Category: history

  • Georgetown University to make amends for slavery history

     By: Ian Simpson, Reuters News Service

     

    student-at-georgetown
    WASHINGTON, DC – MARCH 28: Georgetown University freshman, Darryl Robinson, 19, poses for a photograph on campus on Wednesday March 28, 2012 in Washington, DC. Robinson said he was unprepared and had terrible study habits when he arrived as a student at Georgetown University. Healy Hall is seen in the background. (Photo by Matt McClain for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

     

    WASHINGTON, Sept 1 (Reuters) – Georgetown University apologized on Thursday for its historical links to slavery, saying it would give an admissions edge to descendants of slaves whose sale in the 19th century helped pay off the U.S. school’s debts.

    The 1838 sale, worth about $3.3 million in today’s dollars, was organized by two of Georgetown’s early presidents, both Jesuits. A portion of the profit, about $500,000, was used to help pay off Georgetown’s debts at a time when the college was struggling financially. The slaves were uprooted from the Maryland plantations and shipped to estates in Louisiana.

    The Washington-based university, run by the Roman Catholic Jesuit order, will create an institute to study the history of slavery at the school. It will also rename two buildings that had honored presidents who oversaw the 1838 sale of the 272 slaves, who had worked on church-affiliated plantations in Maryland.

    “The most appropriate ways for us to redress the participation of our predecessors in the institution of slavery is to address the manifestations of the legacy of slavery in our time,” Georgetown President John DeGioia said in a statement.

    The school’s steps go further than those taken by other U.S. universities that are confronting their past association with slavery, including Harvard, Brown, Princeton and the University of North Carolina.

    But some criticized as inadequate the decision to give the descendants of the sold slaves the same admissions preference as the children of faculty, staff and alumni.

    “We remain hopeful that we can forge a relationship with Georgetown that will lead to ‘real’ atonement,” Karran Harper Royal, an organizer of a group of descendants, said in an email.

    She added that the school should have offered scholarships to descendants of the slaves and included them on a panel that made the recommendations.

    The steps follow recommendations by a committee DeGioia appointed in September 2015 on how to recognize Georgetown’s links to slavery.

    The 18,000-student university will also create a memorial for slaves whose work benefited the school, including those sold to plantations in Louisiana to pay off Georgetown’s debts. Descendants of the slaves will be included in a group advising on the memorial.

    The two buildings being renamed by university officials originally paid tribute to the Rev. Thomas F. Mulledy and the Rev. William McSherry, the college presidents involved in the 1838 sale. Now one will be called Isaac Hall to commemorate the life of Isaac Hawkins, one of the slaves shipped to Louisiana in 1838, and the other Anne Marie Becraft Hall, in honor of a 19th-century educator who founded a school for black girls in Washington.

    Students at dozens of U.S. universities staged protests last fall over the legacy of racism on campus. The protests led to the resignation of the president of the University of Missouri and prompted many schools to review their diversity commitments.

    Dr. DeGioia said he planned to apologize for the wrongs of the past “within the framework of the Catholic tradition,” by offering what he described as a Mass of reconciliation in partnership with the Jesuit leadership in the United States and the Archdiocese of Washington.

    “This community participated in the institution of slavery,’’ Dr. DeGioia said, addressing a crowd of hundreds of students, faculty members and descendants at Georgetown’s Gaston Hall. “This original evil that shaped the early years of the Republic was present here. We have been able to hide from this truth, bury this truth, ignore and deny this truth.”

    “As a community and as individuals, we cannot do our best work if we refuse to take ownership of such a critical part of our history,’’ he said. “We must acknowledge it.”

    When Dr. DeGioia invited questions from the audience, a man in a gray suit took the microphone. “My name is Joe Stewart,’’ he said, “and I am a descendant of the 272.”

    Mr. Stewart, a retired corporate executive and an organizer of a group of more than 300 descendants, expressed gratitude to the university’s working group on slavery and to Dr. DeGioia for their efforts. But he said that descendants, who had not been included as members of the committee, must be involved in decision making on these initiatives moving forward.

    “Our attitude is nothing about us, without us,’’ said Mr. Stewart, who was flanked by five other descendants.

     

     

     

  • Mass protests against Zimbabwe’s President, Robert Mugabe called ‘biggest in a decade’

    Robert Mugabe.jpg

    President Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe, in Southern Africa

    Aug. 29, 2016 (GIN) – It all started with a flag.     Zimbabwe Pastor Evan Mawarire, posting on Twitter in a feed he called “ThisFlag”, was letting off steam about his children’s rising school fees. But that “steam” ignited a wildfire now raging among Zimbabweans long hungry for leadership change.

    Exhausted by shortages, unpaid salaries, limits on democratic freedoms, sky-high unemployment and a fast growing spread between rich and poor, Zimbabweans took to the streets last week in a demonstration approved by permit to ask the 92 year old President Robert Mugabe to step down.

    Some had seen the pastor’s Twitter posts but others heard about the protest over the human internet.

    Despite the permit, police were out in full force and began firing tear gas and water cannons at opposition leaders and the demonstrators at Friday’s protest which swept across large parts of the capital, Harare. Pictures posted of the violent police action were seen widely around the world.

    Some 68 people were detained and charged with burning public property, attacking police officers and looting shops.

    The pastor is now in the U.S. after charges that he intended to overthrow the state were dropped. Stopping first in South Africa, he spoke to students at Wits University in Johannesburg where his speech in English and Shona was posted online by various news sources.

    “Thank you fellow citizens for the voices we have raised… Whether I’m in Zimbabwe or not, we keep moving… Our strength is in our numbers, not in one person or in one movement.

    “Don’t stop building these movements that are protesting the government… Don’t depend on Mawarire. Depend on you. That’s what the strength of this movement is about.”     Supporters of President Mugabe attacked the movement in articles belittling the pastor. “Evan Mawarire – a cry baby or a cry boy?” jeered a columnist in Bulaway24 News. Mawarire, he wrote, “is masquerading as a Pastor” and “shedding tears for the alleged crises in Zimbabwe.”

    But the Pastor’s #ThisFlag movement has lit an unstoppable fire, wrote Kitsepile Nyathi, a Kenyan correspondent in Harare. “There are now a plethora of movements that includes Tajamuka (We have rebelled), that lead daring protests against President Mugabe’s rule,” he wrote. Another group, “build Zimbabwe,” can be found on Facebook.

    “Protests have become the order of the day in Zimbabwe’s major cities as calls grow louder for one of the world’s oldest leader to step down,” Nyathi wrote. “Unemployed graduates, rural teachers, vendors and opposition political parties led by former deputies Joice Mujuru and ex-Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai are some of the groups that have taken to the streets demanding change in the last two months.

     

    Arriving last week in Dallas, the Pastor met with famed Zimbabwean musical icon Thomas Mapfumo, composer of Chimurenga (revolutionary) songs, who supports the pastor.    Mapfumo, seen in an online video, said Mugabe and his party have “a wrong understanding of what freedom is… A country is not led by a few individuals but by a majority… That is what is called power to the people,” he said.    A rally is planned for President Mugabe’s arrival for the U.N.’s General Assembly on Sept. 17. Pastor Mawarire is expected to attend.

     

  • Barack woos Michelle: How Tika Sumpter, Parker Sawyers, and their newbie director brought the first couple’s first date to screen

    by Tirdad Derakhshani, Philadelphia Inquirer

    Parker Sawyers and Tika Summer

    Parker Sawyers and Tika Sumpter are the young Barack and Michelle as they go on their first date in “Southside With You.”

    Hollywood hasn’t exactly been shy when it comes to churning out presidential biopics, from well-researched and ponderous entries such as Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln to speculative potboilers like Oliver Stone’s JFK to fanciful numbers like Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.

    But a film about the love life of a sitting president?

    No need to cringe: Southside With You, which opened Friday, isn’t a lurid exposé, but a charming romantic drama that recounts Barack Obama and Michelle Robinson’s first date, in 1989.

    A singularly nonpartisan entry, it’s a sweet indie pic that uses the moving, eventful encounter between the two young Chicago lawyers to tell a universal story about youth, identity, ambition, and love.

    Written and directed by 31-year-old newcomer Richard Tanne, Southside With Youstars up-and-coming actor Parker Sawyers (SurvivorMonsters: Dark Continent) as Barack and Tika Sumpter (Gossip GirlBessie) as Michelle. Sumpter also produced, backed by executive producer and Obama friend John Legend.

    Tanne, from Livingston in North Jersey, had been mulling the idea for years. “I’ve always been really struck by the Obamas and their relationship and the way they look at each other,” the director said in a conference call that also included Sawyers.

    “Their public displays of affection look so real and so alive, something that’s so rare in people, especially public figures, that I was intrigued.”

    Tanne said that when he heard about the Obamas’ first date, he felt sure it would make a compelling movie. The backstory is widely known: After rebuffing the future president, then a summer associate at her Chicago law firm, Michelle finally agreed to accompany Barack to a community meeting in the impoverished neighborhood where he had served as an organizer and advocate. She did not consider it a date.

    In a sly move, Barack asked her to meet him hours before the event so they could spend time together. The film captures that day, which took them to an exhibition of Ernie Barnes’ paintings, to the park for a picnic lunch, to the meeting where Barack impressed Michelle with his passionate commitment to helping the residents. After the meeting, they went to the movies, where they watched Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing.

    Barack and Michelle married three years later, in 1992.

    “That first date involved the classic boy-girl conflict because she wasn’t interested in him,” said Tanne. “So he gave himself that one day to prove to her why she should be with him.”

    Tanne’s tight script opens as each lawyer is preparing to go out and ends with their first kiss, a structure that appealed to Sumpter, 36, who said she signed on as a producer after her first meeting with Tanne. “Richard [Tanne] had asked me to play Michelle, but in the beginning I just wanted to produce, to make sure the film got made even if I wasn’t going to star,” Sumpter said during a visit to Philadelphia this summer.

    “Once I saw the script, I was like, ‘Oh yeah, I want to play this role!’ “It’s playing a woman every girl wants to become,” she said. “And it’s so rare to play a woman with so much strength and complexity and beauty. She is so unapologetic about her intelligence. In a lot of romantic films, the lady is always crying or chasing after the guy and I’m always like, ‘Really, y’all?’ “Now, Michelle, she’s strong.”

    Sumpter said Tanne’s film also transcends the typical romance. “Yes, it’s about love, but it’s much more, it’s about these people defining who they are at a young age. And to me it’s also about a woman who doesn’t want to be overshadowed by this hotshot guy coming in from Harvard.”

    Is that why she refuses to date him? “She tells [Barack] that, as a woman, she has to work twice as hard to be noticed in a male-dominated [law] firm and four times as hard as a black woman. She’s not going to jeopardize that.”

    Sumpter said Tanne, who did extensive research for his screenplay, had creative freedom, but she would nudge him gently when she felt his dialogue rang false. “I’d say, ‘I don’t think she’d say it that way. It’s what a white guy might say!’ ” she said, laughing.

    She said she was surprised to find that much of the dramatic weight rests on Michelle’s shoulders. “I remember thinking that next to this amazing man as Barack, no one would see me,” she said of Sawyers. “But I guess her journey fluctuates a little bit more, as her character has to travel greater emotional distance.”

    Sawyers said he was impressed by Tanne’s ability to humanize the characters. Barack, for one, is shown chain smoking, a habit Michelle doesn’t particularly like. “In writing him, Richard tried to get to the essence and truth of the guy, and he was a chain smoker,” said Sawyers. “And he did smoke a lot of pot in high school, as he admits to Michelle.”

    The movie Michelle sums up the movie Barack as “definitely a smooth-talking brother,” Tanne said. But what clinches their date, Sawyers chimed in, isn’t the suave movie choice or their goodnight kiss but the community meeting, “which gave Barack a chance to reveal other parts of him, a different side.””By the end you realize he’s a smooth-talking brother with a lot of substance.”

  • Steele and Edwards in Oct. 4 Run-off for Mayor of Eutaw

    In yesterday’s municipal elections in the Town of Eutaw there will be a run-off on October 4 between the incumbent Mayor Hattie Edwards and former three-term Mayor Raymond Steele.
    Unofficial results show a total of 1,233 votes with Steele carrying each of the six voting boxes, including the Absentee Box, with a vote of 569 (46.1%) and Mayor Edwards receiving 308 votes (25%). Two other candidates, Carl Davis received 199 votes (16.2%) and Reginald Spencer received 157 votes (12.7%). A detailed chart of the votes is shown on page 8.
    Latasha Johnson was elected to City Council District 1 by a vote of 204 (77.6%) to 59 for James Lewis. LaJeffrey Carpenter was re-elected to City Council District 2 by a vote of 171 (73.7%) to 61 for Stanley Lucious.
    In Forkland, there will be a run-off between the top two vote getters for Mayor, between Charlie McAlpine and Johnny Lovell Isaac.
    Based on unofficial results, the candidates for Mayor of Forkland received the following votes: Charlie McAlpine-87, Johnny Lovell Isaac – 77, Calvin Knott – 66, Michael Barton – 51 and Ollie Vester – 39.In the Forkland City Council races, in District 1: Joe Lewis Tuck was elected over Doris Robinson; in District 2: Christopher Armstead was chosen over Ridgeway (Pap) Gaines and Priscilla (Pat) Turner; in District 3, Preston Davis was elected over John Vester; in District 4, Samitria H. Gray was elected over Gertrude Parker; and District 5, there will be a run-off between Willie Sashington (18 votes) and either Samuel Isaac or Juanita Jackson who each polled 17 votes.
    In Boligee, the election was postponed until October 25, 2016 by Circuit Judge Eddie Hardaway after the printed ballots did not have the names of all candidates who qualified. Dates will be set for a new qualifying period and all interested candidates will have to re-qualify or qualify anew.
    In Union, the Mayor and all city council members were unopposed and reelected to their positions.
    In Eutaw, three City Council candidates: Shelia Smith, Joe Lee Powell and Bennie Abrams were running unopposed and were elected to the City Council. The Council will have three old members and two new members – Latasha Johnson and Bennie Abrams.

  • Federation holds 49th Annual Meeting

    FederationThe Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund held its 49th Annual Meeting this past weekend.
    On Thursday evening in Birmingham, the Federation held its 15th Estelle Witherspoon Lifetime Achievement Award Dinner. Three Mississippi civil rights veterans – Bob Moses, Dave Dennis and Hollis Watkins Muhammad – received the award name for a founder of the Federation, who served as General Manager of the Freedom Quilting Bee in Wilcox County, Alabama.
    Pictured at right, Dave Dennis and Hollis Watkins Muhammad receive award from Cornelius Blanding, Executive Director of the Federation. Bob Moses was unable to attend since he is recovering from hip surgery. More than three hundred supporters attended the dinner.
    The meeting continued at the Federation’s Rural Training and Research Center in Epes, Alabama on Friday and Saturday.
    More than 400 attended Friday’s panel and workshop discussions on USDA programs to benefit family farmers. Workshops on aquaponics, land retention and heir property, forestry, cooperative development, marketing and credit union development were held in the afternoon.
    A highlight of Friday’s program was the signing of a Memorandum of Agreement between the Federation and three USDA agencies – U. S. Forest Service, Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) and the National Agroforestry Center which provides a framework for future work to benefit African-American farmers in the southern region in conjunction with the Federation’s Rural Training and Research Center in Epes.
    On Saturday, the Federation held a Prayer Breakfast, annual business meeting featuring reports from its Board of Directors and Executive Director, state caucuses of members and other business.

  • State issued voter ID available at Black Belt Folk Roots Festival

    The Black Belt Folk Roots Festival will host a booth to accommodate voter registration and free voter ids for the local community. In an effort to ensure that all eligible Alabama citizens are afforded the opportunity to vote, Alabama’s Secretary of State John H. Merrill has asked the state’s election team to participate in as many festivals within the state of Alabama this summer to provide online voter registration and free voter IDs to eligible attendees.
    The Secretary of State’s office will set up its Mobile Voter ID Unit at the Festival activities on Sunday, August 28, 2016. The Unit will be set up behind the Greene County Industrial Development Authority’s office on the old courthouse square.Since June 3, 2014, to participate in an Alabama election, a citizen must be registered to vote and present a valid form of photo ID. Forms of photo ID accepted at the polls include valid:
    driver’s license; * Alabama photo voter ID card; * state issued ID (any state); * federal issued ID; * US passport; * employee ID from Federal Government, State of Alabama, County, Municipality, Board, or other entity of this state; *student or employee ID from a public or private college or university in the State of Alabama (including postgraduate technical or professional schools); * Military ID; or Tribal ID. To receive a free Alabama photo voter ID card a citizen must be a registered voter and must not have one of the valid forms of photo ID listed above.
    When applying for the free Alabama photo voter ID, a voter must show: a photo ID document or a non-photo identity document that contains full legal name and date of birth; documentation showing the voter’s date of birth; documentation showing the person is a registered voter; and documentation showing the voter’s name and address as reflected in the voter registration record. A citizen’s name, address, and voter registration status can be verified by Secretary of State staff, using the statewide voter registration system.
    Examples of non-photo ID documents that can be used in applying for a free Alabama photo voter ID card include a birth certificate, marriage record, Social Security Administration document, hospital or nursing home record, Medicare or Medicaid document, or an official school record or transcript.
    For more information on the process on how to receive a free voter ID, voters can call 1-800-274-VOTE or go to http://www.alabamavoterid.com. The mobile site schedule is also posted there.

  • Escapee from Greene County jail captured in Boligee

    eric washingtonGreene County inmate Eric Washington was captured shortly after 1:00 p.m. Monday, Aug. 22, in Boligee. Washington, who escaped Tuesday, Aug. 16 from the Greene County jail, and was armed, was taken into custody without incident. Authorities say they were acting on a tip when they found Washington in a railroad car in Boligee on Monday afternoon.
    Lt. Jeremy Rancher, of the Greene County Sheriff’s Department, said after getting the tip, Greene County officials called the Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC), who sent tracking dogs from Bibb County to the area. Those tracking dogs and officers searching from helicopters spotted Washington.
    Officials say Washington was armed with a hand gun but was captured without incident. Greene County Sheriff Joe Benison thanked multiple West Alabama and state law enforcement agencies for their help. Benison noted that capturing Washington was a collective effort with the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency’s (ALEA) State Bureau of Investigation (SBI), the Greene County Sheriff’s Department, as well as ALEA’s Aviation Unit, the U.S. Marshals, the 17th Judicial Task Force, the Department of Corrections K-9 tracking team and local law enforcement agencies from neighboring jurisdictions.
    According to court records, Washington was charged in a shooting that injured a Greene County deputy last year. The deputy involved was injured by glass when Washington shot at his vehicle.
    Benison confirmed that Washington was sentenced just last week in that case to 30 years in state prison. He added that Washington was days away from being transferred to a state prison. Authorities have not commented yet on any new charges Washington may face.

  • 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.”

  • Judge Isaac selects to retire following hearing before Alabama Judicial Court

    Issaac

    The Alabama Judiciary Court approved a settlement in which Greene County Probate Judge Earlean Isaac agreed to retire effective August 6 and to never seek judicial office again. She was charged with ethical violations regarding her actions on issues involving distribution of money from her father’s estate in which she and her siblings were heirs.
    Isaac’s father, Robert Percy Williams, died in 2003 without a will. However, in 2013 he was awarded $62,500 (after taxes $50,000) as his share in a class-action racial discrimination lawsuit regarding the administration of a federal farm program, known as The Black Farmers Lawsuit. The heirs – Williams had 15 children including Judge Isaac – then began the process of probating the estate, according to the Judicial Inquiry Commission’s complaint.
    Following her hearing before the Alabama Judiciary Court on Monday, August 8, 2016, Judge Isaac issued the following statement:
    “To the Citizens of Greene County: I take this time to thank you all for your support over the years. I want you to know that I was not removed from office nor was I forced to retire. It was my decision to retire. It has been an extreme honor and pleasure serving you for 47 years with 27 years as Probate Judge. I love you all and may God continue to bless you. Thank You, Retired Probate Judge Earlean Isaac” Isaac also stated that she had intended to retire at the end of her current term.

    During her tenure as Probate Judge, Isaac was active in the Alabama Probate Judges Association serving as Treasurer from 2000-2001; as Secretary in 2002 and as President in 2003. In 2015, she was one of eight judges selected to serve on the Probate Judges Advisory Council established by Secretary of State John Merrill.
    The Judicial Inquiry Commission leveled several charges against Isaac claiming she had violated a number of canons of judicial ethics. The violations, according to JIC, included Isaac: entering into ex parte communications with others, including her siblings; obtaining waivers outside the court and outside the presence of all parties or their attorneys; notarizing documents she knew or should have known would be filed in a preceding before her; directing the estate’s administratrix (her sister) as to who should be included as heirs; directing her attorney to request a class-action check be sent to the probate office;
    inserting her personal knowledge of facts and family history into the case; misusing her status as a judge to preempt tasks normally reserved for the personal representative of the state; and her commingled status as a party and judge, “abandoning her post as an impartial arbiter.”
    According to the complaint “Judge Isaac admitted to the commission that although she has served as Probate Judge of Greene County for 27 years, she was unaware of the requirements of the Canons which include her required disqualification in a probate proceeding concerning a member of her family or in which she had a person financial interest,”
    Judge Isaac was first elected probate judge in 1989 and in 2012 was re-elected to her fifth term, which expires in 2018, according to the JIC.
    Governor Robert Bentley will appoint someone to complete the unexpired term of Judge Earlean Issac.

  • Greene County School System launches Ninth Grade Academy with Tie Tying Ceremony

    Group tiesShown above during the “Tie Tying Ceremony” are Charla Jordan, Federal Programs Coordinator; Leo Branch, School Board President; Rev. Christopher Spencer, Director of Community Development, University of Alabama; Toice Goodson, Jr, Ninth Grade Academy Principal; Leona Morrow, Board Member Children’s Policy Council; Dr. James Carter, School Superintendent; DeShayla Steele, Juvenile Officer; Nigel Speights, Demarius Cockrell, Lataursa Jones and Ivan Peebles, Freshman Academy students and participants in the CPC Mentoring Program; Judge Lillie Osborne, President of CPC; and Dr. Shayla McCray, Student AT-Risk Coordinator. The Ninth Academy enrolled 109 students who participated in the Tie Tying Ceremony.

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    boys tie tying 1-1

    At the opening of the school year, August 8, 2016, Greene County School System launched its first-time Freshman Academy or Ninth Grade Academy, which serves as a transitional program for students moving from the middles school program.
    On the first day of school, a special Tie Tying Ceremony was held for the Freshman Academy students. The ties were donated through the Greene County Children’s Policy Council Boys Passage to Manhood Mentoring Program. District Judge Lillie Jones Osborne serves as President. Community volunteers and school personnel were on hand to guide the Academy students in tying their ties.
    The Academy students will be guided through an academic program focusing on career and college readiness. Students will receive individual counseling and guidance as they adjust to goal oriented scholastic achievement.
    Superintendent James Carter explained that it is important that the 9th grade students just coming to high school are given special attention as they transition. “We determined that a special dress code for this class would be significant so the students would feel this special embrace and know that we intend to carry this throughout their high school tenure. We want students to enjoy school and be serious in working to achieve,” he explained.
    The dress code for the Freshman Academy students include blue blazers, white shirts and maroon and gold ties. The blazers are not required until after Labor Day.