Author: greenecodemocratcom

  • George Curry renowned Black journalist and columnist died suddenly last week at age 69

    georgecurry_bpw14_fallen_web120George Curry, noted Black journalist and columnist in many Black newspapers, including the Greene County Democrat, died suddenly of heart failure last week at the age of 69. A native of Tuscaloosa, Curry was Editor-in-Chief of the new service of the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA) for many years and was working on the re-development of an on-line Emerge Magazine and news service at the time of his death. A more detailed article commemorating Curry’s life and civil rights involvement appears on page 4, in the space where we ran his beloved column, for the past twenty years.

    Legendary Journalist, Black Press Columnist George Curry Remembered as Champion of Civil Rights…. By Hazel Trice Edney

    (TriceEdneyWire) – Renowned civil rights and Black political journalist George E. Curry, the dean of Black press columnists because of his riveting weekly commentary in Black newspapers across the country, is being remembered this week as a legend. Curry died suddenly of heart failure on Saturday, August 20. He was 69.
    “He stood tall. He helped pave the way for other journalists of color to do their jobs without the questions and doubts,” said the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. with whom Curry traveled extensively, including to the funeral of President Nelson Mandela. “He was a proud and tireless advocate of the Black press, serving two tours as editor-in-chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association’s news service.”
    Curry’s fiancée Ann Ragland confirmed that the funeral will be held Saturday, August 27, at 11 am at the Weeping Mary Baptist Church, 2701 20th Street, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Rev. Al Sharpton will give the eulogy. A viewing on Saturday will be from 8:30-11 am.
    Ragland said a viewing will also be held on Friday evening, Aug. 26, with Rev. Jackson speaking, also at Weeping Mary Baptist Church.
    Having grown up in Tuscaloosa during the height of racial segregation, Curry often said he “fled Alabama” and vowed never to return when he went away to college. However, Ragland said he always told her to return him home to Tuscaloosa upon his death.
    Shocking rumors of his death circulated heavily in journalistic circles on Saturday night until it was confirmed by Dr. Bernard Lafayette, MLK confidant and chairman of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference shortly before midnight.
    “This is a tragic loss to the movement because George Curry was a journalist who paid special attention to civil rights because he lived it and loved it,” Lafayette told the Trice Edney News Wire through his spokesman Maynard Eaton, SCLC national communications director.
    Curry’s connection to the SCLC was through his longtime childhood friend, confidant and ally in civil rights, Dr. Charles Steele, SCLC president. Steele and Curry grew up together in Tuscaloosa, Ala., where they played football at Druid High School. Curry bloomed as a civil rights and sports writer as Steele grew into a politician and civil rights leader.
    “He was a pacesetter with the pen. He saw things that other people didn’t see,” said Steele. “And once he saw those things, he embraced them and exposed them in terms of putting information into the hands of people who would normally be left out of the process, meaning the African-American community.”
    Ragland, Curry’s fiancée and closest confidant, drove him to the Washington Adventist Hospital emergency room after he called her complaining of chest pains Saturday afternoon. He insisted that she take him instead of calling an ambulance. She said he remained conscience throughout the cardiac tests and the doctor assured her he would be fine. But his heart took a sudden turn. She said the doctor tried to explain to her that the turn was totally unexpected. “He said, ‘He was okay, but then his heart just stopped.’”
    Curry’s closest colleagues knew and respected him for his journalism and his demand for excellence, which was sometimes expressed in a no nonsense, drill sergeant style of communicating. But, Ragland said the one thing that most people don’t know is “how, even though he was so brash sometimes, how compassionate he was for other people.”
    She gave an example of his being at a recent doctor’s appointment and meeting an older man who was having difficulty walking. She said Curry not only helped the man along but bought him lunch.
    Curry began his journalism career at Sports Illustrated, the St. Louis Post Dispatch, and then the Chicago Tribune. But he is most revered for his editorship of the award-winning former Emerge Magazine and more recently for his work as editor-in-chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association from 2001-2007 at NNPA offices located at Howard University. He returned to leadership of the NNPA News Service in 2012 until last year when he left amidst budgetary issues.
    “It’s hard to believe that George Curry, a giant in the journalism profession is no longer with us. The news of George’s death leaves a tremendous void that will be difficult to fill,” said NNPA Chairwoman Denise Rolark Barnes, publisher of the Washington Informer. “George’s uncompromising journalistic leadership delivered on Emerge’s promise to deliver edgy, hard-hitting, intellectual, well-written and thoroughly researched content that attracted national attention and left an indelible mark on the lives of many.”
    Barnes added, “I was honored to carry George’s weekly column in the Washington Informer and to work with him as he served as editor-in-chief of the NNPA News Wire. George provided so much of his time, energy, wisdom and incredible journalistic genius to the Black Press. His work will stand as a lasting legacy of journalist excellence and integrity of which all of us in the Black Press and in the journalistic field at large can field extremely proud.”
    Jake Oliver, publisher and chairman of the Baltimore-based Afro American Newspapers, who first hired Curry as NNPA editor-in-chief, recalled their long friendship.
    “I’m in total shock. I’ve lost a very close, dear friend,” Oliver said. “I hired him at the NNPA at the turn of the century and even before then we worked remotely on various issues that we had the same point of view about.

    George was a journalist par excellence…He spent a lot of time at his craft and perfected it at a high level. And as a result, he was able to generate national and indeed, international respect,” Oliver said.
    “There was so much that he gave to the Black Press and the gifts that he’s left us are enormous.”
    The name, George Curry, is as prominent among civil rights circles as among journalists. He did weekly commentary on the radio show of the Rev. Al Sharpton. Curry had appeared on the show on Friday, the day before his death.
    “When I started my daily radio show 10 years ago, I asked him to close the final hour every week on Friday,” Sharpton recalls. “About a month ago, he went away for two weeks. He came back last Friday. We teased him [saying] he had rarely missed a Friday. We talked about the elections and everything and the next day he died, which was shocking to me.”
    Sharpton said Curry’s legacy “is integrity, is boldness, is holding people – including Black leaders that were his friends – accountable. And defending us when we deserved it.”
    Sharpton concluded, “George was probably the ultimate journalist and the epitome of a Black journalist. He held us all accountable as he also told our story with no fear and no concern about his own career. He was a man of supreme integrity and boldness that I don’t know if I’ve met anyone that came close.”
    Curry’s reputation was broad and highly esteemed. Democratic Presidential nominee Hillary Clinton also issued a statement upon his death.
    “George E. Curry was a pioneering journalist, a tireless crusader for justice, and a true agent of change,” Clinton wrote. “With quality reporting, creativity, and skillful persuasion he influenced countless people, including me, to think beyond their narrow experience and expand their understanding. George may be gone, but he will not be forgotten.”
    Congressional Black Caucus Chairman G. K. Butterfield (D-N.C.), wrote: “George E. Curry was a giant in journalism and he stood on the front lines of the Civil Rights era and used his voice to tell our stories when others would not.”
    When he died he was raising money to fully fund Emerge News Online, a digital version of the former paper magazine. He had also continued to independently distribute his weekly column to Black newspapers.
    In 2003, he was named Journalist of the Year by the National Association of Black Journalists for his work as editor-in-chief of the NNPA News Service and BlackPressUSA.com, NNPA’s public news website.
    “I am heartbroken to learn that Mr. George Curry has passed. He has been a beacon for so many and a pivotal voice among Black publishers. His strength and pursuit for the truth will carry on in the lives he touched,” said NABJ President Sarah Glover in a statement this week.
    The NABJ release also recalled Curry’s love for working with students and future journalists. It quotes Neil Foote, a friend of Curry’s and president of the National Black Public Relations Society, saying, “George has made so many contributions to journalism – from the high school journalism workshops to his passionate fight for the black press. There’s a generation of journalists – including me – who are grateful to have had the chance to know him.”
    Curry was working to revive Emerge as an online publication at the time of his death. The NABJ statement quotes TV-ONE host Roland S. Martin, a friend, colleague and fellow columnist, who honored Curry during his NewsOne Now television and radio shows this week: “He was still fighting to revive that magazine until his last moment on earth…George Curry died with his boots on, still fighting.”

  • Ethopian Marathon Silver Medalist fears death at home as representative of Oromo people

                                                          Feyisa Lilesa

    Aug. 22, 2016 (GIN) – Using every fiber of his being, track star Feyisa Lilesa of Ethiopia made a dash across the finish line at the just-ended Olympic Games in Rio but it wasn’t to be the end of his run.

    Lilesa used his high profile silver medal victory to make a sign of solidarity with the Oromo people who are locked in a decades-long struggle with the government of Ethiopia. In a photograph seen worldwide, 26-year-old Lilesa stands with his arms crossed over his head – a gesture of defiance used by Oromos in recent months.

    The gesture recalled an earlier protest by Olympic athletes John Carlos and Tommie Smith who gave the Black Power salute on the medal podium after winning gold and bronze in the 200 meter sprint in the 1968 games.

    Political statements are banned during the games, but Lilesa showed no fear of being sanctioned. “This was my feeling,” Lilesa said simply. “I have a big problem in my country. It is very dangerous to protest. The Ethiopian government is killing the Oromo people and taking their land and resources so the Oromo people are protesting and I support the protest as I am Oromo,” he said in an interview with USA Today.

    Oromos, the largest of Ethiopia’s 80 ethnic groups making up at least a third of Ethiopia’s 100 million population, were once a sovereign people but lost ownership of their land and become both impoverished and aliens in their own country. In 1975, all rural land was declared State-owned, leaving the Oromos in a “colonized” status.

    Last November, after the confiscation of a children’s playground and the selling off of an Oromo forest, a wave of mass protests began. Other issues – the expansion of the municipal boundary of the capital, Addis Ababa, into Oromia, land grabbing and the eviction of farmers, and the brutal repression of protestors – fed the fire, according to Human Rights Watch and other independent monitors.

    “If I go back to Ethiopia maybe they will kill me or put me in prison,” Lilesa said.

    A government spokesman denied any threat to Lilesa or his family. Yet state-owned TV station EBC Channel 3 blacked out the clips of Lilesa, focusing instead on the Kenyan winner Eliud Kipchoge.

    Meanwhile, a crowd-funding page was set up, saying the runner had become an “international symbol” for the Oromo protests. Initial pledges of $10,000 doubled within an hour.

    A legal team hired by U.S.-based Ethiopians is helping Mr Feyisa, who has a wife and two children in Ethiopia, with a request to seek asylum in the US.

     

  • Simone Biles is first woman U.S. gymnast to carry American flag in closing Olympic ceremony

     By Charise Frazier, Newsone

    Team USA selected the Rio Olympics’ “it-girl” Simone Biles to carry the flag into Maracanã Stadium during Sunday night’s closing ceremony.

    Biles is the first woman U.S. gymnast to carry the flag. She’s the second American gymnast to carry the flag in an opening or closing ceremony after Alfred Jochim marched with the American flag during opening ceremonies at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, according to The Huffington Post.

    Mary Carillo, a former Olympian and NBC commentator, called her “the most stunning athlete I’ve ever seen” as the U.S flag towered above Biles’ 4′ 9″ frame.

    Biles leaves Rio with tremendous accomplishments; she’s won a total of five medals – four gold and one bronze. She’s the first U.S. gymnast to win four gold medals in a single Olympics.

    “It’s an incredible honor to be selected as the flag bearer by my Team USA teammates,”Biles said in an interview with TeamUSA.org“This experience has been the dream of a lifetime for me and my team and I consider it a privilege to represent my country, the United States Olympic Committee and USA Gymnastics by carrying our flag. I also wish to thank the city of Rio de Janeiro, and the entire country of Brazil, for hosting an incredible Games.”

    Biles was a fan favorite on the floor as multiple athletes stopped the gymnast for photos and selfies during the closing ceremony.

     

  • Civil Rights lawyers file suit against alleged Arkansas ‘hot check’ court that entraps poor people

    By Charise Frazier, Newsone

    The campaign against debtors’ prisons continues.

    Earlier today, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, the ACLU of Arkansas, and law firm Morrison & Foerster LLP, filed a class action civil rights suit that accuses a Sherwood, Arkansas, courthouse of jailing residents for their inability to pay fines and fees associated with low-level offenses or misdemeanors. The suit also names Hot Check Division

    The case was brought forth less than a week after the DOJ filed an injunction that bars the practice of jailing individuals who can’t post bail.

    Lawyers filed on behalf of four city residents who claim their constitutional rights were violated by the Hot Check Division of the Sherwood District Court after they were jailed for not paying court fines and fees.

    A fifth member, also named as a plaintiff, alleges the revenue generated from the accumulated fees have been misused, which violates concerned law-abiding taxpayers. The city of Sherwood has accumulated over $12 million over the course of five years, which directly benefits the prosecutor and sheriff’s office, according to counsel for the plaintiffs.

    During an early afternoon call that discussed the legality of the case, representatives for the ACLU and the Lawyers’ Committee relayed the far-reaching disparities caused by the alleged illegal practice, one that leads to debtors’ prisons and disproportionately affects people of color.

    “The resurgence of debtors’ prisons have entrapped poor people, too many who are African or minorities,” said Kristen Clarke, president and executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee. “The court has what we call a hot check courtroom and completely ignores the longstanding principle that a person cannot be punished because they are poor.”

    The case also reveals a severe miscarriage of justice – most of the defendants were repeatedly jailed for their inability to pay or keep up with an unaffordable payment schedule.

    According to Clarke, warrants are issued for defendants’ arrests each time they are unable to make a payment. Members of the Sherwood Police Department then approach the individual’s home and threaten arrest unless said person puts down a small sum to secure a court date.

    Rita Sklar, executive director of Arkansas’ ACLU, said the group has been aware of the issue over the last 25 years. Researchers spent extensive time building a case, observing, and speaking with those affected, including tax-paying Sherwood residents.

    “What we didn’t know was the extent to which this has been going on and all the details–what happens to people when they go to court, or if they miss a payment,” she said. According to Sklar, a bounced $15 check could accumulate over $400 in fines and fees.

    She added that an internal investigation found the court forces defendants to waive their right to a lawyer, with the judge acting as lead prosecutor: “This court is held in secrecy. There’s no transcript kept to find out what’s going on.”

    The ACLU and the Lawyers’ Committee say they are resigned to lead the charge in challenging and exposing debtors’ prisons, and will continue advocating common sense approaches to criminal justice debt.

  • Donald Trump to Black voters: ‘What do you have to lose?’

    By: BBC News

             Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has made a direct appeal to African-American voters, saying “What do you have to lose?”

    Mr. Trump told a nearly all-white audience in Michigan that Black voters “are living in poverty” and their “schools are no good”.

    He promised to “produce” for African-Americans where Democrats had failed. “If you keep voting for the same people, you will keep getting exactly the same result,” he said.

    He said his opponent, Democrat Hillary Clinton, “would rather provide a job to a refugee” than to unemployed Black youths, “who have become refugees in their own country”.

    Mrs. Clinton called Mr. Trump’s remarks “so ignorant it’s staggering”.

    Donald Trump also predicted he would receive 95% of the African-American vote if he went to on to run for a second term in 2020. President Barack Obama, historically the most popular president among African-Americans in US history, received 93% of the black vote in 2012.

    Mr. Trump has suffered from dismal support among African-Americans. Current polls show about 2% of black voters say they will vote for the New York real estate developer.

    The Trump campaign relationship with the black voters thus far can be described as rocky at best. The billionaire businessman has seen strong support among white supremacist groups. Mr. Trump came under heavy criticism after he took days to distance himself from a former leader of the Ku Klux Klan who endorsed him.

     

    On several occasions, African-American protesters have been assaulted by Trump supporters at rallies. A New York Times investigation found supporters frequently use racist language at rallies.

    The Friday speech was the third time this week that Donald Trump sought to appeal to African-American voters. Some analysts say Mr Trump, trailing badly in national polls for weeks, desperately needs to broaden his appeal beyond his base of white working-class voters.

     

     

  • Equal Justice Initiative plans to build a national memorial to the victims of lynching in Montgomery, Alabama

    national-lynching-memorial-2artist rendering of museum

     

    MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA – The Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) plans to build a national memorial to victims of lynching and open a museum that explores African American history from enslavement to mass incarceration. Both the museum and memorial will open in Montgomery, Alabama, in 2017.

    The ‘From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration Museum’ will be situated within 150 yards of one of the South’s most prominent slave auction sites and the Alabama River dock and rail station where tens of thousands of enslaved black people were trafficked. The museum will contain high-tech exhibits, artifacts, recordings, and films, as well as comprehensive data and information on lynching and racial segregation. The museum will connect the history of racial inequality with contemporary issues of mass incarceration, excessive punishment, and police violence.

    The Memorial to Peace and Justice will sit on six acres of land in Montgomery and become the nation’s first national memorial to victims of lynching. The massive structure will contain the names of over 4000 lynching victims engraved on concrete columns representing each county in the United States where racial terror lynchings took place. Counties across the country will be invited to retrieve duplicate columns with the names of each county’s lynching victims to be placed in every county.

    In February 2015, EJI released Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror, a ground-breaking report that documents more than 4000 lynchings of black people in the United States between 1877 and 1950. EJI identified several hundred more lynchings than had previously been recognized. For a copy of the full report, please contact EJI. Racial terrorism forced millions of black people to flee the South during the first half of the 20th century and played a major role in shaping the demographic geography of America by creating large black populations in urban communities in the North and West.

    The national memorial to lynching victims will be one of the nation’s most ambitious projects relating to the history of racial terror lynchings. EJI has purchased six acres of land atop a rise that overlooks the City of Montgomery and out to the American South, where terror lynchings were most prevalent.

    The memorial is constructed of hundreds of floating columns on which the names of lynching victims from over 800 counties across the United States will be inscribed. The classical structure will be surrounded by a park, where duplicate columns engraved with the names of lynching victims in each county will be placed until they are claimed by each county and permanently installed in the places where racial terror lynchings took place. The memorial will be dynamic, and seeks to inspire local efforts to make the history of racial terror in America more visible and tangible. The memorial is being designed in partnership with MASS Design Group, an award-winning architectural firm based in Boston.

    After the release of Lynching in America, EJI initiated several cultural projects designed to deepen understanding about racial terror in America. EJI is placing markers at lynching sites across the country in an effort to change the landscape of the American South, which is saturated with iconography and memorials romanticizing the Confederacy and the effort to preserve slavery.

    EJI also launched a project to collect soil at lynching sites and create an exhibit that tells the stories of lynching victims. Hundreds of people have begun to actively engage in community remembrance projects around the era of lynching.

    The museum, From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration, is expected to open in April. It is housed on the site of a former slave warehouse in Montgomery, Alabama, located midway between the former slave auction block and the main river dock and train station where tens of thousands of enslaved people were trafficked during the height of the domestic slave trade.

    The museum will showcase interactive displays about America’s history of racial inequality and present dynamic information and content, including virtual reality films about the domestic slave trade, lynching, segregation and mass incarceration. The museum will house the nation’s most comprehensive collection of data on lynching.

    To connect this history with contemporary issues of mass incarceration, the museum will employ narratives that reveal the racially biased administration of criminal justice, police violence, and wrongful convictions. The museum will feature new art pieces by contemporary African American artists, including Sanford Biggers and Hank Willis Thomas.

    EJI has partnered with Local Projects, whose credits include the 9/11 Memorial Museum in New York City, to build the new museum, which will house reports, films, and other cultural pieces on the history of race in America.

     

  • Carpenter seeks re-election for Eutaw City Council District 2

    LaJefferyI am LaJeffery Chris Carpenter, and I’m running this announcement to ask you for your support, and to let you know why I’m seeking Re-Election for District 2 City Council seat in Eutaw.
    I am employed by the Greene County Sheriff’s office.
    I am a member of the Ezekiel Baptist Church.
    I am a member of Morrow Grove Lodge #800.
    I am a member of Greene County High School Class of 2006, and I currently hold the position of District 2 Council Member in Eutaw.
    I am running because it has been an absolute honor to represent you over the last four years.
    I am running because Eutaw needs representatives who believe in the role local government plays in improving people’s lives.
    My vision for Eutaw is to have responsible, knowledgeable policy makers; real leaders of the people who aren’t afraid to talk to the people; someone who puts the people’s interests first. I would love for Eutaw to have a community where young people can maximize and realize their full potential.
    With all the challenges facing us, we need someone with experience to manage the growth of this city. I am still humbled by the honor and privilege received from you the constituents of District 2 four years ago and I wish to continue representing you without bias, ideology, or prejudice. I hope I can count on your love, support, and vote on August 23, 2016.

  • ANSC holds political forum for municipal candidates for August 23rd election

    hattie.jpg

    On Tuesday night, August 16, 2016, the Alabama New South Coalition sponsored a political forum for candidates running for Mayor and City Council positions in Eutaw, Boligee and Forkland.
    The Mayor and Council candidates in the Town of Union are unopposed. Each candidate had an opportunity to present a statement on their qualifications, experiences, prior service to the community and plans for the future if elected.
    The candidates also answered questions from the audience members.
    Three of the four candidates for Mayor of Eutaw – incumbent Mayor Hattie Edwards, Raymond Steele and Reginald Spencer were present. The two candidates for Mayor of Boligee – incumbent Louis Harper and challenger Marvin Oliver; and one candidate for Mayor of Forkland – Ollie Vester, the current Mayor, were present and gave remarks.

    City Council candidates present were: for District 1 in Eutaw:LaTasha Johnson and James ‘Truck’ Lewis; Stanley Lucious for District 2. Michael Gibson and Eddie Mae Brown for Boligee City Council and Doris Robinson, Forkland City Council candidate.

    The candidates and audience members thanked ANSC for holding the forum and allowing the candidates to discuss their issues and respond to questions.

  • Dr. James Carter opens school term with vision of Preparing our students for a world that does not yet exist

    BOE photo

    At the August school board meeting, Superintendent James H. Carter presents plaques to two recent retirees of the Greene County School System. Mrs. Bobbie Jean (BJ) Wallace was honored for 25 years as a cook in the school system; Mr. Otis Robinson was honored for 27 years in the system serving as bus driver, aid and substitute janitor. Shown L to R: Mrs. B.J. Wallace, Dr. James Carter, Mr. Otis Robinson and Mr. Leo Branch, School Board President.

    In his report at the regular school board meeting held August 15, 2016, Superintendent James H. Carter announced that it is imperative that we prepare our students for a world that does not yet exist. He explained that we can only guess at what will be needed to live in this society 20 years from now, but we need to be visionaries and strive to prepare our students accordingly.
    Dr. Carter shared the plans for a student forum to address overcoming the odds in the Greene County School Community. “Students often have very good ideas to contribute on improving situations,” Dr. Carter said.

    Part of his plan is to institute leadership workshops for aspiring leaders in the school system. He also issued a call to community to help students in finding good jobs and in preparing them to launch a successful career.
    The superintendent stated that the Robert Brown Middle School colors selected are red, black and gold. The students chose the Tiger as the school’s mascot.
    In other school updates, Carter said that as of August 12, there are a total of 1,091 students enrolled in the school system. Eutaw Primary has 351 students; Robert Brown Middle School has 412 students; Greene County High School has 328 students.
    Carter stated that there was a significant gain in the ACT Aspire for Reading and Math, “but there is a tremendous amount of work to be done to help students meet expectations.”
    In noting an advantage for consolidating Carver and Paramount schools, Superintendent Carter stated that the total cost of the utilities at the two schools was $198,000 annually.
    The Greene County Board of Education approved various recommendations presented by Superintendent James H. Carter at the August 15, 2016 board meeting. Personnel items included the following.
    * Employment: Dencer Hall as Janitor/Maintenance help at the Central Office; Jacqueline Allen as Reading Tutor at Eutaw Primary; Shaneka Hopson as Health Science Instructor at Greene County Career Center; Micheal Williams as Mathematics Teacher at Greene County High.
    * Re-assignment: Samuel Newton from Custodian at former Carver Middle to Custodian at Eutaw Primary; Lamar Lavender from Custodian at Paramount Jr. High to Custodian at Greene County High.
    * Resignation: Ms. Tonia Bevelle, Mathematics Teacher at Greene County High, effective July 18, 2016.
    * Stipend for Alphonso Noland, Maintenance Worker.
    * The following to assist the maintenance department with repairs to Robert Brown Middle:
    Carl Washington, Kiser Jackson, Andrew Hill.
    * Add the following to the current Bus Driver Substitute List 2016-2017: Samuel Ezell, James Gaines, James Powell, Jerdin Grays, Fannie Aaron, Melissa Davis – Special Services Bus Aide.
    * Additional Service contract(s) for the following employees at Greene County High School for the 2016 – 2017 academic year. (Separate Contract): Eric Hendricks – Assistant Football Coach
    Volunteer Coach: Cedrick Eatman – Greene County High School 2016 – 2017 academic year.
    The board approved providing the same raise for the Superintendent as other employees are receiving.
    The board approved the following Administrative Services:
    Contract with Metropolitan Association of Football Officials for football officials at Greene
    County High School on September 9 and September 23, 2016.
    Contract between the Greene County Sheriff Department and the Greene County Board of Education for services of School Resource Officers at Robert Brown Middle and Greene County High School for 2016 – 2017 school year.
    * Contract between Greene County Board of Education and Greene County Sheriff’s Department for security services at Greene County High School and Robert Brown Middle School football games during the 2016 – 2017 Football Season.
    * Bid submitted by Hotel and Restaurant Supply for shelving for the new walk-in cooler and walk-in freezer at Robert Brown Middle.
    * Lowest bid submitted by Sliddel for Motor Oil products for FY 2016 – 2017.
    * Lowest bid submitted by Pruett Oil for Unleaded Gas and Diesel Fuel for FY 2016 – 2017.
    * Bid Submitted by Tombigbee for Propane for FY 2016 – 2017 (Only Bidder).
    The following items be declared surplus and removed from Child Nutrition Inventory:
    * Lunchroom Tables from old Greene County High School.
    * Lunchroom Tables at Paramount Jr. High School.
    * Imperial Range (oven) at Paramount Jr. High School.
    * Freezer/Refrigerator at Paramount Jr. High School.
    All utilities for Carver Middle and Paramount Jr. High to be turned off at the end of the month
    Payment of all bills, claims, and payroll approved. Bank reconciliations as submitted by Mr. Leon Dowe, CSFO approved. Payment of Invoice for 2016/2017 ATBE General Liability/Errors and Omissions Liability Fund Coverage in the amount of $7,449 approved. Contract of Mr. Toice Goodson as Principal at Greene County High School Ninth Grade Academy (One Year) approved. Contract with West Central Official Association of Football Officials for football officials at Greene County High School on August 19, September 30 and October 7, 2016 approved.

     

     

  • Boko Haram offers to exchange abducted girls for its captured fighters

    Written By Nigel Roberts, Washington Post

                                                        Bring Back Our Girls

    Bring  Back Our Girls

    The Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram released a video on Sunday blaming Nigerian airstrikes for killing many of the girls it abducted more than two years ago and offering to exchange the survivors for its imprisoned fighters.

    A masked militant appears in the video with a group of about 50 girls behind him, purportedly some of the more than 200 schoolgirls the group abducted from Chibok, in northeast Nigeria. The bodies of those allegedly killed or wounded in government airstrikes also appear in the video.

    Africa’s most populous nation has been at war with the insurgents who are trying to carve out an Islamist state in Nigeria.

    In a statement, Nigeria said it’s in touch with the militants and doing all it can for their release, according to the British Broadcasting Corporation.

    “We are being extremely careful because the situation has been compounded by the split in the leadership of Boko Haram,” Nigerian Information Minister Alhaji Mohammed continued. “We are also being guided by the need to ensure the safety of the girls.”

    Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari told the BBC last year that he’s prepared to negotiate with Boko Haram for the girls’ release, if credible leadership comes forward. But that’s now complicated by reports of a split in leadership.

    The New York Times reported that a spokesman for the Bring Back Our Girls campaign said the video seems legitimate, adding that some family members recognized several of the girls.

    At least one kidnapped schoolgirl was found earlier this year. Nigeria celebrated when a civilian militia found her in the forest with a baby, confirming what many feared – that the girls became sex slaves and married off to Boko Haram fighters.

    Meanwhile, the BBC reported that the Nigerian army is searching for journalist Ahmad Salkida, who has written about the internal workings of Boko Haram. Salkida, believed to be in Dubai, wrote about the video before its release.