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Rev. Jesse Jackson Tapped for First Ron Walters Lecture Next Year by Hazel Trice Edney

Oct. 29, 2013

Rev. Jesse Jackson Tapped for First Ron Walters Lecture Next Year
By Hazel Trice Edney

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Dr. Ron Walters was advisor to the Rev. Jesse Jackson during his 1988 presidential campaign that registered millions of new voters. CREDIT: Ron Walters Center

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – Two weeks after hundreds of Black political and social scientists, students, and civil rights leaders gathered for the first Ronald Walters Legacy Conference at Howard University, the director of the Walters Leadership and Public Policy Center confirms that the Rev. Jesse Jackson has been tapped to star as next year’s lecturer as America approaches the 2014 Congressional elections.

“We’ve already been talking with Rev. Jesse Jackson about doing our first major lecture for us,” says Dr. Elsie Scott, president of the Walters Institute. “We feel like that’s a good stand-alone project.”

That’s, in part, because it was Dr. Ron Walters, an internationally renowned scholar and activist, who advised Rev. Jackson in both of his presidential campaigns – 1984 and 1988. Jackson and his “Rainbow Coalition” registered millions of new voters across the nation. Winning first or second place in 46 out of 54 primary contests in 1988, Walters credited him for laying the groundwork for Black politicians across the nation.

The battle for which political party will dominate the 435-member House of Representatives will go down Nov. 4, 2014. Currently Republicans dominate the House while Democrats have the majority in the U. S. Senate, a scenario that has caused venomous infighting and political bottleneck, including the recent Republican-led government shutdown. Ideally, when one political party takes over both Congressional chambers, legislation goes smoother if the president is also of like mind.

Scott, former president/CEO of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation, envisions the Walters Center as a national think tank for political leaders and students. For now, she envisions the center alternating between a major conference and a lecture from year to year. Next year is viewed as a pivotal election year as the nation’s first Black president enters his sixth year in office dealing with a contentious Congress. Rev. Jackson, with his political history and accomplishments will no doubt put the election and America's political moment in context.

Now 72, Jackson – who was also an assistant to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. - continues to influence America’s political and social agendas as president/CEO of his Rainbow/PUSH Coalition. He is a preacher, human and civil rights leader, talk show host and Black press columnist. He is also revered in many countries around the world for his international diplomacy. On August 9, 2000, President Bill Clinton awarded Jackson with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.

This year’s conference included forums with a mixture of more than 200 civil rights stalwarts, politicians, journalists and students who gathered on Howard's campus Oct. 10-11. They focused on key aspects of Walters’ life and career, which – in addition to politics – included Africa and the African Diaspora; Walters’ activism and his focus on Black leadership.

After spending 13 years as director of the African American Leadership Institute at the University of Marylandm Dr. Walters was preparing to return to Howard University as a senior research fellow and lecturer before his death in Sept. 2010. He had served as a professor in the Political Science Department at Howard from 1971 to 1996, nine of which he served as chairman of the department. He published 10 books.

“I feel like the conference accomplished what I hope it would accomplish, one to introduce the center to a broader audience,” Scott said. “And it drew in support for the center, both here at Howard and externally. I think it did that.”

Scott said she was especially pleased that there was a high level of student participation and anticipates the gatherings growth and increasing influence over the years.

She concluded: “We exposed the writings and the scholarship of Ron Walters to another generation. So, there were a lot of students who came to the conference who did not know anything about Ron Walters and they left knowing a lot.”

 

 

State of Emergency for Black Colleges by Marc H. Morial

Oct. 28, 2013

To Be Equal 

State of Emergency for Black Colleges
By Marc H. Morial

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - “HBCUs have always been in a situation where a lot of them have had to struggle. A lot of that has to do with inequitable funding.” Marybeth Gasman, University of Pennsylvania

Current financial problems facing the storied Grambling State University football program are a sign of funding inequities that are shortchanging students and threatening the very existence of a growing number of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).  On October 19th, in protest of severe budget cuts that have decimated the football facilities and led to the firing of Coach Doug Williams, the Grambling State Tigers players refused to take the 160 mile trip to Jackson, Mississippi for their scheduled matchup with Jackson State.  The Grambling players’ boycott of the Jackson State homecoming game sent shockwaves through the Southwestern Athletic Conference and highlighted the dire financial status of many of our nation’s 105 HBCUs.

Draconian higher education budget cuts in Louisiana being pushed by Governor Bobby Jindal are a big part of the Grambling problem. According to the New York Times, state funding for Grambling is “down 56 percent since 2008.  In response, the university has laid off more than 120 staff members and reduced the number of degree programs to 47 from 67.”   This has left the football program in shambles, with players forced to practice and play in unsafe and unsanitary facilities while sometimes enduring thousand-mile bus trips for away games.  The Grambling football experience is unique, but it is also symptomatic of a larger problem that extends beyond the football field to the financial offices and classrooms of the institutions that have traditionally produced the lion’s share of African American professionals.

With lower endowments, cut-rate tuition fees, fund raising challenge and a disproportionate number of first-generation, low-income students, HBCUs have been hit especially hard by the economic downturn.  Recent cuts in government aid and other funding streams have been the last straw for several of them.  St. Paul’s College in southern Virginia closed its doors in June.  Atlanta’s Morris Brown College recently declared bankruptcy.  And a board member at Howard University, considered by many to be the nation’s premier HBCU, recently wrote, “Howard will not be here in three years if we don’t make some crucial decisions now.”

In addition to the financial strains on HBCUs, prospective students are finding it harder to scrape up the money to enroll.  A recent change in credit history criteria in the federal Parent PLUS Loan Program has resulted in the denial of loans to 28,000 HBCU students and a loss of $154 million in revenue to HBCUs.  Congressional Black Caucus Chair, Marcia L. Fudge has responded to this crisis by demanding a return to the previous credit policy.  She says, “The issue must be addressed and the policy must be fixed now.”

The contributions of HBCUs cannot be overstated.  While the 105 HBCU institutions represent just three percent of the nation’s higher education establishment, they graduate nearly 20 percent of African Americans who earn undergraduate degrees.  They also graduate more than 50 percent of African American professionals, half of black public school teachers, and most of the African American students who earn bachelor’s degrees in STEM fields.

For decades HBCUs have been the backbone of a growing black middle class and a stronger America.  We must do everything we can to prevent their decline and keep them alive.

Marc Morial is President of the National Urban League.

Four Blacks to Receive 50th Presidential Medals of Freedom

Oct. 28, 2013

Four Blacks to Receive 50th Presidential Medals of Freedom

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Bayard Rustin

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Rev. Dr. C. T. Vivian

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Ernie "Cub" Banks

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Oprah Winfrey

(TriceEdneyWire.com) – President Barack Obama will award four of 16 Presidential Medals of Freedom to African-Americans upon the 50th Anniversary of the awards.

The Nation’s highest civilian honor, “presented to individuals who have made especially meritorious contributions to the security or national interests of the United States, to world peace, or to cultural or other significant public or private endeavors,” will be awarded Nov. 20 at the White House. Among the recipients are the following:

Civil rights leader Rev. Cordy Tindell “C.T.” Vivian, distinguished minister, author, and organizer; Civil rights activist Bayard Rustin (posthumous), advisor to the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; Baseball Hall of Famer Ernie “Mr. Cub” Banks, former Chicago Clubs player, known as one of the greatest baseball players of all time; and Broadcast Journalist Oprah Winfrey among the world’s most successful talk show hosts for creating The Oprah Winfrey Show.

This year marks the 50th Anniversary of the Executive Order signed by President John F. Kennedy establishing the Presidential Medal of Freedom. According to the White House, “more than 500 exceptional individuals from all corners of society have been awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom” since the inaugural awards to 31 people in 1963.

The other 2013 recipients are: Newsman Ben Bradlee; former President Bill Clinton; World War II Veteran/Former Congressman Daniel Inouye (posthumous); pioneering psychologist Daniel Kahneman; former Sen. Richard Lugar; music legend Loretta Lynn; environmental scientist Mario Molina; pioneering astronaut Sally Ride (posthumous); Arturo Sandoval; champion U.N.C. basketball coach Dean Smith; Renowned writer and activist Gloria Steinem; and revered appellate judge Patricia Wald.

“The Presidential Medal of Freedom goes to men and women who have dedicated their own lives to enriching ours,” says President Obama. “This year's honorees have been blessed with extraordinary talent, but what sets them apart is their gift for sharing that talent with the world. It will be my honor to present them with a token of our nation's gratitude."

Wilder Museum Site Becomes Baseball Field by Joey Matthews

Oct. 28, 2013

Wilder Museum Site Becomes Baseball Field
By Joey Matthews

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Minor league baseball will be played at the Fredericksburg site where former Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder once envisioned an impressive state-of-the-art slavery museum.

Wilder, Virginia governor from 1990 to 1994 and America’s first elected Black governor, first envisioned a national slavery museum in 1992 after a trip to Africa. Also a former Richmond mayor, Wilder was never able to raise the money to develop or even pay architect I.M. Pei the $6 million for the design. The project has been in limbo since 2008 when fundraising halted.

The Smithsonian’s $500 million National Museum of African-American History and Culture, scheduled to open in late 2015 in Washington, D.C., competed with Wilder’s efforts to create his museum.

Wilder’s 22-year-old dream of building the $100 million showcase center to tell the story of enslaved Black people officially ended Oct. 21. That’s when Mr. Wilder and Pei Partner Architects, the chief creditor of his proposed U.S.

National Slavery Museum in Fredericksburg, agreed to sell the 38-acre site along Interstate 95.

The buyers: The Hagerstown Suns, the Class A affiliate of the Washington Nationals major league team, and Diamond Nation. Fredericksburg Treasurer Jim Haney has postponed the auction of the museum site for 150 days to allow the parties to finalize the deal. The auction was to have taken place this week, Oct. 31, to allow the city to recoup unpaid real estate taxes.

Under the deal reached this week, the city of Fredericksburg will be paid the $450,000 it claims to be owed in back taxes, penalties, interest and attorney fees by the national slavery museum organization. However, the total price the baseball group is to pay for the land has not yet been disclosed.

Wilder could still try to build a museum, but on a far smaller scale, under a separate agreement. Silver Cos., which owns the Celebrate Virginia development where the original museum was to be built, has committed to provide Wilder’s organization 2.5 acres in the development if the organization ever obtains an approved site plan from the city for a scaled-down museum.

The land would not be deeded to the organization until that time. At this point, the museum apparently has little, if any money. It’s only significant resources are items private collectors donated and which most have requested be returned.

Silver also has agreed to amend the deed restriction it placed on the 38 acres when it donated the land to the slavery museum in 2002. The restriction currently states that the property can be used only for an African-American history museum or other educational or charitable purposes. A professional and amateur baseball complex will be added as an allowed use.

Tuskegee University President Suddenly Resigns by Frederick H. Lowe

Tuskegee University President Suddenly Resigns
Fourth HBCU leader to leave in the past few months

By Frederick H. Lowe

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Dr. Gilbert Rochon

Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from TheNorthStarNews.com

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Dr. Gilbert L. Rochon, president of Tuskegee University, has unexpectedly resigned during a board of trustees meeting, shocking board members.

Dr. Rochon did not publicly discuss his reasons for leaving Tuskegee, which is based in Tuskegee, Ala. A school spokesperson said board members would not discuss Rochon's Oct. 18 resignation with the news media.

Major General (Ret) Charles E. Williams, chairman of the board of trustees, accepted Rochon's resignation and thanked him for his three years of service.

Tuskegee named Rochon president on Nov. 1, 2010. He was the sixth president in Tuskegee's 132-year history.  Booker T. Washington founded Tuskegee in 1881 and students built the school. Rochon also was named a university professor.

Before joining Tuskegee, Rochon was director of the Purdue Terrestrial Observatory and senior research scientist for the Rosen Center for Advanced Computing. He also was an associate vice president for Collaborative Research and Engagement at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind.

The board named Dr. Matthew Jenkins acting university president. Jenkins, an Alabama native, graduated from Tuskegee University in 1959 with a doctorate in veterinary medicine.

Dr. Rochon is the fourth president of a Historically Black College or University to resign in the past several months.

Patricia A. Hardaway, president of Wilberforce University, is resigning in December. Sidney Ribeau, president of Howard University, also is resigning in December. Norfolk State University recently fired President Dr. Tony Atwater.

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