Friday, July 29, 2011

Fifth Bishop Eddie Long accuser revealed

Fifth Bishop Eddie Long accuser revealed
Centino Kemp (Fox News Five, Atlanta) and Bishop Eddie Long





ATLANTA - In a local Fox exclusive last night the name and face of the fifth Bishop Eddie Long accuser was revealed.
Centino Kemp, a 22 year old aspiring singer, appeared in the exclusive ready and willing to discuss his music career. When the interviewers made it known that they were interested in his alleged relationship with Bishop Eddie Long rather than his pop music, Kemp quickly declined to comment.
Kemp never filed a law suit against Bishop Eddie Long, instead stepping forward with additional allegations when the four young men filed suit. Reportedly he did not know any of the other four boys, whom had all been acquaintances previous to the scandal. It is not known whether he played a large role in the mediation, but he reportedly was included in the settlement negotiations that resulted in an undisclosed amount of money being given to the accusers.
Tattooed on the inside of Kemp's wrist is 'Eddie Long, never a mistake, always a lesson.' He has been described as the puzzle piece in the case that didn't fit, and his presence reportedly caused the Bishop discomfort.
His music, which is sampled in the exclusive, is described as coming from the perspective of an embittered lover, and the album he is working on is titled No Regrets.

Urban League study says bad economy erased black middle class gains

http://www.freep.com
BOSTON -- The economic downturn erased the gains the black middle class made during the last 30 years, as the unemployment rate of African Americans with four-year college degrees has skyrocketed, according to a study the National Urban League Policy Institute released Wednesday.
The study said unemployment for black people with four-year college degrees tripled from 1992, while overall black unemployment is nearing 1982 levels, when it was close to 20%.
The unemployment rate for African Americans with four-year college degrees was 6.5% in 2010, compared to 2.9% for white people with college degrees, the study said.

The report, released just as the National Urban League begins its conference in Boston, mirrors studies by the Economic Policy Institute and the Pew Research Center that said the economic meltdown hit black households hard.
The National Urban League Policy Institute used U.S. Census and Bureau of Labor statistics for the study.
National Urban League President Marc Morial said the report showed that the recession affected the middle class, not just poor and working-class African Americans.
In 2009, median wealth was $113,149 for white U.S. households, $6,325 for Hispanics and $5,677 for blacks, according to an analysis the Pew Research Center released Tuesday.

The wealth gaps between whites and minorities have grown to their widest levels in a quarter-century




The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The wealth gaps between whites and minorities have grown to their widest levels in a quarter-century. The recession and uneven recovery have erased decades of minority gains, leaving whites on average with 20 times the net worth of blacks and 18 times that of Hispanics, according to an analysis of new Census data.
The analysis shows the racial and ethnic impact of the economic meltdown, which ravaged housing values and sent unemployment soaring. It offers the most direct government evidence yet of the disparity between predominantly younger minorities whose main asset is their home and older whites who are more likely to have 401(k) retirement accounts or other stock holdings.
"What's pushing the wealth of whites is the rebound in thestock market and corporate savings, while younger Hispanics and African-Americans who bought homes in the last decade — because that was the American dream — are seeing big declines," said Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor who specializes in income inequality.
The median wealth of white U.S. households in 2009 was $113,149, compared with $6,325 for Hispanics and $5,677 for blacks, according to the analysis released Tuesday by the Pew Research Center. Those ratios, roughly 20 to 1 for blacks and 18 to 1 for Hispanics, far exceed the low mark of 7 to 1 for both groups reached in 1995, when the nation's economic expansion lifted many low-income groups to the middle class.
The white-black wealth gap is also the widest since the census began tracking such data in 1984, when the ratio was roughly 12 to 1.
"I am afraid that this pushes us back to what the Kerner Commission characterized as 'two societies, separate and unequal,'" said Roderick Harrison, a former chief of racial statistics at the Census Bureau, referring to the 1960s presidential commission that examined U.S. race relations. "The great difference is that the second society has now become both black and Hispanic."
Stock holdings play an important role in the economic well-being of white households. Stock funds, IRA and Keogh accounts as well as 401(k) and savings accounts were responsible for 28 percent of whites' net worth, compared with 19 percent for blacks and 15 percent for Hispanics.
According to the Pew study, the housing boom of the early to mid-2000s boosted the wealth of Hispanics in particular, who were disproportionately employed in the thriving construction industry. Hispanics also were more likely to live and buy homes in states such as California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona, which were in the forefront of the real estate bubble, enjoying early gains in home values.
But those gains quickly shriveled in the housing bust. After reaching a median wealth of $18,359 in 2005, the wealth of Hispanics — who derived nearly two-thirds of their net worth from home equity — declined by 66 percent by 2009. Among blacks, who now have the highest unemployment rate at 16.2 percent, their household wealth fell 53 percent from $12,124 to $5,677.
In contrast, the median household wealth of whites dipped a modest 16 percent from $134,992 to $113,149, cushioned in part by a stock market recovery that began in mid-2009.
"The findings are a reminder — if one was needed — of what a large share of blacks and Hispanics live on the economic margins," said Paul Taylor, director of Pew Social & Demographic Trends. "When the economy tanked, they're the groups that took the heaviest blows."
The latest data come as President Barack Obama and congressional leaders try to reach a deal to avoid a U.S. default on its financial obligations after Aug. 2. Democrats and Republicans have been wrangling over proposals that could cut trillions of dollars from programs such as Medicare and Social Security; they are divided over whether to bring in new tax revenue, such as by closing corporate tax loopholes or increasing taxes for the wealthy.
The NAACP and other black groups urged Obama to resist deep cuts to housing assistance or safety net programs, saying it would disproportionately hurt urban areas with high poverty and unemployment. The U.S. poverty rate currently stands at 14.3 percent, with the ranks of the working-age poor at the highest level since the 1960s. Some analysts believe the poverty rate will climb higher when new figures are released in September.
"Typically in recessions, minorities suffer from being last hired and first fired. They are likely to lose jobs more rapidly at the beginning of the recession, and are far slower to gain jobs as the economy recovers," said Harrison, who is now a sociologist at Howard University. "One suspects that blacks who lost jobs in the recession, or who have tried to help family members or relatives who did, have now spent whatever savings or other cashable assets they had."
Other findings:
—About 35 percent of black households and 31 percent of Hispanic households had zero or negative net worth in 2009, compared with 15 percent of white households. In 2005, the comparable shares were 29 percent for blacks, 23 percent for Hispanics and 11 percent for whites.
—Asians lost their top ranking to whites in median household wealth, dropping from $168,103 in 2005 to $78,066 in 2009. Like Hispanics, many Asians were concentrated in states like California hit hard by the housing downturn. More recent arrivals of new Asian immigrants, who tend to be poor, also pushed down their median wealth.
—Across all race and ethnic groups, the wealth gap between rich and poor widened. The share of wealth held by the top 10 percent of U.S. households increased from 49 percent in 2005 to 56 percent in 2009. The threshold for entry into the wealthiest top 10 percent, however, dipped lower: from $646,327 in 2005 to $598,435.
The numbers are based on the Census Bureau's Survey of Income and Program Participation, which sampled more than 36,000 households on wealth from September-December 2009. Census first began publishing wealth data from this survey, broken down by race and ethnicity, in 1984.

Justice Department Declines to Reopen Malcolm X Case




New York Times

The Justice Department has declined a request to reinvestigate the Malcolm X assassination, saying that the statute of limitations has expired on any federal laws that might apply, like the National Firearms Act of 1934, according to a statement released Saturday.
Historians have long viewed the assassination as unsolved, as The Times reported Saturday. Several experts have argued that the Justice Department could take up the case under the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act of 2007, but the department, without elaborating, said the crime did not fit the parameters of that act.
Alvin Sykes, an advocate for justice in civil rights-era cold cases, has suggested that the department has the discretion to investigate even if no prosecution is possible, an authority that has been used in the past to examine the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. But Malcolm X, the department said, does not rate similar treatment.
“Although the Justice Department recognizes that the murder of Malcolm X was a tragedy, both for his family and for the community he served, we have determined that at this time, the matter does not implicate federal interests sufficient to necessitate the use of scarce federal investigative resources into a matter for which there can be no federal criminal prosecution,” the department said.
Mr. Sykes said he planned to appeal to President Obama, Congress and local law enforcement agencies to pursue the case.

Georgia sees an increase in multigenerational households

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
It’s a growing trend great-grandma would recognize: Georgia is seeing a resurgence of a way of life in which three or more generations live under one roof.



In part, demographers say, it’s because people are living longer; in part, it’s because the anemic economy is stressing household finances; and in part it’s because emerging population groups are importing their cultural traditions.
The state had more than 181,000 multigenerational households in 2010, a 39 percent jump from 2000, according to figures released this week by the U.S. Census Bureau.
The core metro counties of Clayton, Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton and Gwinnett saw a combined increase of 31 percent, to more than 60,000 homes.
Expanded households can foster tighter bonds across generations, those who live in them say, but they can also fuel family tensions. (Insert your own mother-in-law joke here.)
The recession has fed the trend, analysts say. Many families are saving money by moving aging parents into their homes.
Meanwhile, many young adults known as “boomerang kids” come back home to live because of slim job prospects, said Jan Ligon, an associate professor in the Georgia State University School of Social Work.
“The recession is having a big impact on housing,” Ligon said. “This can be a very wise thing to do.”
In census terminology, a multigenerational home must have at least three generations of people directly descended from one another. Aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews or cousins don’t count. Despite the strong growth in such homes, they still represent only about 5 percent of all households in the state.
The trend is far more prevalent in some areas and among certain groups than others, census figures show. African-Americans are more than twice as likely as whites to be in a multigenerational home, with Hispanics and Asians even more likely.
Ligon said whites still tend toward the belief that they need to “launch their children” out into the world to lead independent lives.
In the five metro counties, the number of multigenerational African-American households grew 29 percent during the decade, accounting for more than half the overall increase. Asians, a much smaller group, accounted for almost 20 percent of the overall growth.
Gwinnett County experienced the greatest increase among the five counties, with a 94 percent jump, to a total of almost 16,000. That correlates with a major influx of Latinos, blacks and Asians, noted Mike Alexander, research division chief at the Atlanta Regional Commission.
“Gwinnett has become the county for anybody to move to,” Alexander said.
Joon Lee, whose heritage traces back to South Korea, sees his multigenerational home as an extension of family tradition. “I have lived with my mother all my life,” said Lee, 40, of Buford. “My parents lived with my grandparents.”
He said it would be very hard for his mother to live alone in metro Atlanta, since she does not speak English well and cannot drive. Moreover, he appreciates learning from her experience.
His wife, however, doesn’t always see it that way.
“There’s a generation gap,” he said. “But they accept it.”
Christine Fisher of Conyers said bringing her mother into the household helped the family hold on to their home during tough times. Fisher had lost her job as a nurses’ assistant in 2008 and her husband was finding less work as a trucker.
Her mother came in and took care of the children, which allowed Fisher to take on more piecemeal jobs.
“It helped out a lot,” Fisher said. “And the kids get to know their grandmother. They love her cooking.”
It’s a trend experts only expect to increase as the baby boomers age.
“These nursing homes and assisted living facilities can be very expensive, so it can be less expensive to keep them at home,” Ligon said.
The trend isn’t just among struggling families.
Realtor Charles Gerrick recently showed a 7-bedroom, 8-bath, three-story Buckhead home with an elevator listed for $5 million to a man in his 40s whose parents would be moving in with him.
Colby Craig and his wife purchased and renovated a 5-bedroom, 5-bath home in Brookhaven in 2008 to create separate living quarters for his mother, who had recently lost her husband.
Craig is glad his three kids have grown closer to their grandmother. Still, he said, “it’s a challenge to live with anybody. You could live with the pope and it would be difficult.”
Sometimes it’s the younger generation that moves in with their elders.
Housing market analyst Eugene James said his company, Metrostudy, has noticed more young people returning home to wait out the economic downturn and save money for a down payment.
“What I hear is [young people are] just afraid to take on more debt,” James said.
While a shared living space can bring a family closer emotionally, conflicts may arise over privacy, lifestyles and control of the household. When college graduates return to the nest, they don’t want to be treated as kids. Married men might not feel comfortable parading around in their boxers in front of their mother-in-law.
When Nancy Jones divorced in 2005, her mother moved down from Connecticut to help care for Jones’ young daughter. They didn’t always agree on how to do it.
Jones recalled one time in which she made it clear that her daughter was not to eat in her room. She left the house only to return to find her daughter doing just that. An argument ensued.
“At the end of the day it’s my decision,” Jones said. “But she’s still going to give her opinion.”

John Perry contributed 
to this report.

Barack Obama On Turning 50: Michelle 'Still Thinks I'm Cute'

Obama Birthday



The number of days until President Barack Obama's 50th birthday is dwindling (August 4, mark your calendars now), but the commander-in-chief sounds ready to stare down middle age.
In a recent conversation with NPR's Michel Martin,Obama told the "Tell Me More" host:
You know, I feel real good about 5-0. The -- obviously, I've gotten a little grayer since I took this job but otherwise, I feel pretty good. And Michelle, you know, says that, you know, she -- she -- she still thinks I'm, I'm cute, you know. And I guess that's -- that's all that matters, isn't it?
Obviously. FLOTUS doesn't seem to mind a little salt-and-pepper, previously confirming to "The Today Show" that her husband doesn't dye his 'do, explaining "it's too late" but that he "might have started dyeing his hair 10 years ago" if he had known he would become president.
At the time, the first lady did say that she wished the president would sport "a different color suit." A possible birthday gift, perhaps?
In any case, Politico has noticed that the prez has been pulling the age card as of late. Amie Parnes writes:
"We've been governing for 2 and 1/2 years," Obama told supporters on a conference call this month. "I don't look that young anymore. I'm grayer, I have bags under my eyes, but that core spirit is still there."
The same refrain was heard last week in Chicago, at back-to-back fundraisers at which Obama repeated himself in nearly identical language. "You know, your candidate is a little grayer now," he told supporters. "Some of the excitement of something entirely new is not going to be there, and I've got some dents and dings in the fender. But that vision hasn't changed. What we care about hasn't changed. Our commitments should not have changed."
One thing that might have changed? The number of "daaa-aaad!" moments. Last month, Obama flubbed First Daughter Malia's age -- while suggesting that Republicans might be the ultimate procrastinators, the prez remarked, "Malia and Sasha generally finish their homework a day ahead of time. Malia's 13, Sasha's 10. It is impressive. They don't wait until the night before."
Malia was only 12 at the time.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Movement looks to honor African-Americans who fought the British

Peter Salem



When this country was being born, often on the business end of a musket, at least 5,000 African-Americans fought along side their white countrymen to secure America's independence.
Sixty-one known black patriots, both slaves and free men, from MetroWest and Milford-area towns, fought in the Revolutionary War. In May, four members of Congress filed bills in the Senate and House to create a monument in Washington to those men and their thousands of brothers in arms.
The effort is 25 years in the making and led by Maurice Barboza, founder of The National Mall Liberty Fund DC, who is seeking support from local communities for the monument.
"I just find this a great opportunity for communities not just in Massachusetts and Connecticut, but those up and down the East Coast where these soldiers came from, to teach the rest of the nation about this history and the participation of several groups in the winning of the American Revolution," he said.
His aunt, Lena Santos Ferguson, who is black, was famously rejected by the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1980 despite being able to track her lineage to an American patriot.
She was eventually accepted into the organization in 1984, after national leaders threatened its tax status, and part of the settlement included a requirement that the DAR research the role African-Americans played in the American Revolution.
In 1986, President Ronald Reagan signed a congressional resolution to build a memorial on the National Mall in their honor.
The DAR's research was released in 2008 and Barboza is continuing to rally support for the monument by contacting officials in the hometowns of black patriots. The House bill is scheduled for a hearing July 28.
"We're not asking the towns for funds. We're seeking moral support," Barboza said. "We hope to, as part of the monument and memorial, create a database that would hold onto the names and the history of these people. I'm also hoping that more research on the part of local historians will take place while we work on building this memorial. This is certainly not definitive, this list."
Some black patriots are well known to local historians. Peter Salem, a freed slave from Framingham, fought at many engagements and is believed to have killed Maj. John Pitcairn at the Battle of Bunker Hill. Salem is buried at Church Hill Cemetery on Main Street in Framingham.
The DAR notes 14 black patriots from Framingham, the most of any area community. The Framingham History Center has a copy of "Patriots of Color," a study commissioned by the National Park Service and written by George Quintal Jr. in 2002, which tracks American Indian and African-American participants in the war.
Quintal wrote that Colonial militias and armies were completely integrated; there were no segregated units. Black soldiers received the same pay and equipment, but there were obstacles to promotion. The highest ranking African-American Quintal found was a corporal, although American Indians could rise higher in scouting and ranger units, with one reaching captain.
Natick is credited with sending 11 black soldiers to the war effort, including a father and son who marched to fight at Concord on April 19, 1775. Caesar and John Ferritt were two of four black soldiers from MetroWest known to fight in the first day of battle of the Revolution, along with Salem and Jeffrey Hemenway, a freed slave from Framingham.
Many of Natick's black patriots are noted on a monument denoting an American Indian burial ground on Pond Street. South Natick was the home of the Praying Indian Village and the two populations - blacks and Indians - often intermarried.
"I don't know how you distinguish between the two," said Peter Golden, an antiquarian who writes about local history.
Golden said the two populations fought for America in significant fashion with little fanfare starting in King Philip's War in 1675 through the Civil War.
"Natick has a hidden history, and that is a native American and African- American heritage of the defense of the community," he said. "Their contribution was substantial and magnificent. We owe them a debt of gratitude, and at the very least to recognize their courage, their valor and their generosity of spirit."
Lee Swanson, curator at the Sudbury Historical Society, said Sudbury sent a group of militiamen to Bunker Hill in June 1775, and among that group was Porter Cuddy, a black soldier.
"He was a private and served with many founding families like Dakin, Green, Parmenters, Putnams, Puffer, Rice, Mossman and Haynes," Swanson said.
Mendon sent four companies of militia to Boston on April 19, 1775, in order to thwart the British retreat and safeguard Colonists seeking to flee the city. A black soldier named Sam Freeman marched with the 3rd Militia Company to Roxbury, and stayed with the militia for nine days during the siege of Boston.
Mendon's men had a major role in the Revolutionary War, says local historian Dick Grady.
"What was going on in Boston with the Sons of Liberty, much of that was being echoed in Mendon Town Meeting," Grady said.
For more information on the African-American Patriot monument effort, visit libertyfunddc.org.
(Ian B. Murphy can be reached at 508-626-3964 or imurphy@wickedlocal.com.)


Read more: http://www.milforddailynews.com/archive/x920808678/Movement-looks-to-honor-African-Americans-who-fought-the-British#ixzz1T2vrCiUM

BYU exhibit features African-American quilts

Nora Ezell (1919-2007), Star Puzzle, 2001, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts


Deseret News

Quilting has been part of American landscape for centuries, but each culture has taken the art form and made it its own.
The quilts you see in "From Heart to Hand: African American Quilts from the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts" at the Brigham Young University Museum of Art are "very different from the quilts that many Utahns make," says Paul L. Anderson, MOA curator for the show. Yet, they have a folk-art quality, a homespun charm that makes them appealing, he says.


"These quilts are done with a certain freedom from the rules. There's a sense that quilting is less about precision than putting it together."

Yvonne Wells, Little House on the Prairie, 1985, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts (Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts)

In recent years, there's been a lot of interest in the quilts that have been produced in some of Alabama's very small, very rural towns such as Gee's Bend, Eutaw and others, says Anderson. Most of the 31 quilts in this show were done in the 1980s and '90s. They tend to use bold colors and somewhat random designs. If a quilt turns out with more blocks on one side than the other, no problem. "Some play off traditional patterns such as the log cabin and Lone Star, but they go in different directions."

Addie Pelt, Everybody Quilt, ca. 1988, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts (Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts)

But, he adds, "the more you look at them, the more interesting they get." A quilt by Nora Ezell called "Star Puzzle," for example, has stars of all different sizes exploding everywhere. "Bars and Blocks" by Mary Maxlion "has random strips of colors, but your eye wants to make patterns out of the black squares or out of the yellow ones," says Anderson.
Many of the quilts use scraps and materials at hand. Catherine Somerville's quilt made from worn denim patches "embodies a sense of hard labor and frugality."
But Ezell actually bought fabric for one of her quilts, a bag of neckties that cost 75 cents. It took her 160 hours to put them together in flower-like clumps decorated with beads and spangles for "Nora's Necktie Flower Garden."
And Mary Lee Bendolf's "Strings" has a very sophisticated design that was used on a postage stamp, says Anderson.

Yvonne Wells, Rosa Parks, 2005, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts (Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts)

The show features 12 quilts by Yvonne Wells, and they are a delight, says Anderson. "She apparently tried to make quilts like those she had seen and then had an epiphany that she could make them her own way. She started making story quilts."
The quilts in the show tell of both religious and Civil Rights stories. One of the popular ones interprets the 10 Commandments. "People love looking at how she illustrates them," says Anderson. For example, for not taking the Lord's name in vain, Wells has "this ugly black coming out of the mouth. I also love how she numbered the commandments — with numbers from a tape measure."


Wells has done a tribute to Helen Keller, who also came from her home town of Tuscaloosa, creating a figure without eyes and a Braille alphabet made of snaps. A "Self-portrait" done after 9/11 shows her making a new flag, with children bringing the stars. "It's really very hopeful," says Anderson.
One of his favorite quilts is "Put on the Whole Armor of God." "I negotiated that one into the show because BYU is one place everyone would be familiar with that. Her quilt has the warrior stomping on the devil much like you see St. George and the dragon."


Wells' Civil Rights quilts include a tribute to Rosa Parks with a huge bus wheel that could also represent the changing wheel of time, says Anderson. There's one that pays homage to Jackie Robinson and the desegregation of baseball, showing Robinson as a Paul Bunyan-like figure. Another quilt attempts to trace the whole Civil Rights movement in the South.
Wells doesn't use any patterns or templates. "She lays it out on the floor and starts cutting. It's kind of an extemporaneous composition, probably based on what she has in her scrap bag at the moment," says Anderson. "Yet, you get the sense that she feels deeply for what she is doing."
And that's what he thinks viewers will see and feel and well. "Quilters who have come to the show have been very broad-minded," he says. "They love to see how different people look at quilting and they have great respect for a different approach. We all have different ways of expressing ourselves."
If you go …
What: From Heart to Hand: African-American Quilts from the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts
Where: BYU Museum of Art
When: Through Nov. 17, Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; to 9 p.m. on Thursday and Friday.
How much: Free

Black war re-enactors hope to gain members


United Press International - News. Analysis. Insight.™ - 100 Years of Journalistic Excellence
CHARLESTON, S.C., July 24 (UPI) -- African-American Civil War re-enactors are hoping this year's 150th anniversary commemorations will help boost interest in their activities, officials say.
On Monday, 18 people participated in a ceremony to commemorate the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, one of the most celebrated African-American companies to fight in the Civil War, The Washington Post reported.
"If you look, you'll see that most historians now say that if it wasn't for these black soldiers, the North might not have won the war. These guys were freedom fighters. That's what our people should know . . . and that's why we do this," Mel Reid said in explaining why he participates in re-enactments.
The African-American re-enactor community is much smaller than the wider Civil War re-enactment fraternity; in the 1990s at the movement's peak there were fewer than 1,000 black re-enactors, which is a small fraction of today's predominantly white 50,000 re-enactors overall.
However, 150th anniversary events are once again rousing black interest, as increased attention is being paid to the 209,000 African-Americans who officially fought in the war, explained Hari Jones, curator of the African-American Civil War Museum.
"What we're hoping is that the 150-year celebrations will help develop more interest among African-Americans and we see more people join," Jones said.


Read more: http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2011/07/24/Black-war-re-enactors-hope-to-gain-members/UPI-27611311483146/#ixzz1T2tGsPEW