicky Oppenheimer, for championing Corporate Responsibility and the Carnegie Corporation of NY’s President Vartan Gregorian for Leadership in Higher Education Philanthropy. Harlem’s Abyssinia Baptist Church pastor, Reverend Calvin O. Butts, III will provide the invocation. AAI Awards Gala Tickets are available from $500-$1000. Supporters and sponsors of the AAI 2009 Awards Gala are Constant Capital Partners, Chevron, DeBeers, and Exxon Mobil. For more info visit www.benefit office.org/aai, or telephone 888.483.0653. On Tuesday, Sept. 22, Edgar Ridley & Associates, Inc, in collaboration with the African Profiles USA & Globe Magazine, will host and an evening of discussion on how a strategic change in mindset can advance Africa’s Recovery, focusing on Africa’s Prospects Beyond the Meltdown. Event participants include Edgar Ridley, president of Edgar J. Ridley and Associates; His Excellency Ibrahim Auwalu, Consul General of Nigeria; Roderick, “Rick” M. Carr, managing director, MKP Capital Management, LLC; Eloho Otobo, United Nations; Kassahun Checole, Publisher, Africa World Press/Red Sea Press; Dr. Nick Mwaniki, World Bank, consultant & advisor, East African Community. Reservations are necessary. RSVP at africanforum@att.net. The African Development Foundation (ADF) will host its Fourth Dinner Awards Gala on Thursday, Sept. 24 at the Marriott Marquis Hotel at 1535 Broadway 45/46 streets, Manhattan. His Excellency John Evans Atta Mills, president of Ghana and MLB centerfielder Bernie Williams, are 2009 ADF Dinner honorees. Founded in 2003 by Ghanaborn, Marriott Marquis manager George Ntim, the ADF is an international 501©3 organization conceived to promote goodwill between America and Africa through youth-oriented initiatives in education, sports outlets, and health-related resources. ADF Gala tickets are $500. For more info, visit www.africandeve lopmentfoundation.org. In Book Notes, a few weeks ago, I wrote that fine arts photographer/scholar Dr. Deborah Willis’ soon-to-be-published W.W. Norton book was titled “AfricanAmerican Images from 1890s to present.” The correct book title is POSING BEAUTY: AfricanAmerican Images from…….” The National Bar Association (NBA) presented Georgia Attorney General Thurbert Baker with its first annual Barack Obama Political Leadership Award at its 84th annual meeting in San Diego, Calif., on Friday. The award recognizes Baker ’s pioneering achievements as a public servant and elected official. Baker, a Democrat from Stone Mountain, is Georgia’s first African-American Attorney General, having served in the office since 1997. During this time, he has been the only elected African-American Attorney General in the nation. He is also the only African American to be elected by his colleagues to serve as the president of the 102-year-old National Association of Attorneys General. As Attorney General, Baker has successfully managed the state’s legal affairs for more than two decades. He has always made protecting families and children a top priority. He promoted tough new laws against sexual predators who target children via the Internet, and has aggressively worked with local prosecutors and police to bring those who target children online to justice. Baker has also been a leading voice against domestic violence. He fought to make it a crime to commit an act of domestic violence in the presence of a child and he’s worked with local law enforcement to fight family violence. Prior to his service as Attorney General, Baker served for five terms in the Georgia House of Representatives, including several years as the Floor Leader for then-Governor Zell Miller. As Floor Leader, Baker led the fight to pass some of the most significant legislation in modern Georgia history, including the institution of the state lottery and the lottery-funded HOPE Scholarship program. He was the lead sponsor of the largest tax cut in Georgia history – the removal of the state sales tax on groceries. He also led the fight to pass tough new laws against drunk driving, strengthening the state’s notoriously weak, outdated drunk driving laws, and helped bring Georgia to the forefront in the battle against DUI. Baker, now a Democratic candidate for Governor of Georgia, said, “I am humbled and honored to be the first person to receive the National Bar Association’s Barack Obama Award. I hope to live up to the honor by continuing to bring people together to solve the tough problems facing Georgia.” The National Bar Association (NBA) was founded in 1925, and is the nation’s oldest and largest national association of predominately African-American lawyers and judges. It has 84 affiliate chapters throughout the United States and affiliations in Canada, the United Kingdom, Africa and the Caribbean. It represents a professional network of over 20,000 lawyers, judges, educators and law students. The objectives of the NBA are “to advance the science of jurisprudence; improve the administration of justice; preserve the independence of the judiciary and to uphold the honor and integrity of the legal profession; to promote professional and social intercourse among the members of the American and the international bars; to promote legislation that will improve the economic condition of all American citizens, regardless of race, sex or creed in their efforts to secure a free and untrammeled use of the franchise guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States; and to protect the civil and political rights of the citizens and residents of the United States.” Perkins, Brodsky urge Gov. to sign reform legislation Senator Bill Perkins (D-Harlem), chairman of the Senate Committee on Corporations, Authorities, and Commissions and Assemblyman Richard Brodsky (DWestchester), chairman of the Assembly Committee on Corporations, Authorities, and Commissions and Gene Russianoff, a leading reform advocate and president of the Straphanger’s Campaign have announced a concerted effort intended to ensure that the Public Authorities Reform Act of 2009 is signed into law by Governor Paterson. The bill is a fundamental, top to bottom reform of State Authorities such as the MTA, the Thruway Authority, Long Island Power Authority, New York Power Authority, Empire State Development Corporation, and hundreds of others, and has been widely hailed as the most thorough reform of state government in decades. Recent reports have indicated that Mayor Bloomberg has asked Gov. Paterson to veto the bill. “We are committed to working together to ensure that real reform in Albany takes place. Authorities such as the MTA ESDC, LIPA, the Thruway Authority and others have been vehicles for stupendous increases in state debt, corruption, scandal, and mismanagement. They have become shadow government operating like soviet style bureaucracies,” said Assemblyman Richard Brodsky. “We can bring them back to legitimate organizations service the public interests. But that won’t happen if Governor Paterson vetoes this bill.” “New York’s authorities have operated in secret, mismanaged public resources and awarded sweetheart deals to developers and others long enough,” said Sen. Perkins, chair of the Senate Committee on Corporations, Authorities, and Commissions. “Governor Paterson needs to step up and sign on behalf of the people. Let the billionaires fend for themselves this time. These reforms are the result of years of hard work and thorough analysis by the experts in the field.” Sen. Perkins and Assemblyman Brodsky are considering a series of public meetings and hearings as well as a coordinated release of info about authority practices. They plan on releasing a major statement on authority debt in a few days. NNPA Award Winner 27 By Don Thomas Ashanti featured in new ‘Be Great’ billboard in Times Square for Boys & Girls Clubs of America By Audrey J. Bernard Lifestyles/Society Editor One of the newest billboards added to the many outstanding ones hovering over Times Square is that of Grammy Award-winning singer/songwriter, author, actress and Boys & Girls Club alum Ashanti. The beautiful star was on hand for it’s unveiling on Tuesday morning, August 11 in Duffy Square as part of Boys & Girls Clubs of America’s (BGCA) new advocacy campaign encouraging youth to “Be Great.” Looking gorgeous in red — a color as powerful as her message — Ashanti sashayed over to the event from the W Hotel at Broadway and 47 th Street bringing traffic to a halt and giving tourists something to write home about. There she was joined by children from the BGCA and other dignitaries and a pack of photographers who gleefully snapped away. Then, while beautifully posed in front of the electronic billboard sponsored by Clear Channel Spectacolor, Ashanti, surrounded by the children, counted down to the unveiling of the larger than life billboard featuring her cute childhood picture and an inspirational message – “Be Amazing.” Ashanti is the newest celebrity alumni participating in BGCA’s new “Be Great” advocacy campaign to help increase public awareness and understanding about the key issues facing America’s youth, and the positive impact of Clubs. Since its inception, for some young people, a daily dose of BGCA has been the best medicine for their getting through their troubles and for some – keeping them out of trouble. From academic failure and gang Ashanti poses with proud mom and manager Tina Douglas violence to poverty, drugs and obesity, America’s young people face a daunting array of problems – with serious consequences and fewer safety nets at home and in the community. “Growing up in the Club gave on the stage,” she laughed. Once she reached high school, Ashanti began writing songs in high school. Her album, Ashanti, hit the #1 spot on both the Billboard Top 200 and R&B charts and received a ington, Muhammad Ali, Swin Cash, Gen. Wesley Clark, Bill Clinton, Bill Cosby, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Michael Jordan, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Queen Latifah, Mario Lopez, John Mellencamp, Edward James Ashanti poses with BGCA students in front of Be Amazing billboard in Times Square me the opportunity to explore many interests and talents, including dancing and singing, that have profoundly influenced my life,” said Ashanti. “The adult staff at the Club in Glen Cove challenged us to excel, and instilled positive values that still influence me as an adult. It’s an honor to join our alumni ambassadors in talking about the impact Boys & Girls Clubs have on young people, because I’m one of them.” Ashanti is an amazing performer so her objective, “Be Amazing” perfectly echoes her persona as a performer. Recounting her early experiences at BGCA, the “Princess of Hip Hop” recalled how her mother, Tina Douglas, would bring her to the Glen Cove, Long Island chapter. “My mom taught dance for some 20 years and I learned to dance Grammy for best contemporary R&B album. She went on to star in such features films as John Tucker Must Die, Coach Carter, and Resident Evil Extinction. TV credits include the Muppets Wizard of Oz, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Vegas, and American Dreams. Her book of poetry Foolish/Unfoolish is available at Hyperion Books. In 2008, she partnered with jeweler Cartier on a “Love” bracelet benefiting BGCA. Recently, Ashanti made her theatrical debut starring as “Dorothy” in the Encores! production of “The Wiz” to rave reviews. Ashanti now joins a celebrity roster of BGCA alumni in the “Be Great” advocacy campaign including: Academy Award-winning actor and national spokesperson for BGCA, Denzel Wash- Ashanti with VIPs, family and BGCA students Olmos, Shaquille O’Neal, Smokey Robinson, Jimmy Rollins, Martin Sheen, John Singleton, Ruben Studdard, Usher, Courtney Vance, Mark Wahlberg, and Kerry Washington. “We are very excited about Ashanti joining the “Be Great” campaign and her willingness to help us impact the lives of the young people who need us most,” said BGCA president and CEO Roxanne Spillett. “Her story is a textbook case of how the Boys & Girls Club experience can help shape a life, and we are so proud of all that she has accomplished, and all she will continue to do on behalf of the young people following in her footsteps.” As part of the superstar lineup, Ashanti will collaborate with the Club and other alumni to urge the country’s political and business leaders to make the young people of America a priority and encourage every citizen to make a difference by supporting organizations such as the Boys & Girls Clubs – ensuring that every child has a safe, supervised and structured environment during the critical afterschool hours. For more than 100 years, BGCA (www.bgca.org) has helped kids “Be Great,” providing hope and opportunity for those who need it most. Today, more than 4,300 Clubs serve some 4.5 million young people through Club membership and community outreach. Known as The Positive Place for Kids, Boys & Girls Clubs can be found throughout the country and on U.S. military bases worldwide, providing young people 6-18 years old with guidance-oriented character development programs conducted by trained, professional staff. Clubs positively impact lives and help young people reach their full potential as productive, caring citizens. Key programs emphasize leadership development; education and career exploration; community service; technology training; financial literacy; health and life skills; the arts; sports, fitness and recreation; and family outreach. In a recent Harris Survey of Club alumni, 57 percent said the Club saved their lives. National headquarters are located in Atlanta. The billboard featuring Ashanti is the latest in a series of ads depicting the childhood photos of Club alumni, the “Be Great” message and Web address. Thanks to a partnership with the Outdoor Advertising Association of America the lead trade association representing the outdoor advertising industry, thousands of billboard ads will be donated by local companies across the country. Frank Sanchez Jr., vice president, corporate & partner relationships, Boys & Girls Clubs of America with Singer, actor Breje with BGCA students Ashanti (Photo credit: Hilary Steffens/ PRNewswire/ Boys & Girls Club and Ronnie Wright) Celebrate Harlem Week 2009 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Entertainment NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 28 MELLOW FELLOW Nobody does ’60s soul and R&B’s oldschool better than Raphael Saadiq “While I was making the album, I watched videos by Gladys Knight & The Pips, Al Green, The Four Tops…and fused them all together.” – Raphael Saadiq Edited by Audrey J. Bernard Lifestyles/Society Editor WNET.ORG is a pioneering public media institution universally recognized for the intelligence, integrity, innovation, and inspiration of its programs and initiatives. WNET.ORG serves its community with unique programming and educational projects through an array of channels. Its goal is to deliver media experiences of lasting significance for New York, America and the world. Consummate performer Raphael Saadiq cares about the universal language, music, and is compassionate about its global reach using the media as a means to keep his art alive. As a result, Saadiq’s latest smash offering Raphael Saadiq: Live from the Artists Den, released July 21, 2009 on Artists Den Entertainment and Columbia Records, will benefit WNET.ORG New York Public Media. The DVD, which is sold exclusively at PublicTelevisionRocks.org, is the first concert DVD from the Grammy-nominated artist and producer. The DVD, which will be distributed by RED, was filmed at an intimate, private performance at the Harvard Club of Boston, and selections from the show aired nationwide on public television’s Raphael Saadiq: Live from the Artists Den, the hit weekly music series featuring extraordinary artists performing in extraordinary settings. Released now in full for the first time, the DVD features bonus interview clips and concert footage not included in the televi- sion broadcast. Saadiq broke through the American mainstream as a member of multi-platinum R&B innovators Tony! Toni! Tone! The Grammy-winning producer has worked with a roster of superstars. He has released two solo studio albums that have received eight Grammy nominations between them, including a recordsetting five for his Instant Vintage debut in 2002 – the most nominations ever for an independent release – and three for 2008’s The Way I See It – Best R&B Album, Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance and Best R&B Performance By A Duo Or Group. The making of his latest offering starts off with Saadiq warming up the cold winter night of December 3, 2008 with a ninepiece band in the hallowed Harvard Club of Boston, built in 1912. Of playing the unique room, he said, “This building has some history and this music has some history, so I think it’s a perfect match.” The concert DVD features 18 tracks – most from The Way I See It – and song introductions by Saadiq, including a somber reflection on “Big Easy,” a tribute to those who lost loved ones during Hurricane Katrina. An excellent interpreter of music, Saadiq enjoys the reputation of being a standard bearer for what folks call ‘old school’ music. In this role, he continues a time-honored tradition that goes back to the ‘60s and ‘70s. From his early days as a member of the groundbreaking ‘80s group Tony! Toni! Toné! through his work as an award- winning producer of such artists as Joss Stone, The Roots, Snoop Dogg, John Legend among many others and his own solo albums, the multi-talented contemporary crooner has kept the faith. “Every record I’ve ever made has had those influences…The Temptations, Al Green, The Four Tops and so on,” he explains from the L.A. studio where he recorded his latest illustrious work. This album is the culmination of a life time of experiences informed by the music I grew up on.” Indeed. Listening to The Way I See It, it’s immediately obvious that it could have been recorded thirty years ago. Musically cohesive in the same way that soul music albums were recorded back in the day, Saadiq’s third solo album and first for Sony BMG is not merely a throwback: it is as close to the kind of record made in Detroit, Chicago, Memphis, Miami or New York by any number of super R&B hit makers to anything recorded since. While other contemporary artists may attempt to emulate the sound and flavor of ’70s soul music, Saadiq brings real emotion, real feeling and production values that are simply (to borrow a popular phrase from back then), right on. The inspiration for singer/ songwriter/musician/producer and arranger Saadiq’s follow up to 2004’s critically-acclaimed Ray Ray set came from an unlikely destination. “I was out of the country, cooling out, in Costa Rica and The Bahamas. I was surfing and ran into people from all kinds of places…and I noticed everybody was listening to this classic soul music and when I came back home and the music for this album flowed organically, naturally. “ “Since I have my own studio, I was able to perfect it, take my time to make it right. I was able to live with it, day after day and I think that had a lot to do with how the album turned out. In all, it took about four months to put it all together,” Saadiq concludes. The result is that The Way I See It has the kind of smooth musical flow associated with great records made by pioneering producers at famous R&B companies like Motown, Invictus and Brunswick. From the foot-tapping opening track, “Sure Hope You Mean It” to the head-shaking reflective closer “Sometimes,” the heart wrenching singer delivers a present day potent ode to a bygone era. Talking about the songs, he notes, “The first track shows my deep connection to The Temptations. The vocal has a David Ruffin ‘feel’: I pictured how it was when Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams and the guys in the Temps were first introduced to the world. I looked at a lot of their album covers so I could immerse myself in the characters. I think of the track as vintage Motown with a Stax guitar line factored in…it’s like a melting pot of the two sounds…” Loyal Tony! Toni! Toné! fans will particularly appreciate “100 Yard Dash,” which Saadiq describes as “a juke joint, Booker T.-type groove. I reflected back to my first T!T!T! albums when I was singing in a high tenor voice.” British R&B fans – specifically ‘Northern Soul’ lovers – will dig “Keep Marching” with its insistent driving beat and he notes, “That’s the kind of song that can drive people crazy at my live shows… it’s a performance piece.” That same love for real music is exactly what has created a solid and loyal audience for traditional soul sounds among a whole generation of Latino concert-goers and record buyers: “Callin,’” with its Spanish language lines and pronounced doo-wop flavor is, he notes, “a jump back to the music of the ‘50s. I wanted to make a track that would get the low riders. People talk about the division between Latinos and Blacks but we all grew up together loving the same music. This song is a reminder of how we do when we get together…” Hearkening back to the Hot Wax and Invictus records made in Detroit by Holland-Dozier-Holland (soul music buffs, think Freda Payne and The Honeycone), “Staying In Love” is a nifty dance floor gem: “It reminds me of a Jackson 5 record, with that James Jamerson bass line, the kind of energy folks love from those Motown tracks.” And the lyrics? “I wrote it with my ex in mind…some of it is fabricated and some of it is true to life!” Saadiq doesn’t fess up about the lyrics for the catchy “Let’s Talk A Walk” (opening line, “This place is crowded/Don’t know bout’ you/I need some sex/Some sex with you…”) only commenting that it’s “self explanatory!” Born and raised in Oakland, California Raphael Saadiq learned to play guitar, drums, and bass at the age of six, making the bass his preferred instrument. Singing with a professional gospel group by the time he was nine, the budding singer’s musical education encompassed classical music, ’40’s spirituals, hymns, jazz and, of course, R&B. Shortly after high school, Saadiq won a chance to join Prince and Sheila E. on their 1984 “Parade” world tour. As the lead vocalist and bass player with late ’80’s/early ’90’s group Tony! Toni! Toné!, he experienced his first taste of megasuccess, kicking off with the hit single, “Little Walter” in 1988 through the now-classic slow jam “It Never Rains (In Southern California)” and the club/dance party of “Feels Good,” resulting in total sales of over six million copies for the band. After leaving the group, Saadiq recorded two singles for hit movies (1995’s “Ask of You” from “Higher Learning” and “Me & You” from “Boyz in the Hood”). In 2000, he created the supergroup Lucy Pearl (with En Vogue’s Dawn Robinson and A Tribe Called Quest’s Ali Shaheed Muhammad) and the team’s much-appreciated sole self-titled album received Grammy, American Music Awards and Soul Train Music Awards nominations. In 2003, Saadiq released the live CD, All Hits at the House of Blues following it in 2004 with Ray Ray. In demand as a producer, songwriter and musician, his impressive list of credits includes Whitney Houston, Mary J. Blige, Anthony Hamilton, Devin the Dude, Kelis, Q-Tip, Lil’ Skeeter, Ludacris, The Bee Gees, Nappy Roots, T-Boz from TLC, Young Bellz, Earth, Wind & Fire and many others. In 2006, he was the main producer and co-writer of seven songs for the Introducing Joss Stone project. Now comes The Way I See It, a masterful collection of new material that speaks to Saadiq’s deep love for rhythm and blues. “While I was making the album, I watched videos by Gladys Knight & The Pips, Al Green, The Four Tops…and fused them all together,” he admits speaking of the further inspiration he found for creating the album, which truly showcases the rich diversity of funky grooves and smooth balladry that is Saadiq’s calling card. The standout “Oh Girl” (not the Chi-Lites classic but an original Saadiq composition) stirs up images of famed Philly soul harmony groups like The Delfonics and The Stylistics. “I love the ballads by those groups, they’re among my favorite songs,” says Saadiq. “When I listen to them, I wonder where did that sound come from.” The number one soul singer grins when talking about the hypnotic “Love That Girl”: “ M a n , t h a t ’s a l l a b o u t t h e swing…the way girls swing their hips! It’s the type of song that will make people move and that shuffle beat reminds me of those ladies I used to see playing drums in church!” With its Motown-flavored tambourine-featured beat, “Never Give You Up” is what Saadiq calls “my three generations song. It includes C.J., this youngster from Baltimore that I’m working with and Stevie Wonder. The Way I See It ends appropriately with the Sam Cooke-influenced “Sometimes” which Saadiq explains is “the story of my mother and my grandmother who have always been such an inspiration to me through this journey. It felt right to close out the record this way.” Saadiq says that his latest album was “harder to make than Instant Vintage.” “Once I got into this, I got almost stuck ‘in character,’ the character of the old school singers I listened to. But I’m happy and excited it’s done. I put in a lot of work and I feel like I achieved something really great,” he concluded. Interview 29 By Starre Moss After a five-year hiatus, R&B star Chico DeBarge is back on the scene with a new CD called, “Addiction” and a new deal with Kedar Entertainment. This time around, the what I’ve been through in my life,” said DeBarge. “Addiction” is DeBarge’s first musical project since his last CD, “Free” was released in 2003. He hasn’t been sitting idle all that time either. “I’ve been touring a lot and working tan. DeBarge (whose full name is Jonathan Arthur DeBarge) is the youngest of the Debarge family of singers. At one point in time the family had close ties with the Jackson family (Janet Jackson was m a r r i e d t o b r o t h e r, J a m e s The Debarge, family singing group Chico DeBarge Detroit born crooner translates his life journey through song, opening up about his battles with drug abuse, incarceration and troubled relationships. DeBarge became addicted to prescription drugs and heroin and went through rehabilitation in 2003. “Addiction is something I’ve dealt with in my past. The topic matter is important because it’s true to on my new magazine called The 9’s mag.com, an online lifestyle magazine,” Chico told me. The singer has also been busy writing the songs for project which he produced as well. Chico, who now resides in Brooklyn, New York has been performing all summer long from Von King Park in Brooklyn to Central Park in Manhat- thoughts on the death of pop icon, Michael Jackson, “It’s a very sad incident. It’s sad that he died so early because we wanted so much more from him and he had so much more to give.” DeBarge has been both inspired and influenced through the years by legendary artists such as Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and Michael Jackson. When he’s enjoying music, he DeBarge) and the musical fami- prefers to listen to the classics lies were often compared to one rather than music put out by today’s artists. another. Chico’s experiences, good When asked what it was like being compared to the J a c k s o n ’s , t h e s i n g e r r e sponded, “I think it’s great especially since they discovered DeBarge. They also discovered Switch. It’s an honor to be compared to the Jackson’s.” The singer also shared his Theater/Review New play tries to convey too much of everything but character development By Ernece B. Kelly Theater Critic Sometimes it feels as if a playwright were driven to include every idea that comes to mind. George O. Brome’s two-hour marathon drama, “Another Man’s Poison,” performing at The Peter J Sharpe Theater on West 42 nd Street, set in the 1970’s, is a vivid example of this. Gayness, absentee fathers, the Vietnam War, Kent State and Jackson State, plus the Korean Conflict are just some of the themes touched on here. It’s too much. Brome doesn’t explore most of them, so these tantalizing undeveloped notions distract audiences and prevent him from developing his six characters. One who escapes this fate—the play re- volves around him—is Frankie Masters (Leland Gantt), a Black comedian struggling to have his own television show. Masters has honed his comic skills over decades beginning in the Army when he realized that whites were more accepting of a Black man who could make them laugh. After Korea, he neglects his wife Pauline (Penelope Lowder) and son, Alan (James Edward Shippy) so that he and his manager Mel (Steve Greenstein) can develop his TV pilot. Scenes of that pilot provide much needed comic relief and are rehearsed with Dennis Hearn and Toni L. Stanton playing multiple parts. Scenes of Frankie and his wife show the rifts in their longstanding relationship, (“Show business has done nothing but keep us apart”, Pauline complains) and when their son Alan is added to the mix, mutual resentment intensifies matters. “Instead of cutting the apron strings…you’re crocheting them,” Frankie shouts at one point. (Peppering the drama is dialogue like this which shows the playwright’s strength.) But clever lines, Kevin Lee Allen’s sleek and efficient set design, and the pitch perfect l970’s styles of costume designer Ali Turns—Alan’s suede fringe vest and patterned shirt are classic—are not enough to salvage this drama. Sometimes less is more and sometimes more is too much. “Another Man’s Poison” simply put, tries to convey too much of everything but character development, and that’s the stuff theatre audiences come for. and bad, have made him stronger and wiser. The advice he offers to today’s up and coming artists, “Learn all you can about the business because this is a very difficult business to be in. Get all the knowledge you can get.” DeBarge’s ‘addiction’ these days is his music. “I wouldn’t really say it’s an addiction but it’s definitely my passion,” he said. When asked what he would like his legacy to be, the singer answered, “I would like to be remembered for truth and honesty in my music.” NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Chico DeBarge: A Good Addiction NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 30 Film Strip ‘District 9,’ a South African racially charged sci-fi flick By Marie Moore Contributing Scribe Peter Jackson, producer, is used prominently in the promotion of “District 9.” The ads read: “Peter Jackson presents District 9.” Jackson is responsible for “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy and the 2005 remake of “King Kong,” in which the natives were more threatening than the original 1933 film. Aliens who landed in South Africa in “District 9” isn’t the only vexing issue but menacing Nigerians who devour body parts compound the debacle. Director Neill Blomkamp says he saw a void in South Africa’s cinema when it came to science fiction. “I was a science fiction nut growing up in Jo’Burg (Johannesburg) and I realized that I hadn’t seen science fiction in Africa before,” says Blomkamp, who is also responsible for the screenplay. I asked the star of the film, Sharlto Copley, to address a statement he had made about South Africans dealing with issues that most people don’t deal with around the world. “In South Africa, we have to deal with issues that generally people around the world try to sweep under the rug,” Copley commented. Grilled about the issue, he went on to explain that they were cultural. “Cultural differences and value differences, I think, are the biggest challenges that people face in any country. You try not to talk about the things that you really differ on. You know, if you believe that it’s fine to have 10 wives and I believe that it isn’t, we try to sort of not talk about that one because it just creates tension. So you just try and focus on the positive side and try Scene from “District 9” the sci-fi flick of space aliens living in apartheid-like squalor copped the box-office number one spot earning $37 million in ticket sales. to focus on common values. “That’s certainly what South Africa was able to do to allow that kind of decision to happen in 1994, the kind of peaceful transition to democracy. It was about focusing a little bit more and also creating a space for the painful stuff to come out; things like the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. “In it’s most boiled down distilled level, I think it’s really just the idea of two groups, two races kind of meeting one another head on and one group oppressing the other one directly and indirectly. I think a lot of it is subconscious,” Blomkamp says. The animosity between the Africans in the film is very cognizant. “There are two parts to South Africa’s history,” Blomkamp continued. “There’s the part that everybody knows which is, you know, the white oppression over the Black majority. But then there’s the second thing that’s happening now which I wanted to include in the film. “The situation of the millions of Zimbabwean immigrants and the impoverished Blacks of South Africa reached its critical point while we were filming in 2008. I don’t know if you saw the news, about the lynchings, burnings and machete attacks but it was seriously violent stuff that happened.” More disturbing than the aliens who wanted to return home are those are the scenes of Nigerians eating body parts. Called upon to describe the cannibalistic scenes Blomkamp noted that putting the Nigerians into a setting where they are involved in a crime syndicate, “South Africans would instantly think that was absolutely accurate and completely hilarious. That is exactly how South Africa is. For all of downtown Jo’Burg it’s Nigerian occupied and most of the violent crime in Jo’Burg stems from the central area around Hillbron where huge Nigerian gangs own and control a lot of the ins and outs of how the city works. There are lots of African witch doctors and voodoo. In South Africa that practice or idea of consuming body parts and stuff has powerful results. So it’s something that I put in there because it is African and it is part of South Africa’s makeup but I walk that fine line knowing that a North American population may or may not get it. So it’s authentic to South Africa and it’s authentic to West Africa but the audiences are going to take from it what they will I guess,” Blomkamp concluded. Hip-hop artist Big Boi, onehalf of the Grammy Awardwinning duo “OutKast,” poses with Minnie Mouse at the Magic Kingdom in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. Antwan Andre Patton, a/k/a Big Boi is scheduled to release his first solo project entitled “Sir Luscious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty” in 2009. In addition to his work with “OutKast,” the Atlanta, Georgia based artist and producer has appeared on tracks by Grammy Award-winners Beyonce, Jay-Z and Missy Elliott. In 2008 he collaborated with the Atlanta Ballet for a series of well received performances.. He was visiting the Walt Disney World Resort during his recent vacation. (Photo: Garth Vaughan) KICKIN’ IT with Audrey J. Bernard 31 Dr. Billy Taylor, founder of Jazzmobile, celebrates milestone birthday Jazzmobile presents New York’s oldest continuous summer Jazz festival reaching approximately 100,000 annually. In honor of Jazzmobile Inc.’s 45th anniversary, on Wednesday, August 12, an array of musicians – wearing their 2009 Jazzmobile Summerfest T-shirts — attended a very special opportunity to pose for a reunion photograph prior to the group’s free concert featuring the Jimmy Heath band. Artists including Jimmy Heath, Jimmy Owens, Charli Persip, Benny Powell, Frank Wess and Randy Weston, who have performed for Jazzmobile at concert halls, clubs and in its renowned Summerfest mobile concerts since the group’s 1964 founding, joined the organization’s founder Dr. Billy Taylor for the historic gathering. Additional performers and others from the Jazz community who attended the jamboree included WBGO Jazz 88.3 FM radio personality and concert producer Sheila Anderson, Hakim Ankh-ra, Azande Cummings, Michael Max Flemming, Ghanniyya Green, Onaje Allan Gumbs, Winard Harper, Antonio Hart, Michael Howell, Linda Hudson, David Lee Jones, Melba Joyce, Kiyoshi Kitagawa and Ray Mantilla. Together with Marie Lee McBroom (former grant writer for Jazzmobile in 1964), Danny Mixon, Antoinette Montague, Don Moore, Eunice Newkirk, Dion Parson, Jeb Patton, Jeremy Pelt, Donald Sanger, Bill Saxton, Cynthia Scott, Dotti Anita Taylor, Akiko Tsuruga, Diego Urcola, Lynette Washington and Elise Wood. “We are delighted that some of the artists, who have been entertaining in neighborhoods throughout the city as a part of Jazzmobile’s programs for de- Jazzmobile Instructors (1st row) Jim Harrison, Jimmy Heath, Dr. Billy Taylor, Robin Bell-Stevens, Chris White, Paul West, Bill Saxton (2nd row) Michael Max Flemming, Jimmy Owens, Benny Powell & Michael Howell cades, have joined us today. Some of the artists missing are performing in national and international festivals. Having our founder, Billy Taylor, and two former heads of Jazzmobile (jazz musicians themselves) — Chris White and Paul West — is very special,” said Jazzmobile president & CEO Robin Bell-Stevens. “The public also came out to thank them for their dedicated years of service to the art and culture landscape of the City of New York. This event is part of the 18-month celebration of our 45th anniversary,” concluded Bell-Stevens. Heath led the free concert that followed the photo taking opportunity. The consummate jazz artist has long been recognized as a brilliant instrumentalist and a magnificent composer and arranger. He is the middle brother of the legendary Heath Brothers (Percy Heath/bass and Tootie Heath/drums) and the father of urban contemporary and funk musician and producer Mtume, known for his 1970s/80s band of the same name. Having led his own ensembles Jazzmobile executive directors Paul West, Robin Bell-Stevens, Dr. Billy Taylor & Chris White and big band, Heath has performed with nearly all the jazz greats of the last 50 years, from Howard McGhee, Dizzy Gillespie, and Miles Davis to Wynton Marsalis. Over the course of his career he has performed on more than 100 record albums, including seven with The Heath Brothers and 12 as a leader. Many of Heath’s more than 125 compositions have become jazz standards. Heath has not only been a Jazzmobile artist, he’s helped create the next generation of jazz performers as a Jazzmobile instructor since the 1970s. Jazzmobile’s Summerfest runs through August 28, with concerts in all five boroughs of New York, including performances as a part of the Harlem Week celebration. Each Wednesday the group presents a concert at Grant’s Tomb and each Friday it holds a concert in Marcus Garvey Park — both shows at 7:00 p.m.; throughout the week Jazzmobile swings into neighborhoods across New York City. For more information, go to www.jazz mobile.org. Jazzmobile, Inc., the oldest not for profit arts organization created just for jazz in the country, was founded in 1964 by jazz master Dr. Billy Taylor and Daphne Arnstein. Its mission is to present, preserve, promote, and propagate Jazz — “America’s classical music.” This mission is implemented through quality jazz education and performance programs: workshops, master classes, lecture demonstrations, arts enrichment programs, as well as outof-doors mobile Jazz performances and those in clubs and major concert halls here and abroad. Jazzmobile, www.jazzmo bile.org, serves approximately 100,000 people in New York City and its outlying areas each year. Remaining 2009 Jazzmobile Summer Concert Schedule: Thurs., 8/20, 7:00 PM, Dave Gibson, Lyman Pl. bet. Freeman & 169th St., Bronx; Fri., 8/21, 7:00 PM, Antoinette Montague, Marcus Garvey Park, 122nd St. & 5th Ave, Harlem; *Sat., 8/2, Jazzmobile Reunion at Grants Tomb 11:30 AM, Ray Mantilla, NY Family “Health Walk-a-thon,” St. Nicholas Park, 135th St. & St. Nicholas Ave, Harlem. Sat., 8/22, 3:00PM, Arturo O’Farrill, J. Hood Wright Park, Fort Washington Ave., bet. W. 174th & 175th St., Washington Heights; Mon., 8/24, 7:00 PM, The Duke Ellington Legacy Band, featuring Edward Ellington II, 106th St. bet. Central Park West & Manhattan Ave, Manhattan; Tues., 8/25, 7:00 PM, Cecil Bridgewater & the Jazzmobile All-Stars, 122nd St., bet. 7th & Lenox Aves, Harlem. Wed., 8/26, 7:00 PM, Frank Wess, Grant’s Tomb,122nd St. & Riverside Dr., Harlem; *Wed., 8/ 26, 7:30 PM-10:00 PM, (3 Sets), Boncella Lewis, “The Joints are Jumpin’”, Londell’s, 2620 8th Ave at 140th St., Thurs., 8/27, 7:00 PM, Lynette Washington, 132nd St. bet. 7th & Lenox Aves, Harlem; Fri., 8/28, 7:00 PM, Ghanniyya Green, Marcus Garvey Park, 122nd St. & 5th Ave, Harlem. *Note: As part of Harlem Week 2009. Please note that all performances are weather permitting and subject to change. Enthusiatic Jazzmobile fans in their Jazzmobile T-shirts (Photos: Hubert Williams/Imagezs of Us) NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 45th Anniversary Reunion NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 32 In Performance George Wallace says: ‘Laughter is the greatest thing in the world’ George Wallace By shirlee r. schwam Contributing Scribe Inspired by such greats as Red Skelton, Johnny Carson, Redd Foxx, Milton Berle and Richard Pryor, among many other comedic actors, at the tender age of six, George Wallace already decided that one day he would be an outstanding comedian. Nonetheless, in order to achieve his dream, he needed a financial cushion to fall back upon. In order to pursue the practical goals, he left his home town of Atlanta, Georgia and enrolled in the University of Akron in Ohio. Upon graduation, he received a degree in transportation, marketing and advertising which he then put to good and practical use by selling advertising space. And although he was successful, (within a couple of years he progressed to being vice president of the firm for which he worked) the idea of becoming a comedian was never far from his mind and remained his ultimate goal. At every opportunity, Wallace did stand-up comedy routines in all venues, and the skills he honed in sales quickly helped him land comedy appearances. As he himself has said on many occasions, “In advertising, I had to sell space, whereas in comedy, I have to sell myself.” He was successful in marketing his talents and when one of his clients opened a comedy club, Wallace hit the stage and from then on the transition occurred smoothly. Within a matter of weeks, Wallace was seen on stage at a comedy club and was offered a job writing for “The Red Foxx Show.” As his comedic reputa- tion grew, he was suggested as a competitor for a cable television special “The Big Laff Off” where he won the first prize of $2,000 and club engagements all over the country. Like his contemporaries, Jerry Seinfeld and Bill Cosby, Wallace derives his comedy from every day moments of life. His unique brand of social commentary proved popular with radio audi- ences as well. He also is a favorite guest on the TV talk show circuit with appearances on “The Tonight Show,” “Late Night With Dave Letterman,” “Entertainment Tonight,” “E!Entertainment,” “Extra” and “Oprah” as well as starring on his own HBO special. In addition, Wallace has had guest starring roles on “Seinfeld,” “The Parkers,” “In The Heat Of The Night,” “Tall Hopes,” “The Fresh Prince Of Bel Air,” and “Arliss And Moesha,” among others. In 1995, after having been nominated four years in a row, Wallace won an American Comedy Award as best stand-up comedian. Wallace has also appeared in several motion pictures, including: “The Wash,” “Three Strikes,” “Little Nicky,” “A Rage In Harlem,” “Punchline,” “Bert Rigby You’re A Fool,” “Hot To Trot,” “Things Are Tough All Over,” “Postcards From The Edge,” “Batman Forever” and “Meet Wally Sparks”. Signs and billboards throughout Las Vegas proclaim Wallace as the best 10pm show on the Strip. Having read that this ultimate showman was seeking to run for Mayor, I inquired if this was true. He replied that this is a standing joke with his colleagues. “One day I talk of running for Mayor, the next day I am being promoted as a candidate for President. It’s one of the things we banter about” he adds, tongue in cheek. “Vegas is an audience unlike any place else. It’s made up of people from all over the world,” he adds. The world-known, affable comedian is comfortable with audiences as young as 8 and as old as 80. Currently he is doing his hilarious stand-up routines at the world famous Flamingo Hotel & Casino on the Las Vegas Strip. He is the undisputed king of the “I Be Thinkin Yo Mamma Jokes.” “I met your Mama at the airport– She got a job sniffing luggage.” “Yo Mama is so cross-eyed, yesterday she dropped a dime and picked up two nickels.” “Yo Mama cook’n is so bad, all the flies got together and fixed the hole in the screen.” “My mama so fat, she has to iron her panties in the driveway.” Wallace lets the audience know who’s boss. When someone shouted a command, he immediately retorted with “This is my house–you do what I say!” He also regales audiences with the “Stupid Things People Say.” “At the airport, this guy comes up to me and asks, “What are you doing at the airport? Are you going somewhere?” or the sign that reads: “Cleaners open 7 days a week; even Sundays.” “The other day, I went down to the lobby of the hotel, and this man looked me over and said, “I got something exactly like that, only, it’s different.” His wit is the swiftest. Looking at some couples in the front row, Wallace asks: “How come people who snore, are always the first to fall asleep?” Wallace, who looks like a lovable huge teddy bear, tells his standing-room only audience that “laughter is the greatest thing in the world.” As if to prove it, the awesome comedian continues with his observations. “You know. I went to night school. Not that I had to, we lived so far away, it took me until night to get there.” “I went in to my local post office yesterday, and there on the wall were some photos. A picture of a wanted murderer and the employee of the month were the same.” Discussing the economic situation Wallace says It’s becoming ridiculous. I stayed at The MGM Grand and ordered a slice of raisin toast. The price charged was $6.75. I told the waiter that the price was too high and suggested he take off a few raisins to make it cheaper.” While Wallace performs nightly at the Flamingo Hotel, he does not rest on his past accomplishments; he writes new jokes all the time. Unlike some comedians, Wallace does not rely on offensive jokes and rarely, if ever, repeats his dialogue. Instead, he uses his flare for knowing his audiences and avoids the standard or cliché material often used by others. No matter how often a patron goes to see his show, he always finds room for more and more laughter. When in Las Vegas, “The George Wallace Show” should be your first stop—you will thank me for it! Anika Noni Rose (2nd left), who provides the voice of Disney’s newest princess, (Tiana), in the upcoming Walt Disney Pictures animated feature film “The Princess and the Frog,” poses with the new Princess Tiana character (left) as she will soon appear at Disneyland Resort in California and Walt Disney World Resort in Florida. The very first public appearance of the Princess Tiana theme park character and took place during the 2009 National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) Annual Convention in Tampa, Florida. In addition, Rose performed a song from the film for convention-goers. “The Princess and the Frog” film will premiere in theaters nationwide December 11, 2009. (Photo: Matt Stroshane) 33 (From page 2) part, is you don’t turn over the whole new marketplace to private insurance companies and trust them to do the right thing.” Obama’s spokesman refused to say a public option was a make-orbreak choice. “What I am saying is the bottom line for this for the president is, insurance in competition with private industry, not unlike the way electric and agriculture coops operate, especially in rural states such as his own. With $3 billion to $4 billion in initial support from the government, the co-ops would operate under a national structure with state affiliates, but independent of the government. They would be required to maintain the type (From page 10) of financial reserves that private companies are required to keep in case of unexpectedly high ability and transparency in government. claims. Clinton, particularly, praised the “I think there will be a competitor to private insurers,” Sebelius government as “a model of democsaid. “That’s really the essential what we have to have is choice and competition in the insurance market,” White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Sunday. A day before, Obama appeared to hedge his bets. “All I’m saying is, though, that the public option, whether we have it or we don’t have it, is not the entirety of health care reform,” Obama said at a town hall meeting in Grand Junction, Colo. “This is just one sliver of it, one aspect of it.” Lawmakers have discussed the co-op model for months, although the Democratic leadership and the White House have said they prefer a government-run option. Conrad, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, called the argument for a government-run public plan little more than a “wasted effort.” He added there are enough votes in the Senate for a cooperative plan. Clinton: US sent ‘tough love’ message to Africa racy and economic progress in Africa.” She noted that women account for more than half the members of Cape Verde’s Cabinet. “I think the United States can learn a lot from your example,” she told Neves. Said Clinton: “I always feel a sense of awe that we are in the place where human beings began so many, many years ago.” “I leave Africa even more com- mitted about what lies ahead,” she told reporters. “The Obama administration has delivered ... a message of tough love. We are not sugarcoating the problems. We’re not shying away from them.” Protestors are testing President Obama’s fortitude That is increasingly unlikely as nance Committee who is workone can see by the leadership in ing with the Chair,Max Baucus. a solution that is favored by Re- the Senate of Grassley of Iowa, the Baucus is already compropublicans as well as Democrats. minority leader on the Senate Fi- mised because he has been (From page 8) Rape: Torture in the Congo (From page 12) atrocities before they even arrived in Congo. Pushed out by Tutsi forces after they perpetrated the Rwandan genocide, these paramilitary forces settled in Eastern Congo. Other groups, like Laurent Nkunda’s CNDP, continue to fight the Congolese government. Under-funded and underpaid Congolese government troops fight both types of groups, and unfortunately, also the civilian population. The psychology of it is both complicated and elusive. Yet the ripple effect is too great to be ignored. Each time perpetrators whether military or militia – rape, torture, terrorize, and burn villages, they destroy the very fabric of Congo and any hope for real democracy and prosperity. We need to take a stand and demand accountability. From the corporations that rape the country and turn a blind eye to the violence, to our governments and African governments, we must demand action regardless of boundaries and partisanship. Generations of abuse and rape in this rich land can only be overcome by a global uproar and demand for action globally and locally. Nicole C. Lee is the executive director of TransAfrica Forum Michael Vick has paid his dues (From page 8) Another bright spot is that the National Humane Society has been acting humanely. It has accepted Vick’s offer to talk to youth about animal cruelty and will reserve judgment on whether he’s had a true change in heart. Vick’s interview with James Brown Sunday night on “60 Minutes” was largely designed to win over some doubters. It was largely successful. It was clear to me that he was well-trained on how to deal with hostile questions. BROWN: And the operation, Michael, that you pleaded guilty to bankrolling, to being a part of, engaged in barbarous treatment of the animals — beating them, shooting them, electrocuting them, drowning them. Horrific They don’t dislike health care (From page 8) cates claim that government intervention isn’t fair to private companies. What? The same private companies that now leave people uninsured? A compromise might be the notion of government supported health insurance cooperatives. This takes a step in the direction of those Republicans who want to preserve competition. From my perspective, the cooperatives could work, but they may also have flaws that distort the outcomes for the poorest Americans. Further, a compromise right now signals that all people have to do is go to town meetings, clown and perform like banshees, in order to get their way. In discussions that have shed less light than heat, health insurance reform opponents have clearly signaled their antipathy to this President, but they have not offered clear objections to his health insurance plan. They have provided the basis for analysis, but not capitulation. Julianne Malveaux is president of Bennett College for Women. She may be reached at presben nett@bennett.edu. things, Michael. VICK: It’s wrong, man. I don’t know how many times I gotta tell, I gotta say it. I mean, it was wrong. I feel, you know, I feel, you know, tremendous hurt behind what happened. And, you know, I should’ve took the initiative to stop it all. You know, given more money from the health care industry than any other Senator except for Grassley, but his deference to Grassley makes it all the worse. It was the same during the Clinton years in the 1992-1994, when Clinton tried to get a health care bill through. He did craft a bill, but there were also several others developed by other members of Congress and none of them made it out of the relevant Committees due to the power of the Insurance lobby. So, the issue is whether Obama will have the guts to stand up to them or negotiate reform away, seeking to get anything to set him up for re-election in 2012. Already, the wheels of the “Government Option” seem to be coming off. This measure had been sold as a mechanism to provide competition to the 1,300 health insurance companies to bring down costs. Now, his Secretary of Health is saying that if the same thing can be achieved without this Option, it might be done. He needs to not be intimidated, but to understand the raucous town hall meetings as nothing more than the massive rant of those who lost the election, that things will clarify when there is a bill and the American people will most probably swing behind it and him. Dr. Ron Walters is Professor of Government and Politics Emeritus at the University of Maryland. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (University of Michigan Press). and I didn’t. And I feel so bad about that now. And I know, you know, that I didn’t I didn’t step up. I wasn’t a leader. BROWN: In any way, for those who may say it showed a lack of moral character because you didn’t stop it, you agree or disagree? VICK: I agree. Vick has repeatedly accepted full responsibility, he has served his time in prison and is surrounded by talented people such as Tony Dungy. It’s time for PETA and others to call off the dogs. George E. Curry, former editorin-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com. Obama and the extreme right (From page 12) US military intervention into a situation that could end up resembling Vietnam. In fact, the Afghanistan war, through its budgetary impact, could derail his domestic objectives. So, while President Obama ignores the principal concerns of his base, the extreme Right sharpens its knives. It wishes to see him fail and they have been very clear about that. Insofar as President Obama departs from a focus on “Main Street” instead of “Wall Street,” and insofar as he attempts to appease big business, he will demoralize his base. Those who were and are looking for progres- sive change will fall prey to despair. So, President Obama has a choice, and progressive people do as well. Those who argue that we need to give President Obama more time in order to move his agenda are missing what is actually happening in the real world. If he continues to retreat, time will run out and the Right will have won. Therefore, President Obama needs to have pressure coming from another direction and that other direction needs to ensure that he follows up on his commitment to jobs; healthcare; housing; and peace. What the political Right is counting upon is that President Obama will fall on his face. They are also counting on his base becoming tired, despairing and lazy. If that happens, they assume that they can march into office in 2010 as the saviors of the USA, and more specifically, the saviors of white people. Irrespective of President Obama’s negotiating strategies, progressive people need to make sure that the only way that the political Right marches is into oblivion. Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a senior scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies, the immediate past president of TransAfrica Forum and the co-author of “Solidarity Divided.” He can be reached at papaq54@hotm ail.com. NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Ex- Gov. Dean calls public option indispensable 34 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com THEATRE BRIEFS Lillias White joins cast of Fela!, as mother of iconic African composer & performer Fela Anikulapo-Kuti Lillias White Tony Award-winner Lillias White will join the cast of Fela!, the new Broadway musical based on the life and music of African composer and performer Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, playing the role of the iconic artist’s mother, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti. The critically acclaimed musical, which had sold-out crowds dancing in the aisles during its world premiere last summer at OffBroadway’s 37 Arts, will arrive on Broadway at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre, on Monday, October 19, 2009. The official opening is set for Monday, November 23, 2009. Fela! is directed and choreographed by Tony Award-winner Bill T. Jones, with a book by Jim Lewis and Jones. The world renowned Antibalas and other members of the NYC Afrobeat community, under the direction of Aaron Johnson, will again perform Kuti’s rousing music live onstage. Winner of this year’s Lucille Lortel Award for Best Musical, Fela! was conceived by Bill T. Jones, Jim Lewis and Stephen Hendel. White, a native New Yorker, began singing at a young age atop her Grandmother’s dining room table. Since then she has performed at major venues around the world from New York to Singapore, L.A. to Sydney. An acclaimed actress and singer, White has achieved success on Broadway in such hits as Barnum, Dreamgirls, Cats, Once On This Is- land, How To Succeed In Business…, Chicago and The Life, for which she won the Tony Award, Drama Desk Award, Outer Critics Circle Award and Friends of New York award for her outstanding performance as “Sonia.” On film, White can be seen with Katie Holmes in Pieces Of April, with Michael Keaton in Game Six, and you can catch a glimpse of her with Jim Carrey on the conga line in How The Grinch Stole Christmas. Television credits include; “Sesame Street” (Emmy Award), “Law & Order: S.V.U.,” “The Jury,” “NYPD Blue,” “PBS TV in Performance at the White House” with Leotyne Price, and most recently as Bloody Mary in the PBS “Great Performances” telecast of South Pacific. Off-Broadway, White was part of the original cast of Crowns (Audelco Award) and won an Obie Award for playing “Hennie” in William Finn’s Romance In Hard Times at the Public. She was also seen in The Princess And The Black-Eyed Pea (San Diego Rep.), The Best Is Yet To Come (Rubicon Theatre), and Waiting For Godot (Cynthia Belgrave Th.). White can be heard singing background for Madonna (“Rescue Me”) and as the voice of the Lead Muse in Disney’s Hercules as well as “Effie Melody White” in the 25th anniversary concert Anne V. Andre, Lauren Deveaux, Maia McKinney, Iris Wilson recording of Dreamgirls. Her autobiographical recording From Brooklyn to Broadway is available online and coming soon is The Jazz Album – Just Jazz. In this revolutionary new musical, directed and choreographed by Jones with a book by Lewis, audiences are welcomed into the extravagant, decadent and rebellious world of Afrobeat legend Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. Using his pioneering music (a blend of jazz, funk and African rhythm and harmonies), Fela! explores Kuti’s controversial life as artist, political activist and revolutionary musician. Featuring many of Fela Kuti’s most captivating songs and Bill T. Jones’s imaginative staging, Fela! is a provocative hybrid of concert, dance and musical theater. Fela! features scenic and costume design by Marina Draghici, lighting design by Rob Wierzel, sound design by Rob Kaplowitz and projection design by Peter Nigrini. Musical arrangements and additional music by Aaron Johnson and Jordan McLean, and Jim Lewis provided additional lyrics. Fela!, a new musical, based on the life of groundbreaking African composer, performer and activist Fela Anikulapo-Kuti, moves to Broadway. Performances will begin on October 19 at the Eugene O’Neill Theatre (230 West 49th Street, between Broadway and 8th Avenue) with an official opening set for Monday, November 23. The cast will again be led by Sahr Ngaujah as Fela AmikulapoKuti. Ngaujah won an Obie and was nominated for a Lortel award for his performance. Ngaujah’s career spans work with F. Hendrioks, D. Hamilton and T. Habeger (Atlanta, GA) to G. Timmers (Rotterdam) and F. Richter (Berlin). Ngaujah is the Theatre Director of Rotterdam’s Lef Act Festival and a collaborator with MC (Amsterdam). A graduate of Dasarts, his most recent creation is Conversations with Ice. Recent films include The Signal and Blood Done. * * * * * Fela Ransome Kuti was born in Abeokuta, Nigeria, north of Lagos in 1938. His father was a Christian schoolmaster, minister and master pianist and his mother was a worldrecognized feminist leader, who was very active in the anti-colonial Nigerian women’s movement during the struggle for independence. Fela was educated in Nigeria amongst the indigenous elite. Ironically, many of his classmates in his Nigerian school would become the very military leaders he so vociferously opposed. With medical aspirations for their offspring (Fela’s older brother. Koye, was to become a deputy director of the World Health Organization and his Bill T. Jones younger brother, Beko, President of the Nigerian Medical Association) in 1958 Fela’s parents sent him to London for a medical education. Instead, he registered at Trinity College’s school of music where he studied composition and chose the trumpet as his instrument. Quickly tiring of European composers, Fela, struck by Miles Davis and Frank Sinatra, formed the Koola Lobitos in 1961, and his band became a fixture in London’s club scene. Two years later, Fela returned to Nigeria, restarted the Koola Lobitos, and became influenced by James Brown. Trying to find an authentic musical voice, he added elements of traditional Yoruba, high life and jazz, and “Afrobeat” was born. In 1969, Fela’s Koola Lobitos traveled to Los Angeles to tour and record. During his eight months in the US, with LA as a home base, Fela befriended Sandra Isidore, who introduced him to the writings and politics of Malcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver and other proponents of Black nationalism and Afrocentrism. With this new politically explicit and critical worldview, Fela reformed the Koola Lobitos as Nigeria 70 and returned to Lagos. He founded a commune/recording studio called the Kalakuta Republic, complete with his own private nightclub, The Shrine, and Fela dropped his given middle name “Ransome,” and replaced it with a Yoruba name “Anikulapo” (meaning “he who carries death in his pouch”). Playing constantly and recording at a ferocious pace, Fela and band (who were now called Africa 70) became huge stars in West Africa and beyond. His music served as a rallying cry for the disenfranchised, critiquing the military government, and made Fela not only a pop star but thrust him into political life. People took to the streets singing his songs and the military responded by viciously harassing Fela, jailing him and nearly killing him on several occasions. In 1977, during a governmentsanctioned attack on his Kalakuta Republic commune, Fela and other members of his commune were arrested; Fela himself suffered a fractured skull as well as other broken bones; a number of women living at Kalakuta were beaten and raped; and his 82-year old mother was thrown from an upstairs window, inflicting injuries that would later prove fatal. The soldiers set fire to the compound and prevented fire fighters from reaching the area. Fela’s recording studio, all his master tapes and musical instruments and the only known copy of his self-financed film Black President were destroyed. After the Kalakuta tragedy, Fela briefly lived in exile in Ghana, returning to Nigeria in 1978. A year later, he formed his own political party, MOP (Movement of the People) and ran for president in two elections, although his campaigning was consistently blocked by the military. As the ’80s ended, Fela recorded blistering attacks against Nigeria’s corrupt military government. Fela Anikulapo-Kuti was arrested more than two hundred times in his life, and charged with almost every conceivable crime, although only serving one eighteen month sentence in jail for a currency violation. Despite this constant harassment he continued to live in Nigeria even though, as an icon in the international world of rock and roll, soul, jazz and hip-hop, he could have at any point abandoned Nigeria and led the life of an international music superstar. His death on August 3, 1997 of complications from AIDS deeply affected musicians and fans internationally, as a unique and ineffable musical and sociopolitical voice was lost. In Nigeria one million people attended his funeral. His incredible body of work, almost 70 albums, is now available, through public demand, all over the world. For more information about Fela!visit www.FelaOnBroad way.com. (AJB) Sahr Ngaujah as Fela Kuti (Photos: Monique Carboni) (From page 13) health care reform bill that would reduce Medicare benefits, indications that we have endorsed any of the major health care reform bills currently under consideration in Congress are inaccurate,” the statement read. AARP spokesman Jordan Mcnerney said that AARP will not formally endorse any particular bill because all the bills are being legislated and many components of the proposals will change throughout the process. “But we are supportive of and committed to healthcare reform,” he says. The president’s inaccuracy aside, Mcnerney said that his advocacy group has bigger errors to address. “We won’t stand idle when opponents of health care reform attempt to scare or mislead the American people—and older Americans in particular—about what fixing the system really means,” said AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond said in a statement . “The truth is we need to fix health care, whether it’s ensuring affordable coverage for Americans age 50 to 64 or improving benefits for people in Medicare. It’s time for the public to get the real facts.” Mcnerney said AARP members have been most concerned about health care reform becoming socialized medicine, whether it will mean rationed care, whether it will hurt Medicare, be unaffordable and, of course, whether the government could really make life-and-death decisions for individuals. These are the myths that the group will focus on knocking down in its multi-million dollar campaign. “We’ve already started national and local ad campaigns,” Mcnerney said. “We’re doing interviews to get the word through the press. We’re doing massive email blasts, organizing events and we have offices in every state so we can spread the word pretty effectively.” Palin stands by her discredited ‘death panel’ claim (From page 13) Palin and other critics were not helping the GOP by tossing out false claims. Portions of the Democratic health care bills “are bad enough that we don’t need to be making things up,” Murkowski said, invoking a phrase that Palin used in her resignation speech, when she asked the news media to “quit making things up.” Murkowski said she was offended at the death panel terminology. “There is no reason to gin up fear in the American public by saying things that are not included in the bill,” she said. Georgia Sen. Johnny Isakson, a Republican who co-sponsored a similar measure in the Senate, said it was “nuts” to claim the bill encourages euthanasia. And Rep. Earl Blumenauer, DOre., who authored the provision on end-of-life counseling, said he is astounded that Palin has not tempered her bleak descriptions of the health care bill. “It’s deliberate at this point,” Blumenauer said. “If she wasn’t deliberately lying at the beginning, she is deliberately allowing a terrible falsehood to be spread with her name.” He said the measure would block funds for counseling that presents suicide or assisted suicide as an option, calling references to death panels or euthanasia “mind-numbing.” Ex-Congressman Jefferson is found guilty on 11 of 16 counts (From page 6) to Sidney Barthelemy in 1986. During the 1982 mayoral race, Dutch Morial attacked Jefferson by calling him “Dollar Bill” — a nickname which has stuck to this day. Still, Jefferson was considered a rising star in Louisiana politics, with some even predicting he would someday become Louisiana’s second African-American governor. In 1990, Jefferson threw his hat into the race to replace 10term incumbent Lindy Boggs after she announced her retirement. After finishing first among seven candidates in the primary with 24 percent of the vote, he defeated Marc Morial, the son of Dutch Morial, in the runoff with 52 percent of the vote. He was reelected seven times. In Congress, Jefferson was considered a rising star in many respects. He was named to a seat on the influential Ways and Means Committee, the tax-writing body that is probably the most powerful among the various House committees. He used that post there to benefit African American-owned small businesses. Jefferson is also credited with taking the lead on the issue of “environmental racism” (an issue of critical importance in southern Louisiana), successfully heading off the construction of a potentially hazardous plastics plant near an African-American community. He fought to end the “digital divide,” by introducing legislation providing for tax breaks that would enable low-income families to purchase computer equipment. In 1991 he was a strong supporter of then-Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton in his run for the presidency, and continued to work closely with President Clinton. The Congressman, along with his family, controlled one of the most powerful and effective political organiza- tions in south Louisiana — the Progressive Democrats. Coupled that with his work with the national Democratic Party —for which he served as Louisiana co-chair for the 1988 and 1992 Democratic presidential campaigns — Jefferson’s name became a statewide household name which fueled his ambitions toward higher office. He contemplated a U.S. Senate run in 1996. And twice he pondered a gubernatorial run before he fully committed in 1999 to challenging incumbent Republican governor Mike Foster. Unlike Cleo Fields, the Black Democratic candidate who ran unsuccessfully in 1995, Jefferson did so with the supp o r t o f L o u i s i a n a ’s l a rg e l y white-dominated Democratic Party. In the 1999 race, Foster, who purchased voter mailing lists from former KKK leader David Duke, appealed to white voters’ sense of racial solidarity while Jefferson sought to address the economic hardships faced by many of Louisiana’s working-class families. In the end, too many votes went to minor candidates in the race for Jefferson to have a real shot at winning. Jefferson only captured 30 percent of the state electorate, with Louisiana’s residents still voting rigidly along racial lines. However, the off-year election allowed Jefferson to maintain his Congressional seat, and the gubernatorial loss did little to tarnish his image. Although Jefferson was convicted on 11 of the 16 counts, it surprised some who closely followed the trial that he was acquitted on the count that involved the infamous cash found in a freezer in Jefferson’s home by federal investigators four years ago. Over the course of a six-week trial, federal prosecutors told jurors in Alexandria, Va. that the former congressman sought to collect hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes from a dozen companies in several industries including oil and communications from 2000 to 2005. The government alleged that Jefferson accepted more than $400,000 in bribes and sought millions more in exchange for using his considerable influence as a congressman to broker business deals in Africa. Defense lawyers argued that federal bribery laws are narrowly written and were never intended to ensnare the conduct alleged against Jefferson, an argument that some legal experts found compelling. Jefferson’s attorneys told jurors that their client was acting as a private business consultant in brokering the deals. Longtime New Orleans pollster Silas Lee, said last week that Jefferson’s loss of his congressional seat to political newcomer Anh “Joseph” Cao, R-La., coupled with the convictions, have not only ended his political career but dramatically changed the political landscape. “Once he lost, it automatically moved the city on, a changing of the guard,” Lee told The Associated Press. “Certainly, this is the final the nail in the political coffin of Bill Jefferson,” political analyst Clancy DuBos told WWLTV. “There is no coming back politically from this.” Before last week’s dramatic conclusion to a saga that lasted four years, there was talk about Jefferson possibly resurrecting his political career with a bid for mayor or a run to reclaim his congressional seat if he were acquitted. “This is a difficult day for the people of New Orleans and Louisiana, but now we can turn the page on a negative past to focus on a positive future. My thoughts and prayers go out to Mr. Jefferson and his family during this time,” Congressman Cao. New Orleans City Councilwoman Shelley Midura told USA Today that last week’s trial proves that the image of Louisiana politics is changing. “Any victory against corruption and the old-guard political machines is good news for New Orleans,” she said. “It’s a sacred trust to serve the people, in any one of these offices – whether it’s a governor or a congressman,” Jindal told WWL-TV. “This wasn’t some technical violation, these were the most serious allegations – allegations about abusing the office for personal gain, selling the office for personal gain. “This is one of the greatest acts of betrayal of trust an elected official can do.” “I want to commend the Justice Department, because it sends a strong message that we’re not going to tolerate political corruption,” U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-Jefferson, told the local daily paper. “This is a sad and tragic day for Louisiana,” U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., said last week. “My hope is that with this case’s resolution, the people of New Orleans can move forward and focus on the many opportunities and challenges ahead, including our ongoing recovery and rebuilding efforts.” Jefferson was not without supporters last week. Among them was New Orleans minister the Rev. Aubrey Wallace, who told The Associated Press, “We’re going to rally around him,” he said. “I’ll be a supporter until the last breath in my mouth.” “We just pray for him, and that’s all we can do now,” the Rev. Samson “Skip” Alexander told the local daily paper. “He’s done a lot in the community that people don’t see. He changed the community from one where brothers and sisters couldn’t get elected. “Those who are mad with him naturally say that doesn’t count. I still credit him with changing the electorate for African Americans for running and getting elected,” he said. Charlie Cook, editor and publisher of The Cook Political Report, worked alongside Jefferson as a legislative assistant for U.S. Senator J. Bennett Johnston, DLa., in the 1970s. “It’s a case of, ‘Here’s a guy who grew up very poor, he wanted to be in Congress and politics, but he just made a decision that he wasn’t going to be poor again,’” Cook told USA Today. “It just broke my heart.” NAACP mourns passing of first woman chair (From page 6) said NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous. “Her invaluable contributions will be sorely missed, and her legacy and passion for social justice will live on through the NAACP’s efforts.” Roslyn M. Brock, NAACP vice chairwoman, said upon hearing of Mrs. Wilson’s passing that “she was a pioneer in Missouri who effectively sought to bring change, the first black woman to run for Congress in 1948, the second to practice law in the state, and the first woman of color to become chairman of the NAACP National Board. She set precedents and demonstrated that with qualifications determination and perseverance, goals can be reached. Her achievements have certainly inspired me to move forward.” Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors. 35 NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com Obama sets out to debunk health care myths CLASSIFIED NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 36 Autos Wanted DONATE VEHICLE: RECEIVE $1000 GROCERY COUPON. NOAH’S ARC SUPPORT NO KILL SHELTERS, RESEARCH TO ADVANCE VETERINARY TREATMENTS FREE TOWING, TAX DEDUCTIBLE, NON-RUNNERS ACCEPTED 1-866-912GIVE Business Opportunity ALL CASH VENDING. Do you earn $800 in a day? Your own local candyroute. 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Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly dated 1/6/2009, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Bronx County Courthouse, Room 600, 851 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY, New York, on 9/14/2009 at 2:00 PM, premises known as 1036 EAST 226TH STREET, BRONX, NY 10466. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the New York City, Borough of BRONX, County of Bronx and State of New York, Section, Block and Lot: Block 4872 - Lot 60. Approximate amount of judgment $352,196.22 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #380757/07. Leroi John Andrews, Referee, Steven J. Baum PC, Attorneys for Plaintiff, P.O. Box 1291, Buffalo, NY 14240-1291 Dated: 8/6/2009 NOTICE OF SALE SUPREME COURT: COUNTY OF BRONX - U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE FOR THE MLMI SURF TRUST SERIES 2006-BC5 C/O WILSHIRE CREDIT CORPORATION , Plaintiff, AGAINST WILLY ABREU, ET AL., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly dated 7/7/2009, I, the undersigned Referee will sell at public auction at the Bronx County Courthouse, Room 600, 851 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY, New York, on 9/21/2009 at 2:00 PM, premises known as 1026 OLD KINGSBRIDGE ROAD, A/K/A 1026 GROTE STREET, BRONX, NY 10460. All that certain plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being in the New York City, Borough of BRONX, County of Bronx and State of New York, Section, Block and Lot: Block: 3100 Lot: 12. Approximate amount of judgment $550,308.04 plus interest and costs. Premises will be sold subject to provisions of filed Judgment Index #14480/07. Larry Alfonso Arias, Referee, Steven J. Baum PC, Attorneys for Plaintiff, P.O. Box 1291, Buffalo, NY 142401291 Dated: 8/12/2009 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 07/27/2009, bearing, Index Number NC001696-09/NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants Akua Amanimaa Baa-Asante the right to assume the name of Akua Angela Asante. The place of birth is Kumasi, Ghana, the date of birth is May 9, 1984 and the present address is 3941 Secor Avenue, Bronx, NY 10466 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 07/28/2009, bearing, Index Number NC-001710-09/ NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants Margene Joy Villanueva-Guerrero AKA Margene Joy Guerrero the right to assume the name of Jay Miguel Guerrero. The place of birth is Seattle, WA, the date of birth is April 19, 1979 and the present address is 78 Van Buren St. Bklyn, NY 11221 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 07/31/2009, bearing, Index Number NC001768-09/NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants Pablo Cepeda AKA Pablo Rosario the right to assume the name of Pablo Rosario. The place of birth is Manhattan, NY, the date of birth is Nov. 9, 1986 and the present address is 619 West 136 Street, Apt #10, New York, NY 10031 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 08/11/2009, bearing, Index Number NC-001862-09/ NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants Isaac Nicholson Posner the right to assume the name of Isaac Nicholson Mor Posner. The place of birth is New York, the date of birth is Aug. 7, 2008 and the present address is 360 Riverside Drive, Apt 7C, New York, NY 10025 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 08/11/2009, bearing, Index Number NC001849-09/NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants Vilma Sofia Trelles AKA VilmaSofia Trelles-Paucar the right to assume the name of Vilma Sofia Trelles-Paucar. The place of birth is Brooklyn, NY, the date of birth is Sept. 26, 1991 and the present address is 636 Dahill Rd, Apt. 2, Brooklyn, NY 11218 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 07/31/2009, bearing, Index Number NC001737-09/NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants Annette Torres Rivera AKA Annette Torres-Natal, A. Torres the right to assume the name of Annette Torres. The place of birth is Bronx, NY, the date of birth is Dec. 2, 1974 and the present address is 2201 Haviland Ave, Apt #51, Bronx, NY 10462 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 07/29/2009, bearing, Index Number NC001721-09/NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants Petra Ulrika Strader AKA Petra Ulrika Zather the right to assume the name of Petra Ulrika Zather Strader. The place of birth is Kansjo, Sweden, the date of birth is Aug. 26, 1974 and the present address is 165 East 35 Street, Apt #12F NY, NY 10016 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 07/30/2009, bearing, Index Number NC000791-09/NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants David Christopher Pritchett II the right to assume the name of Shaznay Pritchett. The place of birth is Charleston, SC, the date of birth is Nov. 23, 1988 and the present address is 948 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY 11213 Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, New York County, on 08/14/2009, bearing, Index Number NC001876-09/NY, a copy of which can be examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at 111 Center Street New York, NY 10013, grants Dabar Yashar Brice the right to assume the name of Shamiah Yashar Dabar Brice. The place of birth is Bronx, NY, the date of birth is Aug. 28, 1991 and the present address is 159-64 Harlem River Drive, Apt #13E, New York, NY 10039 HOROSCOPE ARIES Look for an increase in your personal prosperity this week, my little darlings. You’ll either be receiving a long-overdue debt, an unexpected bonus, a lucky lottery ticket, or you may just find cash laying at your feet as you are out for a stroll. Lucky ! You love feathering your nest and this week the Universe is helping you. TAURUS Dive into it! Don’t be intimated by the unknown. Your adventurous spirit can take you to a new place of celebration this week. If you can, bring someone along who can celebrate in the same manner with you. Harmony and peace is the motto that you should chant when you accomplish what you want to do! GEMINI You may find that discussions at home have taken a sudden, spiritual orientation. Give everyone room to express their personal beliefs without trying to preach your point of view. Your openmindedness helps you with deep learning this week. CANCER Feeling bold, are we? Well, go with the flow of your feelings! No other sign can call on inner courage as easily as you. Whether at home, at work, or out on the town, let your personal statements be stylish and bold! LEO Strong vibrations make for a series of dramatic interactions with others this week. Practice your art with your heart, and let your energy carry you upwards to your best, highest self. Keep emotions calm. VIRGO Restless feelings may arise over health matters, or perhaps education or the lack of it. Do what you need to do to feel comfortable with yourself. If it involves seeing a dentist or taking a class, what’s stopping you? Self-improvement can be a very enjoyable game! LIBRA Surprises are in order this week, and you can roll with everything that comes at you unexpectedly. Healing can happen in a relationship if you just show up. That’s power! Use it for the good of others. SCORPIO This week you may find yourself pulled in many directions; it’s a good time to say No to certain forceful or manipulative people who know where your buttons are. You may want to focus your bountiful attention on what exactly composes your very likeable nature. What do you love about it? SAGITTARIUS You want a comrade who doesn’t place inordinate expectations or demands on you, and who is creative, intelligent, a good conversationalist, and highly spiritual. Perhaps you should be out looking this week with eyes wide open! CAPRICORN Set a limit on what you can do for others this week. You’ll enjoy your feelings more if you are straightforward about refusing a less than appetizing assignment. Trust your feelings and say “No, I won’t.” Clear bound111 help you define yourself. AQUARIUS Business looks good this week as you discover a new way of increasing exposure to your product. Let hope and optimism lead you into new beginnings and fresh starts. All vibes are good. Go! PISCES You seem preoccupied this week and it’s because your mind is filled with a vision of love for the entire planet. Use your gifts to assist others in seeing the world as you do, in glorious color. Check the details on paperwork that you have to do, dreamer. PISCES NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com LEGAL NOTICES 37 SPORTS NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 38 In defense of Jeter’s glovework By Jason Clinkscales For much of the past decade, there has been a vocal group of people connected to baseball – fans, media and maybe a few within the game itself – that think Derek Jeter isn’t half the player on the field that he is in the batter’s box. Yet, when taking a glance at his defensive numbers this season, he is showing that he’s nowhere as terrible as they’d lead you to believe. There’s no question of his abilities as a hitter. He cemented as the best pure hitting shortstop of this generation long ago, but breaking Luis Aparicio’s record of career hits at the position over the weekend places him in the conversation of the all-time greats at any position. Save for soreness of being an everyday player and the dislocated shoulder suffered at the start of the 2003 season, his relative durability will allow him to add onto the record in remarkable fashion. Yet, for as long as he whacks singles through the infield gaps, he will be nitpicked for not having the strongest of arms or criticized for wasted motions to glove the ball. However, here’s the rub for those critics; in 108 starts, he’s made only six errors and is on pace to tie, if not better his career-best .986 fielding percentage in 1998. Of course, the most scrutinizing stats-heads will point to having less fielding chances that season compared to his first two full campaigns or numbers that reflect limited range compared to the league average. While those are certainly valid issues but the fact is that he takes care of the balls that come to him. This isn’t Chuck Knoblach – a stellar defensive second baseman with Minnesota before coming to New York – making errant throws to the high-priced seats in the front row as he did in 1999. What Jeter’s critics will also overlook is that having a superb defensive player at first base can improve any infielder’s stats. In his first few seasons as a Yankee, he had Tino Martinez to throw to. While Jason Giambi was serviceable, at best, on the bag, there’s a tremendous upgrade when you have a perennial Gold Glove candidate – and likely 2009 AL MVP – in Mark Teixiera. As discussed at his signing, Teixieria is a top-notch fielder who can reach for the too high throw or stretch for the near-dirt tosses; turning potential errors into putouts. Honestly speaking, much of the ‘hate’, if you will, for Jeter’s defense comes from a seemingly endless loop of Yankee coverage from the national media. Considering that the Yankees are absolutely beloved or reviled – there is no middle ground with this team – any of The Captain’s highlights, including the famous backwardsleaping toss to first, drives his detractors insane. Jeter isn’t as smooth or quick as Ozzie Smith or Omar Vizquel, two of the best defensive players of any position in the game’s history. Yet, if he wore a Kansas City Royals uniform or even that of the Chicago White Sox, his shortcomings and strong points would have dimmer lights shone on them. Jeter has been doing this in the Bronx; a star of the early part of the 21st century who’s comparable to Joe DiMaggio. As he once said in response to the criticism, “I play in New York, man. Criticism is part of the game, you take criticism as a challenge.” Even with such national attention as the Yanks receive, a few selective highlights or lowlights presents can present an inaccurate portrait to the sporting public. Jeter may not worry much about that perception, but it’s about time he gains a bit more respect for being the complete player his fans have appreciated for over a decade. Derek Jeter does not get the credit he deserves for his glove work. Luis Castillo, New York Mets MVP By Adam Salazar It’s time for the much maligned Luis Castillo to receive the recognition he’s due as the best Met of the year. Of course after Wright’s injury Castillo is the last Met standing from opening day line up but even before the beaning Wright was sitting on just 8 HR which is certainly way below expectations for the face of the franchise. So to all you Castillo haters, and you know who you are, it’s time to admit that Luis has been surprisingly good and the most consistent Met on the year. You simply can’t complain Luis Castillo is one of the lone bright spots in this dismal about a .304 batting avg, 13 SB, Mets season. (Photos by Marc Rasbury) and (Yankee pop up aside) sparkling defense all season long. It’s hard enough to hit .300 so Luis gets extra credit for overcoming all that he has: • He literally begged Omar to give him another chance because he was so embarrassed by his ‘08 season • Luis began the year knowing full well he was in the Shea Faithful’s doghouse yet he delivered in spite of the added pressure • Dropping the Subway Series pop-up could’ve broken a lesser man (KazMat and Benitez immediately come to mind) but Luis stood there, took it like a man and just kept on getting’ the job done In a season of Met agony and disgrace Luis Castillo has been one of the very few bright spots. *** As for David Wright getting clocked in the head by a 93 mph fastball: what a terrible thing to see. While it was encouraging to see Wright eventually walked off the field under his own power, it wouldn’t be shocking if he’s taken his last AB until 2010. There’s no way to know how getting hit in the head by a major league fastball will effect someone but it can easily render you “less than all there” for the next 6 weeks. And considering the Met medical staff ’s history you would have to expect they will be overly cautious with the star player. 39 Ware, Patrick continue Giant trend of rushing depth By Jason Clinkscales It isn’t a case of “don’t know what you got ‘til it’s g o n e ” a s h e a d c o a c h Tom Coughlin was quick to say that his Giants have very talented players who can catch the ball as well as they run it. Yet, in the Monday night preseason win against Carolina, the Big Blue running backs displayed those very skills up, over and through the Panthers defense. In particular, it was Danny Ware who used the game to show that he can make up for some, if not all of what went south to Ta m p a B a y w h e n D e r r i c k Ward signed with the Buccaneers. Ward, formerly Wind of the Earth (Brandon Jacobs), Wind and Fire (Ahmad Bradshaw) rushing trio of the Giants, had some of the better hands of running backs in the league; he had become Eli Manning’s favorite option for screen passes when wide receivers were defended well. Despite the depth chart and likelihood that he would have seen little to no time in the regular season, Ware was the early offensive star last preseason. Since Ward remained healthy for the first time in his career and Bradshaw’s speed c o u n t e r i n g J a c o b s ’ p o w e r, Ware unsurprisingly had just two carries in 2008; both in the season finale in Minne- sota for fifteen yards. With Ward’s departure and an expanded role for Bradshaw, Ware’s ascension will be vital for a team whose offense is predicated on a strong running game. It appears that Ware prepared himself well for the increased workload, even if we’re talking about the preseason. “I think I had a pretty good offseason,” said the undrafted reserve from Georgia. “I lost a little weight, trained hard, studied hard, just been working as everything has been about football this offseason.” With the glaring opportunity of 2009 in front of him, he quipped, “I noticed that we had Ward leave, so there was an opening and I took it upon myself to just go get it… and see what happens with the end results.” That potential role hasn’t kept him from forgetting the unfortunate realities of the NFL, however. Last week during camp, Andre Brown, the much-touted rookie from NC State was lost for the year with a ruptured Achilles tendon. So understanding that Allen Patrick, the fourth back in the group, is in a similar predicament from himself a season ago in just trying to retain a roster spot, Ware reminds him to be ready. “Anytime, guys can get hurt, so I tell him to stay up in that playbook and be prepared and always finish up everything he does hard.” Danny Ware looked like a keeper on Monday. (Photo by Marc Rasbury) It’s official, the Sanchez era has begun (From page 40) his play. From the moment he took off the baseball cap and trotted on the field, one could feel the energy level rise throughout the Meadowlands. He not only got a standing ovation from the fans, you can see a little extra pep in each of the players. Even some of the members of the Jets starting defense unit were on the sidelines looking at this kid’s first series. And, like all of the fans, they were thrilled at what they saw. He showed you that he was the real deal on his very first play with 30 seconds left in the first quarter. He stepped into the huddle with an air of confidence and proceeded to execute a perfectly thrown 48-yard bomb that set up a 33 yard FG. Forget the fact that the Jets eventually lost the game, 23-20, to the St. Louis Rams. I guarantee you that no Jet fan remembers the score of the game or even the fact that Gang Green lost the game. All they will remember is that the Jets appear to have found that young franchise QB they have been searching for since they Rex Ryan's first unit defense was in attack mode all night brought Joe Willie Namath up from the “Land of Dixie.” long. (Photos by Marc Rasbury) According to teammates, this kid did not even flinch when the play was called prior to taking his first snap. Sanchez went 3-4 for 88 yards and looked like a season pro. He has all of the tools to be one of the best QBs of his generation. He comes from a great college program in USC that prepares players for the next level. But the talent and preparation means nothing if the QB does not have those intangibles, like self confidence, that all the great ones possess. When the bullets start flying for real, can the signal caller answer the bell? From what all of the Jets fans witnessed on Friday, it appears that Sanchez may be the real deal. Like the Giants, the Jets have a big question mark at the receiver position due to their ine x p e r i e n c e . We k n o w t h a t Jerricho Cotchery and Chansi Stuckey should put up some up some nice numbers this season. But keep a close eye on the second year WR David Clowney. This kid has explosive speed. In the past he was known to have suspect hands and spent most of his rookie season on the disable list. He showed flashes of brilliance last pre-season before getting hurt. If he can stay healthy, this kid may be the X factor for the Jets offense even more than Sanchez. The Jets defense was impressive as well. Rams starting QB Marc Bulger was pressured all night long to the point even he went to the bench, he was still looking for Rex Ryan’s unit. But getting back to Sanchez. It is only matter of time before the rookie is handed the starting job. It could be next week or week eight. Everyone in attendance or watching the game on TV knows that this is Sanchez’s job to loose. I saw Boomer Esiason running off the field at half time yelling, “Looks like you guys have yourself a Quarterback!” Rex Ryan also liked what he saw and indicated that Sanchez will start on Friday against the Ravens in Baltimore. That may be a sign of things to come. I will have to agree with Boomer. Sanchez raised the bar on Friday. Now I do not want to get too giddy about his short performance, but I do like what I see thus far. I have to cross my fingers and hope that he is the “Real Deal.” NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com SPORTS NEW YORK BEACON, August 20, 2009 - August 26, 2009 newyorkbeacon.com 40 BEACON Marc Rasbury SPORTS It is better to run than receive? By Marc Rasbury That may be the Giants mantra this season. They are strong in every aspect of the game with the exception of game with the exception of their receiving core. It is not that they do not have talent in this specific area, it is just that there is very little experience in this group. If the Giants are going to repeat as division champions, they are going to have to tread water until their receiving group gets their feet under them. After watching the Giants first pre-season game on Monday, I was pleasantly surprise with the receiving unit. However, I still realize that it was only a pre-season game and that the receiver group was a work in progress. I could care less about the fact that the Giants won the game, 24-17, only the final play of the game in dramatic. I was there mainly to see how the receivers were going to perform and more importantly how Eli Manning would perform with- Hixon looks as if he is ready to take on a bigger role this season. Giants in receiving. And Brandon Jacobs and Ahmad Bradshaw also made some nice catches out of the backfield. On the surface it might appear that the backs were the apple of QB Eli Manning’s eye. Yet, the young receiving core showed some flashes of promise. Hixon had two catches for 23 yards including a nice 18 yard grab. Manningham had one nice catch but it was nullified due to a holding penalty. Braden had a nice grab for 20 yards. Moss, Nicks, and forth year pro Derek Hagan each had snag in the preseason opener. Keep in mind that the Giants also have two TEs in Kevin Boss and Darcy Johnson who are both capable of moving the chain. Over all I believe that the receiving core “represented” and Manning looked sharp in his two series. The Giants have enough weapons to extend drives and wind up in the endzone. Hopefully the running game powered by the best offensive line and the deepest most talented defensive line core can hold the down the fort until the passing game gets on track. This group may not keep defensive coordinators up at night, but collectively this young inexperienced group might surprise some folks by the bye week. It’s official, the Sanchez era has begun By Marc Rasbury Hakeem Nicks has been the talk of the camp thus far. (Photos by Marc Rasbury) out Plaxico Burress. This is the only question mark on the squad that GM Jerry Reese. Big Blue lost their two starting WRs (Burress and Amani Toomer) from last year’s opening day roster. A lot of weight will be put third year pro Steve Smith and Domenik Hixon to replace Burress and Toomer. The Giants will also need contributions from Mario Manningham and Sinorce Moss as well as rookies Hakeem Hicks and Ramses Braden. And don’t forget David Tyree is back in the mix. Replacing Toomer’s production over the last few years might not be that difficult. However, replacing his leadership will be tough. Replacing Burress’s leadership will be easy. His production is another story. The Giants do not need one individual to replace Burress’s production. If they can get two or three players from that receiving core to step up their games, I do believe they will be alright. Reese and coach Tom Coughlin also brought in Keenan Mard It is often said that a chain is only strong as its weakest link. Well, many consider that the receiving group as that weak link among Big Blue’s squad. On Monday, the RBs were more effective catching ball than receivers. Rookie Danny Ware led the Once again, I know that it was only a pre-season game. But I loved what I saw on Friday night out of Mark Sanchez. He only played one series. However, it was one impressive showing. My heart goes out to Kellen Clemens. He has done and said all of the right things off the field. He did not flinch when Jets brought in Brett Favre last season and he did not jump off the bridge this time when the Jets moved heaven and earth to draft Sanchez. New head coach Rex Ryan stated all along that there would be an open competition between them with Clemens holding a slight lead over the hyped rookie. Well, after that one Sanchez series, it is apparent that the starting QB spot is his to lose and that is not only based on (Continued on page 39) "Fellas look like we have ourselves a QB"