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by Max Edison, Special to the NNPA from the Houston Defender
May 21, 2013
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HOUSTON (NNPA) — Texas Southern University recently held its spring commencement, and one of the highlights was the presentation of an honorary doctorate of humane letters to alum Michael Strahan.
Strahan, now a TV personality, was a ... |
by Staff
May 21, 2013
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NEW ORLEANS —New Orleans once again makes a list of America’s top cities.
A report by Bloomberg Rankings ranks the New Orleans area, including neighbors Metairie and Kenner, as No. 2 on a list of “Top 12 American Boomtowns.”
The list is a ranking of the fastest-growing cities in the U.S. betwe... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
May 15, 2013
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| WASHINGTON (NNPA) —When a Baltimore grocery store employee fingered 26-year-old Michael Austin for the murder of a security guard in the spring of 1974, Austin didn’t even match the police sketch. The wanted suspect was less 6 feet tall and Austin was the size of a small forward in the NBA. The only other evidence linking him ... |
by Staff
May 15, 2013
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| BETHESDA, MD — Robert L. Johnson, founder and chairman of The RLJ Companies, has announced plans for an education awareness campaign designed to convince minority organizations, elected officials, and public interest groups to support his proposal to end payday lending as we know it today and to encourage lending institutions to cre... |
by Maya Rhodan, NNPA Washington Correspondent
May 15, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services announced plans to provide $150 million to community health centers to assist in getting uninsured Americans prepared for the Oct. 1 opening of the Health Care Marketplace.
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by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
May 15, 2013
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JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (NNPA) — When international icon and former political prisoner Nelson Mandela was elected president of South Africa in 1994, it marked a watershed moment for the former minority-ruled country. Mandela, t...
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by Maya Rhodan, NNPA Washington Correspondent
May 15, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —For Malcolm Shabazz, grandson of Malcolm X, trouble seemed to come easy.
His troubles began in 1997, when at age 12 he plead guilty to setting fire to the apartment of his grandmother, Betty Shabazz, that resulted in her death in New York. As a result, young Malcolm spent four years in juvenile detention... |
by Maya Rhodan, NNPA Washington Correspondent
May 10, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Whites had an average wealth of $632,000 in 2010 while Blacks had about $98,000 and Hispanics had $110,000, according to a recent study by the Urban Institute.
“Such great wealth disparities help explain why many middle-income blacks and Hispanics haven’t seen much improvement in their ... |
by —Special to the NNPA from The Wilmington Journal
May 10, 2013
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WILMINGTON, N.C. —Seventeen people, including eight ministers, civil rights leaders, and students, were arrested for a prayerful protest at the state legislature in Raleigh on Monday.
They promise to return again.
The activists were handcuffed and taken to jail while they sang and prayed in front of the locke... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
May 10, 2013
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ASHVILLE, N.C. (NNPA) — The W.K. Kellogg Foundation has awarded $75 million in grants for a 5-year project called the American Healing Initiative. But in an unusual and unexpected move, the foundation assembled some of the grantees here recently to help heal the healers.
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation, a private, philant... |
by Charlene Crowell
May 10, 2013
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According to a new research report, America’s racial wealth gaps will persist until public policy reforms provide every family the opportunity to build wealth.
Less than Equal: Racial Disparities in Wealth Accumulation, from the Urban Institute’s Opportunity and Ownership project, ana...
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by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
April 28, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —— Fewer Black males were enrolled in the first year of medical schools last year than 32 years ago, a trend that, if left uncorrected, could hamper efforts to provide quality health care to underserved communities,... |
by Tony Best, Special to the NNPA from the New York Carib News
April 28, 2013
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BROOKLYN, N.Y. — To the retired police officer in Brooklyn, the news was shocking, virtually impossible to comprehend.
“We were at a meeting of the Caribbean Law Enforcement Officers Association about a week ago and she was her usual quiet self,” recalled Leroy Hutchinson, a Bajan who left the New York Police D... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
April 28, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – As President Obama continues to underscore the need to increase the college-educated workforce significantly by 2020, all except two states have slashed their funding for higher education.
“Cuts to state funding for higher education, since the start of the recession, have been severe and very widespr... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
April 18, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —Blacks have fallen behind in their efforts to reach parity with Whites in several key areas since 2010, according to the National Urban League’s new “State of Black America” report.
Each year, the report computes an Equality Index for economics, health, education, social justice, and ci... |
by Philip Stelly, Special to the NNPA from the Louisiana Weekly
April 18, 2013
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NEW ORLEANS — Pay no attention to that shocking video of drinking, drugging, gambling, and gun play at the House of Detention you’ve all seen in the past week. Orleans Parish Sheriff Marlin Gusman investigated the matter and determined there was not enough hard evidence to sustain a legal case against the inmates seen in th... |
by Karania A. Ajanaku, Special to the NNPA News Service from The New Tri-State Defender
April 12, 2013
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MEMPHIS — A billing for the evening read: “Mountaintop Speech Commemoration.” It was a summons to gather back at Mason Temple, where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gave his last oration – often simply called “The Mou... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
April 12, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —There wasn’t much good news for any of the worker groups in the March jobs report, released last week. Even though, the unemployment rate fell to 7.6 percent, most economists agree that the drop is attributable to nearly half a million workers exiting the labor force.
“The unemp... |
by Maya Rhodan, NNPA Washington Correspondent
April 12, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —Ron Daniels, president of the Institute of the Black World 21st Century, declared a war on the War on Drugs last week, saying it is fine to end the failed public policy.
“The War on Drugs is a racially biased policy and strategy. It is the new Jim Crow,”
Daniels said. “We come today... |
by D. Kevin McNeir, Special to the NNPA from The Miami Times and Matthew Charles Cardinale
April 12, 2013
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MIAMI —For the first time in nearly 40 years, the number of state prisoners in the U.S. has declined. Data compiled by The Pew Center on the States indicates that as of Jan. 1, 2010, there were 1,404,053 persons under the jurisdiction of state prison authorities. The decrease, which is the first year-to-year drop in the state pri... |
by Staff
April 03, 2013
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MADISON — The Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority (WHEDA) has officially unveiled the WHEDA Tax Advantage, a Mortgage Credit Certificate Program (MCC). Under this unique program, qualifying home buyers can claim a tax credit against their federal income tax liability of up to $2,000 a year. The credit is availabl... |
by Matthew Charles Cardinale
April 03, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Even as the issue of gay marriage continues to make waves in the U.S., change is inexorably arriving in the halls of power, with a record seven openly homosexual or bisexual members of the new U.S. Congress.
While still small, the number represents a significant gain since the previous congress, w... |
by Charlene Crowell
April 03, 2013
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One of the worst ironies of the nagging economic recession is that consumers with the fewest financial resources have lost the most. Now, a new report finds that payday loans not only strip much-needed income from low-income families, but harms the economic viability of the communities where they operate, draining n... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
March 22, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Instead of being the traditional ticket to success, many of our nation’s troubled schools hinder opportunity for upward mobility, especially for students of color, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan told Black... |
by Maya Rhodan, NNPA Washington Correspondent
March 22, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — The Congressional Black Caucus opposes a proposed House Republican budget for fiscal 2014 and instead offered an alternative budget that it said is faired to the voters the CBC represents.
Referring to the Republican plan CBC Chair Rep. Marcia Fudge (D-Ohio) said in a statement, “It cla... |
by Jim Lobe
March 22, 2013
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| WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Cyber threats appear to have largely replaced terrorism as posing the greatest risks to U.S. national security, which also confronts major longer-term challenges from the effects of natural resource shortages and climate change, according to the latest in a series of annual threat assessments by the U.S.... |
by Maya Rhodan, NNPA Washington Correspondent
March 15, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — When Rep. Gwen Moore [D-Wisc.] stood near President Obama last Thursday as he signed the Violence Against Women Act into law, as a rape survivor, she knew the benefit of the legislation as well as well as... |
by Katelyn Fossett
March 15, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Since the 2008 financial crisis, and most recently with the broad federal spending cuts beginning Mar. 1, experts have warned that an austerity-minded political system could bring about dramatic changes in the U.S. foreign aid model.
A significant part of this conversation has focused on shifti... |
by Maya Rhodan, NNPA Washington Correspondent
March 07, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — As Black History Month came to a close last week, a Civil Rights icon made history once again in the halls of the U.S. Capitol.
Last Wednesday, in a ceremony hosted by President Obama and members of Congress, Rosa... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
March 07, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —In the oral arguments last week before the Supreme Court to determine whether a key section of the Voting Rights Act should be upheld, Justice Antonin Scalia referred to the provision as “perpetuation of racial entitlement.”
U.S. activists converge on high court for challenge to voting rights
by Matthew Charles Cardinale
March 07, 2013
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ATLANTA, Georgia (IPS/GIN) —The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments Wednesday in a challenge to the constitutionality of key sections of the historic Voting Rights Act (VRA) of 1965.
Numerous organizations are rallying in support of the VRA. Activists across the nation, including Dr. Charles Steele, CEO of the S... |
by Maya Rhodan, NNPA Washington Correspondent
February 27, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Many of the students at Harvard School of Excellence in the Inglewood neighborhood on Chicago’s South Side are the same age as the 20 first- and second-graders who were gunned down at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
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by Cynthia E. Griffin, Special to the NNPA from Our Weekly
February 27, 2013
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Family raises money for foundation
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Feb. 26 will mark one year since then-17-year-old Travyon Martin was gunned down by George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch coordinator in a gated community of Sanford, Fla.
M... |
by Felicia Vance, Special to the NNPA from Tri-County Sentry
February 27, 2013
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Blacks have fewer incidences of thyroid cancer but have a more advanced form of the disease once they receive a diagnosis — and are more likely to die from it.
The mortality rate is probably due to an access to care issues. It has been found that Blacks had a 1 percent higher mortality rate, though thyroid cancer i...
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by Carey L. Biron
February 27, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — A major audit of the United States’ flagship global anti-HIV/AIDS program, prepared for the U.S. Congress, notes “remarkable progress” over the past decade. However, it also warns of insufficient monitoring and urges a stepped-up process of handing over greater control to partn... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
February 20, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — President Obama has launched initiatives and backed legislation that have significantly helped African-Americans throughout his time in office even though there is a perception in some quarters that the nation’... |
by Sylvester Monroe, Special to the NNPA from the Marketplace Wealth and Poverty Desk
February 20, 2013
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CHICAGO — Three days after his State of The Union address, President Obama visited Chicago to talk about gun violence. The president’s attention to the problem was appreciated by people like Bob Bennett, who has seen the value of h... |
by Carey L. Biron
February 20, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — For the first time, a U.S. government auditor has added climate change to a list of issues that pose the greatest financial risk to the government and country. It is also warning that Washington is markedly unprepared to deal with the scope of the problem.
The admonitions, coming amidst a... |
by La Risa Lynch, special to the NNPA from The Final Call
February 14, 2013
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CHICAGO — By all accounts, Hadiya Pendleton had everything going for her.
She was an honor roll student at King College Prep High School on Chicago’s South Side. She was a majorette in the school’s marching band tha... |
by Maya Rhodan
February 14, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — There was a lot of laughter in Howard University Hospital’s Tower Auditorium as Erwin “Magic” Johnson addressed a crowd of hospital staff and community members on National Black AIDS Day. Although, the... |
by Carey L. Biron
February 14, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — A months-old national campaign to convince U.S. colleges, universities and city governments to withdraw investments from the world’s largest oil and gas companies has seen some notable initial successes.
Last week, a city supervisor in San Francisco introduced resolutions calling on... |
by Maya Rhodan
February 06, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Thursday, Feb. 7, will be observed as National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day. And according to activists, there is plenty that African Americans need to observe.
There are more than 1.1 million people living with HIV/AIDS in the United States, including more than $510,000 African-Americans. ...
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by Maya Rhodan
February 06, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — For 97 years, the Association for the Study for African American Life and History has been commemorating the accomplishments of African Americans through Black History celebrations.
In 1915, Carter G. Woodson f... |
by George E. Curry
February 06, 2013
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The U.S. Census Bureau has released the following figures about Black America to coincide with African American History Month. If found them interesting enough to share.
Population
• 43.9 million
The number of Blacks, either alone or in combination with one or more other races, on Jul... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
February 06, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – President Obama has been accused of everything from not being born in America to secretly being a Muslim. But the most surprising – and accurate accusation – is that the nation’s first Black presid... |
by Carey L. Biron
February 06, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — The research arm of the U.S. Congress is warning that U.S. corporations’ use of tax havens has risen substantially in recent years, with companies offering massively inflated profit reports from small countries with loose tax regulations.
“Ample evidence of a significa...
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by Staff
January 30, 2013
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LAS VEGAS — President Obama is pledging to negotiate with Congress on immigration legislation, but he is also working with another group: voters.
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Obama flew more than 2,000 miles Jan. 29 to make his immigration pitch, visiting a politically ... |
by Staff
January 30, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — The Great Recession has had its greatest impact on African Americans, who saw their net wealth decrease at a rate more than four times faster than whites, according to a recent report by United for a Fair Economy, a Boston-based research group that advocates for economic equality, Black families are losing gro... |
by Maya Rhodan
January 30, 2013
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by George E. Curry
January 30, 2013
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FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (NNPA) — Rep. Alcee L. Hastings says President Obama of consistently disrespects the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC), the Black Press, and graduates of historically Black colleges, key groups that were critical to his re-election in November.
Black Veterans Request Proclamation for Buffalo Soldier
by Dorothy Rowley, Special to the NNPA from The Washington Informer
January 30, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — In a letter to President Barack Obama, the National Coalition of Black Veterans Organizations (NCBVO) asks that during the celebration of Black History Month in February — a presidential proclamation be issued that elevates legendary Buffalo Soldier Col. Charles Young to the honorary rank of Bri... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
January 23, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Rejecting calls for him to move closer toward his Republican critics, a confident President Barack H. Obama kicked off his second term on Monday by making an impassioned plea for a more inclusive America.
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by Lee A. Daniels
January 23, 2013
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I’ve always disliked the way Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday is often celebrated.
The reasons why became even clearer to me these past few days, as the importance of considering King’s life and work was juxtaposed against t...
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by Carey L. Biron
January 23, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Activists and watchdog groups across the United States unveiled a new national push on Thursday to urge policymakers to roll back a controversial 2010 Supreme Court decision that led to the unprecedented spending of about 6 billion dollars, much of it untraceable, during recent national elections.
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by Philip M. Jones, Special to the NNPA from Our Weekly
January 16, 2013
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African Americans have been the most rapidly advancing oppressed people in the history of the world, according to some major historians. To come from brutal and hard slavery, with virtually no legal basic human rights, to rise to lawmakers, local leaders... |
by Carey L. Biron
January 16, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Civil society actors and the some corporate groups here are reacting with excitement to indications that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which regulates the country’s stock exchanges, is likely to take up discussion over new rules that would mandate the public disclosure... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
January 09, 2013
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —A recent study reports that treating substance abusers, especially African Americans, could save the nation billions of dollars at a time when all eyes are glued to debates over how to solve the country’s national debt.
The study by researchers at Meharry Medical Co...
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by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
January 09, 2013
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| WASHINGTON (NNPA) – After blinking during in a New Year’s Day showdown with President Obama that could have triggered across-the-board spending cuts and significant tax increases, Republicans are poised to seek deep cuts in spending that would violate the “balanced” approach to the deficit that the president has ad... |
by Nisa Islam Muhammad, Special to the NNPA from The Final Call
January 09, 2013
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — The year was 1967 and Aretha Franklin’s new single “Respect” was a big hit. But respect was sorely lacking in Black neighborhoods as summer riots erupted in Newark, Detroit and other cities.
It’s also the year that FBI head J. Edgar Hoover sent this communiqué: “T... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
December 19, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — In the late 1960s, Black revolutionary H. Rap Brown, now known as Jamil Abdullah al-Amin, was often quoted as saying violence is “as American as cherry pie.” More than 40 years after the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) firebrand made that pronouncement, the numbers support hi... |
by Staff
December 19, 2012
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by Larry Miller, Special to the NNPA from The Philadelphia Tribune
December 19, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — A new report just released by The Sentencing Project, a Washington, D.C., based nonprofit that advocates for prison reform, shows that in at least thirteen states there had been enough of a decline in the state prison population to begin closing some facilities.
The study shows specialty courts... |
by Charlene Crowell
December 13, 2012
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More than 37 million American households were either unbanked or under-banked in 2011, according to a new report by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). African-American households represent 34 percent of all under-banked consumers, the highest percentage among demographics surveyed.
When under-banked African-American ... |
by Staff
December 13, 2012
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| WASHINGTON (NNPA) —The black unemployment rate fell to 13.2 percent in November, down from 14.3 percent the previous month. The decrease of 1.1 percent was a sharper drop than for Whites (6.8 percent, from 7 percent in October) and Latinos (10 percent, the same as for the previous month), according to the monthly report by the... |
by Jim Lobe
December 13, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Underlining the persistent power of their party’s most right-wing elements, a majority of Republican senators last week blocked ratification of the long-pending International Convention on the Rights of Persons With Disabilities (CRPD).
Sen. John McCain, who suffered life-crippling ... |
by Jeffrey L. Boney, Special to the NNPA from the Houston Forward Times
December 13, 2012
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Stephen Manley, 36, is not your typical Black male.
Not only does Manley have a bachelor’s degree in Legal Studies from the University of Houston-Clear Lake, he also carries a Masters of Business Administration with an emphasis on Information Technology from Western Governors University in Salt Lake City, Utah.
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by Maya Rhodan
December 05, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —Although Black and Latina youth represent only 35 percent of all U.S. teenagers, they accounted for 84.4 percent of all newly HIV-infected teenagers in 2010, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Blacks ages 13 through 24 accounted for more than a quarter of new HIV i... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
December 05, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — As millions of families gather for marathon eating sessions across the nation this holiday season, Black families will worry about where their next meal is coming from at a rate that is twice that of Whites, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
While the national rate for food insecu...
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by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
December 05, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — If Republicans and Democrats don’t reach a 12th hour deal to avoid the “fiscal cliff,” many lower-and middle-income families will feel deep pain, according to analysis by economists and respected think tanks.
The Budget Control Act, set to expire at the end of the year, will usher... |
by Jim Lobe
December 05, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — The U.S. Senate approved a new round of economic sanctions against Iran Friday, ignoring warnings by the White House that the additional measures could prove counter-productive to the goal of persuading Iran to curb its nuclear program.
The 94-0 vote, which was immediately praised by the powerf... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
November 28, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — More than 11 million Blacks lived below the poverty line in 2011, including an estimated 5.2 million that languish in severe poverty, according to a recent report.
The yearly report by the Half in Ten campaign found that, even though Blacks comprise 13 percent of the total population in the United St... |
by Avis Thomas-Lester, Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American Newspaper
November 28, 2012
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NEW YORK — Good Morning America (GMA) talk show co-host Robin Roberts returned home for Thanksgiving Day after a virus following her bone marrow transplant landed her back in the hospital.
Roberts, who received the bone marrow transplant from sister, Sally-Ann Roberts, said the latent virus was causing her no pain, and was... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
November 14, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNAP) — After hearing oral arguments earlier on whether an affirmative action program at the University of Texas is constitutional, the United States Supreme Court has agreed to review a challenge to the Voting Rights Act of 1965, paving the way for the court to rule on two major civil rights issues by n... |
by Carey L. Biron
November 14, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Despite a bitterly and closely fought presidential campaign fuelled by record financial backing, analysts sifting through Tuesday’s national election results here are forecasting a period of introspection for the opposition Republican Party that could ease the gridlock that has gummed up Washington po... |
by Cash Michaels, Special to the NNPA National News Service from Wilmington Journal
November 07, 2012
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WILMINGTON, N.C. (NNPA) – Revelations about former Assistant New Hanover County District Attorney James “Jay” Stroud Jr.’s racial jury gerrymandering, and his plot to cause a mistrial to impanel a “KKK” type jury in the Wilmington Ten case forty years ago were “stunning and beyond outra...
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by Special to the NNPA from the Michigan Chronicle
November 07, 2012
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Comfort the hurting, pull the trapped out of the wreckage, administer first aid until help arrives. But if you’re 150 miles away, don’t jump in your pickup with a load of used clothing. Odds are you’ll just be in the way &mdash... |
by Gareth Porter
November 07, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) —In 1998, the Defense Department vetoed a delegation of prominent U.S. nuclear specialists to go to Iran to investigate its nuclear program at the invitation of the government of newly-elected Iranian President Mohammad Khatami, according to the nuclear scientist who was organizing the mission.
Then Pr... |
by Maya Rhodan
October 31, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Although President Obama and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney have duked it out in three televised debates and are running opposing ads in the waning days of the election, a nastier fight to intimidate Black voters is taking place away from the limelight.
“It has taken many disguises,&rd... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
October 31, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – Slightly more than half of all Americans — 51 percent — express anti-Black attitudes, an increase of 3 percent over the past four years, making it more difficult for President Barack Obama to win n...
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by Raynard Jackson
October 31, 2012
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During the past year, as my columns have been syndicated to more outlets throughout the world, I have been asked by many leaders in the Republican Party why I am so critical of our party. The short answer is that I am very concerned about the direction my party is taking. It has increasingly become the party of old,...
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by Zenitha Prince, Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American Newspaper
October 31, 2012
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When Americans go to the polls on Nov. 6, support for President Obama will remain virtually unchanged among Black voters, some experts predict.
“I think Black support for Obama would be the same,” according to David Bositis, senior analyst at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, a Washington-based thi... |
by Special to the NNPA from the St. Louis American
October 31, 2012
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ST LOUIS — Former Secretary of State Colin Powell broke with the Republican party during the 2008 election, to endorse then-candidate Barack Obama for president, calling Obama a “transformational figure.”
Less than two weeks before the presidential election, Powell publicly endorsed Presiden...
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by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
October 25, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — The Department of Justice will spend $6.6 billion this year to stack drug dealers, addicts, shooters, and illegal immigrants like Lego blocks in prisons that are overcrowded, understaffed and barely safe, according to ...
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by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
October 25, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —The heated debate over same-sex marriage has created a Red Sea-like divide among Black ministers that has serious implications for President Obama’s re-election bid.
As some black pastors express fer... |
by Anita J. Martin
October 25, 2012
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What starts off as teasing and name-calling in middle school can lead to dating violence later in middle school and in high school. Adults as well as younger people are frequently unaware of this trend.
Likewise, many are not tun...
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by Michelle Phipps-Evans, Special to the NNPA from the Washington Informer
October 25, 2012
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It was Day Two of the DC Hunger Solutions [DCHS] Food Stamp Challenge, an attempt by participants to eat on $30 a week. Council member Mary Cheh [D-Ward 3] thought the challenge would be cinch because she doesn't drink coffee or juices, and doesn't eat meat, which is pricey.
&nb...
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by Mason Harrison, Special to the NNPA from the Louisiana Weekly
October 25, 2012
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NEW ORLEANS — A sobering independent study commissioned by local officials that was released this month pans the New Orleans justice system as a disparate array of political fiefdoms that are charged with working together but often fail to do so in a manner that produces trackable results; is hobbled by outdated technolog...
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by Special to the NNPA from the Houston Forward Times
October 25, 2012
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HOUSTON — She is remembered across the world as the woman who was “sick and tired of being sick and tired.”
On October 5, hundreds came from across the United States to remember Fannie Lou Hamer, a tireless civil rights advocate during her lifetime, at the unveiling of a statue built in her honor in her...
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by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
October 17, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — With one supporter of affirmative action retired and another declining to participate because of a conflict of interest, the concept of affirmative action is barely hanging on by a thread in the United States Supreme ... |
by Barrington Salmon, Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American Newspaper
October 17, 2012
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Blacks and Latinos are solidly in the corner of President Barack Obama in the upcoming elections.
In 2008, 96 percent of Blacks and 67 percent of Latinos voted for Obama. He’s going to need that support again on Nov. 6 to beat back the challenge of Mitt Romney, in a race that’s too close to call.
The significa... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
October 10, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — After receiving poor marks for his performance in his nationally televised debate with Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, President Obama received a much-needed boost from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ report showing that unemployment fell to 7.8 percent in September, the lowest it ha...
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by Maya Rhodan
October 10, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — When Kimberly Higginbotham was 23 years old, she received some devastating news.
It was January. Higginbotham was in her last year of graduate school for physical therapy at Howard University, but she wasn’t feeling the same excitement as her peers. Instead, she was worried about the... |
by Christian Morrow, Special to the NNPA from the New Pittsburgh Courier
October 10, 2012
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After several days of testimony and strong direction from the State Supreme Court, Commonwealth Court Judge Robert Simpson reversed himself and approved an injunction of the state’s voter ID law.
It will not be in effect for the November General Election, though it may after January.
Last month Simpson denied t... |
by Marcus Wright and Puakea Olaisha Anderson, Special to the NNPA from The Michigan Citizen
October 10, 2012
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DETROIT — The Bing Administration and Detroit Police top brass seem not to know or are ignoring the rumblings in the ranks. Detroit Police Officers Association President Joseph Duncan said officers aren’t happy.
“Would you be happy if your boss took 10 percent of your pay and told you, you had to work 12-hour shif... |
by Aswad Walker, Special to the NNPA from The Houston Defender
October 03, 2012
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When the digital divide was first introduced as a concept in the 1990s, it referred to a gap between those who had access to computers and the Internet and those who did not. There were concerns that minorities and low-income Americans were being left behind in cyberspace, while wealthier and predominantly White Americans fl... |
by Carey L. Biron
October 03, 2012
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WASHINGTON(IPS/GIN) — A top United Nations official has presented the first ever international investigation into the situation of indigenous peoples in the United States, urging the adoption of new policies and mechanisms to “address persistent deep-seeded problems related to historical wrongs, failed policies of the past ... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
September 20, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) —Blacks 18 to 29 years-old pay more to get out of jail than Whites and Latinos in a system that costs taxpayers more than $9 billion annually, a recent study shows.
In “Bail Fail: Why the U.S. should end the practice of using money for bail,” the Justice Policy Institute, a Washington, D.C.-ba... |
by Staff
September 20, 2012
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ROCKFORD, Ill. — International Day of Peace, set for Thursday, Sept. 21, represents a movement to unite the global community in a day of nonviolence.
World leaders Kofi Anan, the Dalai Lama and others acknowledged that one day of peace would permit children and families to leave war-torn areas, permit medical and food supp... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Special Contributor
September 20, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — In a private discussion with millionaire donors, Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney stereotyped those who voted for President Obama in 2008 as “victims” who want and expect a free ride from the federal government.
The surreptitiously recorded video of Romney’s unusuall... |
by Special to the NNPA from Our Weekly
September 20, 2012
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PHILADELPHIA —During an angry and vocal rally held outside of the Municipal Services Building last week, members of the NAACP, several union representatives, clergy, state and city legislators took turns commenting on the Pennsylvania Voter ID law.
The rally, which was hosted by the NAACP, took place before the state Supre... |
by — Special to the NNPA from the Washington Informer
September 12, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Five thousand miles couldn’t stop Vernelle Dickerson from paying her respects to one of the most influential men in her life. A South Carolina native, Dickerson remembers the harsh conditions she and countless African Americans faced daily growing up in the Jim Crow South.
So when...
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by Special to the NNPA from The Final Call
August 30, 2012
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Many believe Chavis Carter was murdered. So while authorities may be content with their findings, Black America is not.
The coroners’ report is back and they have agreed with the incredible assertion of the Jonesboro Police De...
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by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
August 30, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — No one can creditably deny the burden of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Black community. Although Blacks represent only 12 percent or the U.S. population, they accounted for 44 percent of all new HIV infections. Black women accounted for 57 percent of all new HIV infections among women and 64 perce...
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by Nadra Kareem Nittle
August 30, 2012
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Long before a little-known Illinois politician ran for president, the mainstream media focused on his race. When he flourished as a presidential candidate four years ago, everyone in America knew that Barack Obama was Black.
H...
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by Nadra Kareem Nittle
August 30, 2012
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Long before a little-known Illinois politician ran for president, the mainstream media focused on his race. When he flourished as a presidential candidate four years ago, everyone in America knew that Barack Obama was Black.
Have his blackness and extensive coverage of that fact boosted his political career or made... |
by Michaela Duckett, Special to the NNPA from the Charlotte Post
August 30, 2012
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Organizers of the Nation of Islam’s 17th anniversary of the Million Man March met Charlotte community leaders to discuss issues important to African Americans.

Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan will keynote the 17th anni...
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by Zoha Arshad
August 30, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Deportation is a devastating experience for a family, breaking it apart and leading to emotional and mental stress for its members. But a new report from the Centre for American Progress shows that such duress extends beyond families and into the larger community as a whole.
The report,...
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by Special to the NNPA from The State Defender
August 22, 2012
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Support for voter identification laws is strongest among Americans who harbor negative sentiments toward African Americans is a key revelation in a new National Agenda Opinion Poll by the University of Delaware’s Center for Political Communication.
Voter ID laws require individuals to show government issued identif...
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by Carey L. Biron
August 22, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — With less than three months to go before the U.S. presidential election, Barack Obama’s Republican challenger for the presidency, Mitt Romney, finally announced his vice-presidential running mate, a young member of Congress named Paul Ryan.
At the announcement, on Saturday, Ryan p...
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by Cash Michael, Special to the NNPA National News Service from Wilmington Journal
August 08, 2012
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GREENSBORO, N.C. (NNPA) — They come from all walks of the civil and human rights struggle, each a distinguished leader with a long record of advocacy, molded in courage, and sacrifice. Ministers, activists, poets, former elected officials, retired military, disciples of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and even the form... |
by Special to the NNPA from The Louisiana Weekly
August 08, 2012
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WASHINGTON — Seven years after a series of high-profile murder cases in the wake of 2005’s Hurricane Katrina involving the New Orleans Police Department rocked the nation, the U.S. Department of Justice took steps toward reforming the troubled agency. A federally mandated plan to rid the NOPD of corruption, discrimination, ... |
by Imani Evans
August 02, 2012
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The 2012 International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C., can be a bewildering experience for a first-timer, even for veteran AIDS activists, like Marsha Jones of the Aafiya Center in Dallas. There are dozens of sessions, hundreds of part... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
August 02, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – Nearly 6 million former prisoners –1 million of them Black – will not be able to vote in the November presidential election because of state laws that continue to punish them even after they have completed their sentences, according to a recent report by the Sentencing Project.
The r...
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by Charlene Crowell
August 02, 2012
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Blacks and Latinos support financial reform more than any other group, according to a new poll released by Lake Research Partners. When consumers were asked if Wall Street caused the financial crisis, eight out of 10 African-Americans agreed. Sixty-five percent of Latinos agreed, compared to an overall rate of 64 percent. ...
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by Ethan Freedman
August 02, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) - Against the backdrop of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, a panel of United States government officials and experts called for stronger methods to prevent modern-day genocides and mass atrocities, particularly in the case of Syria.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the highest-ranking gov...
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by George Barnette, Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American Newspaper
July 25, 2012
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Publishing veteran Bill Tompkins will get a crack at moving Black newspapers forward as he’s been named president and CEO of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, the umbrella organization for America’s Black newspapers.
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by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
July 25, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — As Washington, D.C. hosts the 2012 International AIDS Conference, residents in the nation’s capital continue to battle epidemic levels of HIV/AIDS.
According to a report released by the District’s Department of Health, the prevalence rate – or the proportion of cases within a g...
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by William Reed
July 25, 2012
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Are you middle-class? One way to know this for sure is through homeownership.
Unfortunately, for many Blacks, the American Dream of homeownership is quickly fading. Among racial demographic groups, European Americans have the highest homeownership rate, while African Americans have the lowest. After peaking at 50 p...
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by Judith Scherr
July 25, 2012
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BERKELEY, California (IPS/GIN) — Amber, 24, who’s been living on the streets half her life, was sitting on a sunny sidewalk in downtown Berkeley last week, cuddling her three-month-old puppy and talking to a friend. But if voters approve a measure the city council placed on the November ballot, sitting on the sidewalk ... |
by Aswad Walker, Special to the NNPA from The Houston Defender
July 18, 2012
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HOUSTON (NNPA) — The NAACP’s recently concluded national convention in Houston saw its share of highlights. They included dramatic and powerful addresses by political and civil rights leaders and a host of workshops aimed at empowering me... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
July 18, 2012
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Today, 50 million Americans are 18-29 years-old. Often referred to as Generation Next or the “millennials,” this generation is the most diverse in American history: 61 percent White, 19 percent Hispanic and 14 percent Black. By comparison Generation X (born between 1970-1978) is 71 percent White, 13 per... |
by Ethan Freedman
July 18, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — As the Latino population in the United States rises, the demographic shift will affect future as well as current voting habits, and therefore election outcomes, in the United States, according to several experts.
In the highly competitive upcoming presidential elections, “a couple hundred of... |
by Reshonda Tate Billingsley, Special to the NNPA News Service from The Houston Defender
July 11, 2012
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HOUSTON (NNPA) — The NAACP has always had a concentrated effort to get people of color registered to vote, but due to recent suppression measures, NAACP officials say that’s only half the battle. Now, it&rsquo... |
by By Freddie Allen, NNPA Washington Correspondent
July 11, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — It was about time. More than 60 years after 20,000 African-American men donned United States Marine Corps uniforms and trained at the legendary Montford Point Marine Corps facility in Jacks...
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by Sue Sturgis, Special to the NNPA from The Louisiana Weekly
July 11, 2012
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Many states are failing to provide public schools with the resources they need to serve all students equitably, and Florida and North Carolina doing a particularly poor job in addressing educational disparities caused by concentrated poverty.
That’s among the findings of a new report from the Educational Law Center...
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by Ethan Freedman
July 11, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) —Following what many regard as a disappointment at the recent Rio+20 Earth Summit, the World Bank and several groups have begun implementing new initiatives to “personalize” climate change, in hopes of revitalizing the issue among the younger generation.
Last week, a Wor...
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by Akeya Dickson, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
June 28, 2012
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ATLANTA (NNPA) — A panel discussion at the National Newspaper Publishers Association annual convention titled, “Get Out the Vote” should have been renamed, “Get Out the Anger” as Black newspaper owners expressed their strong displeasure over the Obama administration’s failure to accommodate t...
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by Staff
June 28, 2012
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MADISON — More than 1,500 volunteers from 222 Wisconsin communities will be in Madison Friday-Saturday, June 29-30 to provide $1.75 million in free dental care to some 3,000 children and adults during the fourth Wisconsin Dental Association and WDA Foundation Mission of Mercy.
This will be the largest charitable dental clinic... |
by Richard B. Muhammad, Charlene Muhammad and Starla Muhammad, Special to the NNPA from the Final Call
June 28, 2012
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America’s criminal justice system today amounts to tougher laws, longer sentences, harsher conditions and little oversight. Advocates say there is a combination of almost unlimited power and too little transparency.
Problems range from depriving inmates of religious literature and denying religious practices to denial of m... |
by George E. Curry
June 28, 2012
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Ambassador Andrew Young (center) accepts Legacy Award from NNPA Chairman Cloves Campbell, Jr. (left) and Xernona Clayton (right).
ATLANTA (NNPA) — Former United Nations Ambassador Andrew Young and Danny J... |
by Kenya King, Special to the NNPA from the Atlanta Daily World
June 28, 2012
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Flashback to April 4, 1968, and you may still sense the deep dejection and overwhelming grief that permeated the African-American community on a day that will never be forgotten — the day that Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. That tragic evening was also the same day that Edythe Scott Bagley, Coretta Scott King&r... |
by Carey L. Biron and Ethan Freedman
June 28, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) —President Barack Obama’s administration recently announced that the United States would no longer deport certain young immigrants.
While the move, made by executive order, was hailed by immigration advocates as a small but positive first step, many others pointed to the...
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by Alex Darocy, Special to the NNPA from the San Francisco Bay View
June 20, 2012
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On June 12, family members held a memorial for Derrick Gaines, a 15-year-old who was shot and killed by an officer with the South San Francisco Police Department on the evening of June 5. Police claim that Gaines, who was walking with a friend near an Arco gas station, was engaging in “suspicious behavior.” ... |
by Carey L. Biron
June 20, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) -— Countering a two-year trend, the world overall became slightly more peaceful over the past year, according to an annual report released here on Tuesday.
The United States, however, moved down seven places to 88 out of 158, a “fairly low rank (that) largely reflects much higher levels of mil... |
by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
June 20, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – When 6-year-old Simaya Hammonds ditched Dora the Explorer for tween-fare found on the Disney Channel and Nickelodeon, her mom, Tahneezia Hammonds wasn’t surprised.
The precocious first grader enjoys “Shake It Up” on the Disney Channel and “Victorious,” a show about ...
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by Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
June 14, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — For the past three decades, crime in the United States has been declining. The murder rate, for example, has fallen by almost half, from 9.8 per 100,000 in 1991 to 5.0 in 2009. Robberies were down 10 percent in 2010 from the previous year. Yet, there is a steady drumbeat from liberals and conserv... |
by Special to the NNPA from the New Pittsburgh Courier
June 14, 2012
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Working parents are already lining up child care plans for the summer. While they’re at it, educators say all parents of school-age children should also plan for preventing the dreaded summer slide.
“The ‘summer slide’ is the information and skills children forget during summer break from the end of one s... |
by Zack Burgess
June 14, 2012
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After more than a decade in decline, the United States teen pregnancy has been rising in recent years.
According to momlogic.com, the estimated public cost for teen pregnancy in the United States is between $6 and $9 billion a year. Eighty percent of teen moms are on some form of public assistance. Seven out of 10 teen m...
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by Stephanie Parker
June 14, 2012
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NEW YORK (IPS/GIN) — As the United States struggles to level the racial disparities in its education system, the birth rate of minorities has been rising steadily. Experts say this confluence of statistics should compel Americans to seriously address the flaws and failures of the country's public education system.
Publi... |
by Yussuf Simmonds, Special to the NNPA from the Los Angeles Sentinel
June 07, 2012
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It’s a very long way from Yazoo City, Mississippi to the Halls of Congress, State Houses, City Halls and the White House, but Bishop H.H. Brookins has been there, “an don dat.” He has traveled that path and has gone the distance. Along the way, he has touched the lives of other bishops, ministers, mayors, gove...
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by Charlene Muhammad, Special to the NNPA from the Final Call
June 07, 2012
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The right to self-defense is human nature and a fundamental principle of law.
But with a harsh prison sentence handed to a Black mother and the upcoming trial of an elderly Black man — both declared ineligible to claim Florida’s Stand Your Ground law — the truth remains that in America the right to self...
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by Bankole Thompson, Special to the NNPA from the Michigan Chronicle
June 07, 2012
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Rev. Marvin Winans
The Rev. Marvin Winans’ remark, “I refuse to be afraid of us,” in the wake of the robbery attack on him by four young Black men at a neighborhood gas station on Linwood and Davison...
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by J. Coyden Palmer, Special to the NNPA from the Chicago Crusader
June 07, 2012
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As Chicago dealt with yet another deadly weekend of violence where 10 people were killed and nearly three dozen injured, the parents of slain Florida teen Trayvon Martin were in town to talk about the impact of gun violence on communities. Speaking... |
by By Freddie Allen, Washington Correspondent
May 30, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — On October 24, 1974 an unidentified man robbed and raped a pregnant Wayne State University student in a bathroom on campus. The student later picked 19 year-old Edward George Carter, out of a photo lineup that contained multiple pictures of the Black teen.
None of the physical evidence — ... |
by Akeya Dickson, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
May 30, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — The woman selling you lottery tickets at 7-11 could be an engineer with multiple degrees. The guy bagging your groceries may have earned a six-figure salary in the not-too-distant past. Welcome to underemployment, the new norm in America.
As of April, there are nearly 8 million adults in this co...
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by Jennifer Gerald, Special to the NNPA from The Nashville Pride
May 30, 2012
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ATLANTA, Georgia, (IPS/GIN) — A coalition of advocacy groups is denouncing corporate support for the right-wing Heartland Institute after the organization put up a controversial billboard in Chicago that links the belief in global warming with serial killing and mass murder.
On Tuesday, the coalition protested ... |
by Akeya Dickson, Washington Correspondent, NNPA News Service
May 24, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – As many as 5 million people could be denied access to right to vote in the November presidential election because of a series of regressive actions, including insisting on photo identification at the polls, reducing time allotted for early voting and eliminating Sunday voter registration drives popular am... |
by Carey L. Biron
May 24, 2012
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| WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Earlier this month, the United States intelligence community unveiled a first-ever assessment of global water-security issues. A declassified version of the document, which looks forward through 2040, suggests that "during the next 10 years, water problems will contribute to instability in states importan... |
by By Freddie Allen, NNPA Washington Correspondent
May 16, 2012
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The jobless rate for Black women has fallen 3 percentage points over the past five months, the largest decline for any demographic over that period.
WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Black women are making the most significant gains in e... |
by Lee A. Daniels, Special to the NNPA from the Defenders Online
May 16, 2012
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It’s as dependable as the rise and ebb of the tides.
If a national election is near, then it’s time to cast doubt on the commitment of blacks and Latinos to turn out to vote. Despite their steady level of participation over the last two dec...
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by Gabriel Schivone
May 16, 2012
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TUSCON, Arizona, (IPS/GIN) — In December 1985, The New York Times reported on what was believed to be the first anti-apartheid conference of U.S. high schools discussing divestment from corporations operating in South Africa.
Sixteen independent schools met at St. James Episcopal Church in Manhattan to dis... |
by Jennifer Gerald, Special to the NNPA from The Nashville Pride
May 16, 2012
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NASHVILLE — The foreclosure, neighborhood blight and natural disaster crises are having a disproportionate impact on minority communities, and minority-owned real estate businesses across the nation. As a result of these concerns, the National Association of Real Estate Brokers (NAREB®), the oldest African American trade asso... |
by Staff
May 09, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — When she graduated from the University of Iowa two years ago with a major in elementary education, Amber Newman envisioned standing in front of a class of bright, energetic youngsters and providing them with the solid educational base that would help them become successful in the upper grades as well as later ... |
by Carey L. Biron
May 09, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Continuing near-record high food prices around the world are highlighting international inattention to a looming threat, observers here warned on Friday.
According to speakers at the launch of the World Bank-International Monetary Fund (IMF) Global Monitoring Report 2012, on the sidelines of the B... |
by Special to the NNPA from the Defenders Online
April 25, 2012
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In an historic decision, a North Carolina judge reduced an inmate’s death sentence to life without the possibility of parole because the prosecutor had deliberately exclude... |
by A. David Dahmer
April 25, 2012
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Jan Morrill, of the National Roundtable Against Metallic Mining, is on a national tour talking about important mining issues.
The recent mining controversy in northern Wisconsin was far more complex t... |
by Alexis Taylor, Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American Newspaper
April 25, 2012
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| WASHINGTON (NNPA) — “Right now my employees don’t have healthcare,” said William F. Wingo, president of Power Magazine. “I had healthcare for them, but it just became too expensive,” said Wingo, who for years provided benefits for employees of the Christian monthly that is circulated in the Baltim... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Editor-in-Chief
April 18, 2012
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Trayvon Martin
WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Two investigators working for Florida Special Prosecutor Angela Corey in the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin have filed court documents saying George Zimmer...
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by A. David Dahmer
April 18, 2012
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Dr. Mads Gilbert, professor of medicine at the University of North Norway
“You are being lied to. Your media does not tell the realities on the ground,” states Dr. Mads Gilbert, flatly. “It's not shown in a truly jou... |
by NNPA
April 18, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) — Award-winning journalist George E. Curry has been named editor-in-chief of the National Newspaper Publishers Association News Service, a position he held from 2001-2007, it has been announced by Karl B. Rodney, chairman of the NNPA Foundation, which oversees the wire service
“We are pleased that Geor... |
by Larry Miller, Special to the NNPA from The Philadelphia Tribune
April 12, 2012
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The shooting death of Trayvon Martin has been called everything from a national tragedy to a national disgrace; a hate crime with more and more rallies taking place everyday calling for George Zimmerman’s arrest and justice for the victim and his grieving family.
Waiting for Obamacare(s) at the Supreme Court
by Yussuf Simmonds, Special to the NNPA from the Los Angeles Sentinel
April 12, 2012
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It’s up to the U.S. Supreme Court to do the right thing for all the people: give them justice in the form of universal healthcare.
In his first month in office, President Barack Obama said, “Health care reform cannot wait, it must not wa...
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by Jim Lobe
April 12, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — Despite his repeated differences with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a strong majority of U.S. Jews are likely to vote to re-elect President Barack Obama in November, according to major new survey of Jewish opinion released here Tuesday.
More than six out of 10 (62 percent) of U.S. Jewish vo... |
by Kimberly N. Alleyne, Special to the NNPA from The America's Wire
April 12, 2012
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WASHINGTON — Health disparities are creating economic burdens for families, communities and the nation’s health care system. Across the country, infant mortality and chronic diseases continue to affect people of color at rates far higher than those for whites.
In recent years, the focus has increased on the i...
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by Eric Mayes, Special to the NNPA from the Philadelphia Tribune
April 04, 2012
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President Barack Obama holds a slim lead in Pennsylvania, according to a new poll, which also gave the president a bigger edge in two other important swing states, Florida and Ohio.
“Obama is on a roll in the key swing states. If the elec...
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by Alexis Taylor, Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American Newspaper
April 04, 2012
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House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan
A Republican-proposed federal budget for the 2013 fiscal year that would cut taxes for the wealthy, restructure Medicare, and slash federal spending cleared the House of Repres...
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by Charlene Crowell
April 04, 2012
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Late last year, America’s homeownership rate dropped to 66 percent, the lowest since 1998. Amid continuing foreclosures and short sales, millions of former proud homeowners now find the cost of their American Dream financially out of reach. For many displaced by foreclosures, rental housing has become a long-term ho... |
by Jasmin Ramsey
April 04, 2012
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WASHINGTON (IPS/GIN) — A former top state department official singled out diplomatic engagement as the best available option for ending decades of "mistrust and misunderstanding" between Washington and Tehran.
"Take the sanctions pressure and turn it into a useful diplomatic tool to beg... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Special Contributor
March 28, 2012
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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – On the night of Feb. 26, Tracy Martin and his girlfriend had gone out to dinner in Sanford, Fla., leaving his 17-year-old son, Trayvon, behind at the townhouse with plans to watch the NBA All-Star game scheduled to be televise... |
by Chris Levister, Special to the NNPA from Black News Voices
March 28, 2012
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To combat the high toll of HIV and AIDS among Black women in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has launched Take Charge. Take the Test., a new campaign to increase HIV testing and awareness among African-American women.
The campaign which features advertising, a website and community outreac... |
by Staff
March 28, 2012
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Latino youth receives unmatched leadership development from nationally recognized internship program
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute (CHCI), the nation’s premier Hispanic youth leadership development and educational organization, is hosting Linda Gome... |
by George E. Curry, NNPA Special Correspondent
March 21, 2012
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President Barack Obama speaks to publishers who were in the nation's capital to celebrate NNPA's annual Black Press Week.
WASHINGTON (NNPA) — President Barack Obama expressed admiration for the balanced pi... |
by Staff
March 21, 2012
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Seventeen year old high school student, Trayvon Martin, was recently shot and killed by a white neighborhood watch vigilante in Sanford, Florida.
JUSTICE DEMANDED IN THE DEATH OF TRAYVON MARTIN by Marc H. Morial
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by Caryn Freeman, Special to the NNPA
March 21, 2012
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The “State of the Black Press” round table and luncheon held at the National Press Club during this year’s Black Press Week in Washington, DC highlighted the need for black publishers to migrate to more widely sourced digital platforms in order to expand their readership and survive in this era of online news. The Nat... |