Thursday, March 26, 2009

A Giant @ Rest: Dr. John Hope Franklin (1915-2009)


A lifelong academic, Franklin wrote works that remain staples on college reading lists. In 1995, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. (By Katherine Frey -- The Washington Post)


John Hope Franklin, left, who was thrust into a role as social activist, speaks with President Bill Clinton, right, and members of the race advisory board. (White House)



Franklin knew many famed figures of the black struggle in the 1950s and '60s, including Martin Luther King Jr. (By Jim Bounds -- News & Observer)


Tha Artivist And Dr. John Hope Franklin

Historian Helped Blaze A Civil Rights Path



Portrait by Simmie Knox


By Wil Haygood
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 26, 2009; A01

John Hope Franklin, one of the most prolific and well-respected chroniclers of America's torturous racial odyssey, died of congestive heart failure yesterday at the age of 94 in a Durham, N.C., hospital.

It was more than Franklin's voluminous writings that cemented his reputation among academics, politicians and civil rights figures as an inestimable historian. It was the reality that Franklin, himself a black man, had seen racial horrors up close and thus was able to give his academic work a stinging ballast. Franklin was a young boy when his family lost everything in the Tulsa race riot of 1921. The violence was precipitated by reports that a black youth assaulted a white teenage girl in a downtown elevator. In the end more than 40 people died, mostly blacks, although some reports put the death total much higher.

Franklin was among the first black scholars to earn prominent posts at America's top -- and predominantly white -- universities. His research and his personal success helped pave the way both for other blacks and for the field of black studies, which began to blossom on American campuses in the '60s.

In time, a second generation of eminent black scholars -- Harvard's Henry Louis Gates Jr., Georgetown's Michael Eric Dyson and Princeton's Cornel West -- would follow Franklin to the heights of America's most illustrious schools.

"He gave us a common language," Gates, director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research at Harvard, said yesterday. "As the author of a seminal textbook, 'From Slavery to Freedom,' Franklin gave us young black scholars a common language to speak to each other. He had invented a genre out of whole cloth."

Gates, a former recipient of a MacArthur "genius grant," for years was curious as to who had recommended him. He attended a dinner once with Franklin, and Franklin confided that he had been the one to recommend Gates. "And I cried at the table we were sitting at. A lot of us called John Hope 'the Prince.' He had such a regal bearing. We're all the children of John Hope."

Over the course of his career, Franklin taught at Duke, Harvard and the University of Chicago, and would regale friends with the joy he had teaching at Cambridge University in England. Among his many honors was the Presidential Medal of Freedom, which President Bill Clinton bestowed upon him in 1995.

Franklin's life became so celebrated in his later years, and his testimony at congressional hearings so frequent, that he seemed almost a fictional figure, a combination of Booker T. Washington and Mark Twain. "I could not have avoided being a social activist even if I had wanted to," Franklin once said.

Among Franklin's more popular works, many of which remain constants on college reading lists, are "From Slavery to Freedom" (with Alfred Moss Jr.), "The Emancipation Proclamation," "Reconstruction After the Civil War," "A Southern Odyssey: Travelers in the Antebellum North" and "The Militant South, 1800-1861."

John Hope Franklin was born Jan. 2, 1915, in Rentiesville, Okla. His father, Buck, was a lawyer and the first black judge to sit on an Oklahoma district court.

Franklin attended Fisk University, a historically black college, and received his undergraduate degree in 1935. He earned both a master's and doctorate from Harvard University. From there it was an academic career full of highlights, fellowships, research stints and publications. He was a professor at Howard University from 1947 to 1956. His rising reputation caught the eye of Brooklyn College, which named him chairman of its history department. The appointment was met in the black press with an exuberance usually reserved for black sports figures. Franklin had become the first black person to chair a history department at a college that was not historically black.

But it was in the arena of politics and social activism that Franklin carved a new niche for himself. He provided important historical research to NAACP Legal Defense Fund lawyer Thurgood Marshall in the historic Brown v. Board of Education case that outlawed school segregation. A new generation of young Americans would witness Franklin's testimony during the unsuccessful nomination of Robert Bork for a seat on the Supreme Court.

In his long life, Franklin rubbed shoulders with many of the most famous figures from the black struggle in 1950s and 1960s America: Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr., Jesse Jackson and Marshall. He also lived in many of the cities that experienced tumultuous racial clashes. In a 2005 interview with The Washington Post, Franklin recalled living in Montgomery, Ala., in the 1940s: "In the liquor store, you would use the same clerk as the whites, but walking up to the clerk, there was a wall that separated you from the white person. So all you saw was that white person's hand."

In that same interview, Franklin talked about going to Richmond in 1947 to donate blood to his sick brother. Afterward, Franklin boarded a bus and sat in the whites-only section. He told the driver he had just given blood and was too tired to move; the driver threatened arrest. "The blacks were yelling at me: 'Stand your ground!' And you know what? That bus driver drove on off with me sitting right there."

Word of Franklin's death quickly swept throughout the academic community yesterday. Eileen Mackevich, executive director of the Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, first met Franklin in the late 1960s while doing graduate study in Illinois. "He taught me about race, about life, about communicating with people in respect to their differences," she said. "I am white, but he taught me things I never would have understood about race even though I've lived most of my life in integrated communities."

She continued: "I think a lot of white institutions congratulated themselves for hiring him as the first or second African American historian. But in the end, he made them feel honored to have him because of what he did for the faculty, the students and the neighborhood."

Franklin was married to Aurelia Whittington, his college sweetheart, who died in 1999. They are survived by their son, John Whittington Franklin. Aside from his family and his intellectual pursuits, Franklin also loved orchids. He was devoted to raising them. "There is even an orchid named after him," Gates said.

More On W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio:

Keep Hope Alive!!! Tha Artivist Reports...
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2006/11/keep-hope-alive.html

W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special: Dr. John Hope Franklin Interview...
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2007/05/31/legendary-scholar-dr-john-hope

Dr. John Hope Franklin Says We Got Step Our Game Up
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2007/06/dr-john-hope-franklin-says-we-got-step.html



Monday, March 23, 2009

3/25/2009~W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio~Ending March Madness In Clarity & Sanity: A Rayna Dubose Story



Celebrating 2 Full Years In The Biz: Ain't No Stopping Us Now!!!


March 2009 Theme: For Us, The Living...
Air Date: Weds. March 25, 2009
E-mail: r2c2h2@gmail.com
Time: 8PM C/9PM E/6PM P

Listen Live Online:


"Courage comes in many packages. Some really big. Some quite small. But the courage to Love and the courage to Live Is the greatest of them all. Rayna DuBose is a poster girl for courage in all sizes."
Nikki Giovanni - Poet/Professor

"Meet Rayna Dubose...listen to her story...and you too will be inspired to do things you thought you couldn't do. Rayna is an inspiration to us all and is living proof that a positive attitude is a magnet for positive results."
Beth Dunkenburger - Head Women's Basketball Coach, Virginia Tech


Welcome To Winning The Game of Life

Photo & Bio from http://www.raynadubose.net/index.shtml


What started as a dream in 2001 quickly turned into a disaster for Rayna Dubose, a highly recruited student who was granted a full athletic scholarship to play Division I Women’s Basketball at Virginia Tech.

Rayna entered Virginia Tech in 2001 as a part of the women’s team which was in the Big East Conference at the time. By the time April 2002 had approached, Rayna was struck with a deadly bacterial disease known as menigcoccal meningitis, which then led to 96 days in the UVA Medical Center in Charlottesville, Virginia, with collapsed organs, non-functioning kidneys which had her on dialysis, in a coma, liver problems and worst of all no blood circulation to her hands. She was a vegetable fighting for her life. Soon enough the day came when all four of her limbs were amputated and she became a bi-lateral amputee.

After the pain, therapy and what seemed like torture, Rayna returned back to Virginia Tech in the summer of 2003 to return to her normal college life as if nothing had ever happened. With a year off from school in 2002 she still remained active, taking on-line classes and staying a part of the Virginia Tech Women’s Basketball team by serving as a Student Assistant Coach, still traveling and being a part of the team.

In 2003 she received the Most Courageous Award at the Men’s Final Four in New Orleans. In 2005 she received the Wilma Rudolph Award. Rayna has also made appearances on HBO Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel, CBS Sports, the CBS Early Show and local news stations.

Rayna recently graduated from Virginia Tech with a degree in Consumer Studies and plans a career in motivational speaking about priorities in life, determination, perseverance and never giving up. She hopes that one day she can spread the smile that she wears everyday with others.

Video Clip: ”Standing Tall” from Real Sports with Bryant Gumble
http://easylink.playstream.com/jasonschmidtreel/RSDubose.mov

Sis. Rayna Dubose's Official Website:
http://www.raynadubose.net

****
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See Also...

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W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special:Reflections On The 2009 Inauguration Part One:
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W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special: Yes He Did...So Now What??? Defining The Obama Presidency...
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2008/11/16/Tha-Artivist-PresentsWE-ALL-BE-News-Radio

W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special:O Yes We Did!!! The Barack Obama Tribute...
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2008/11/09/Tha-Artivist-PresentsWE-ALL-BE-News-Radio

W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio Special: Barack Obama & The Hip Hop Effect On American Politics:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2008/02/10/Tha-Artivist-PresentsWE-ALL-BE-Radio

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Also check out how good we were in "2008 a.k.a. The Year Of Citizen Radio":
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http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2008/02/we-all-be-news-radio-reps-black-history_29.html

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Sunday, March 22, 2009

Family: Suspect In Oakland Cop Deaths Feared Jail...


This is an undated photo released by the Oakland Police Department of 26-year-old Lovelle Mixon. Mixon was killed during a shoot out with police that left three officers dead and one gravely wounded Saturday March 21, 2009.
(AP Photo/Oakland Police Department)


By TERRY COLLINS and LISA LEFF, Associated Press
OAKLAND, Calif. – Relatives of the man suspected of fatally shooting three Oakland police officers said Sunday the 26-year-old parolee was frustrated about not finding work and feared returning to jail.

The suspect Lovelle Mixon was slain in a gunfight with police during which two officers were killed Saturday, authorities said. Another officer was fatally shot earlier in the day and a fourth gravely wounded after the two of them pulled Mixon over for a routine traffic stop, police said.

Mixon's family gathered Sunday at his grandmother's East Oakland home, where he had stayed on and off since being released from a nine-month sentence for a parole violation, family members said.

He had previously served six years in state prison for assault with a firearm during an armed robbery in San Francisco, the family said. While he was in Corcoran state prison, he married his childhood girlfriend, they said.

Mixon's uncle, 38-year-old Curtis Mixon of Fremont, said his nephew had become depressed because he could not find work as a convicted felon. His nephew expected authorities to issue an arrest warrant for missing parole meetings, even though the he felt he was not to blame, he said.

"I think his frustration was building up, but he was trying to better himself," Curtis Mixon said.

Mixon was wanted on a no-bail warrant for violating his parole when Sgt. Mark Dunakin, 40, and Officer John Hege, 41, both on motorcycles, stopped a 1995 Buick sedan in east Oakland just after 1 p.m., police said.

The driver opened fire, killing Dunakin and gravely wounding Hege, Oakland police spokesman Jeff Thomason said.

Police initially issued a statement Sunday saying Hege had died but later backtracked, saying the officer had been declared brain dead but remained on life support while a decision was made about donating his organs.

Reached by telephone, Dr. John S. Hege said his son was attached to a ventilator and "looks fine" except for a black eye behind which the bullet was lodged.

"He does not have vital brain function to sustain life and will not regain that," Hege said, adding that the family would soon make a decision about continuing life support.

After shooting Hege and Dunakin, the gunman fled on foot, police said, leading to an intense manhunt.

Two hours later, officers found the gunman inside a nearby apartment building. When a SWAT team entered, the gunman opened fire, police said. Sgt. Ervin Romans, 43, and Sgt. Daniel Sakai, 35 were killed and a third officer was grazed by a bullet, police said.

Officers returned fire, killing Mixon, police said.

Mixon's sister, Reynete Mixon, 16, said she was sleeping when police kicked in the door and threw flash grenades, one of which struck her and caused minor burns on her leg. She said she did not know her brother was in the apartment when she fled as shots rang out.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered flags at the state capitol flown at half-staff Sunday. Schwarzenegger returned from Washington, D.C., to meet briefly with Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums and members of the police department Sunday afternoon.

Police said never in the department's history had so many officers been killed in the line of duty in a single day.

Relatives and co-workers of the four officers requested privacy as they absorbed the enormity of the deaths. Oakland had never lost even two officers on the same day.

Yet some details about their lives and motivations for joining law enforcement emerged Sunday.

Friends who knew Sakai from his days at the University of California, Berkeley and his continued involvement in his college fraternity said he was married to a campus police officer and was a father. He and his family lived in Castro Valley.

Oren Levy, a fraternity brother of Sakai, said his friend grew up in Big Bear and was an accomplished mountain biker and outdoorsman who majored in forestry and graduated in 1995.

As an undergraduate at Berkeley, Sakai worked for the campus police department as a student volunteer. After graduation, Sakai spent a year in Japan teaching English.

"His honor was extremely important to him. Whenever there was a situation where someone could take the path that was less honorable, he always advocated doing the right thing," Levy said. "Being a police officer was really perfect for him."

Hege's father said his son, who lived in Concord, loved being a policeman. He worked well with people and was an Eagle Scout. He played high school football and wrestled. He umpired and coached even as a youth, and joined the Oakland Police Department reserves.

After graduating from St. Mary's College in Moraga, he taught high school physical education for a few years in nearby Hayward before joining the police department a decade ago.

He recently became a motorcycle traffic patrol officer, Hege said, adding, "He liked excitement."

As for the slain shooting suspect, Hege said, "The man was evidently terribly desperate. It is a sad story."

LaTasha Mixon, 28, of Sacramento said Sunday her cousin was "not a monster."

She said her family's prayers were with the slain officers' relatives.

"We're devastated. Everybody took a major loss. We're crushed," she said.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


See Also on W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio:

Chickens Coming Home To Roost??? Gunmen Kills 4 Oakland Police Officers & Is Killed By Police...
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2009/03/chickens-coming-home-to-roost-gunmen.html

Enough Is Enough! February 6 March Of Stolen Lives Braves Massive Police Intimidation...
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2009/02/enough-is-enough-february-6-march-of.html

*W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio Special*
Enough Is Enough!!! Ending Police Brutality In The 21st Century
Some More Perspectives On Oscar Grant Tragedy...

Former Police Officer Who Murdered Oscar Grant III Caught In Nevada...
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2009/01/former-police-officer-who-murdered.html

For More Info About Police Brutality Please Listen To W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio's "Brave Mothers Rally Against Police In-Custody Brutality/Homicides" segment (Original Air Date Dec. 28, 2008):
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2008/12/28/Tha-Artivist-PresentsWE-ALL-BE-News-Radio

Popular British TV Celebreality Star Jade Goody Concludes Her Final Season...R.I.P.....

Video: Jade Goody Dying Cancer Gives Only Interview To The News Of The World



Video: Jade Goody Wedding - Jade's speech




Video: Jade Goody And Shilpa Shetty On Big Brother




Jade Goody and Jack Tweed are seen on the drive way of her home in Upshire, Feb. 21, 2009. The spokesman for reality television star Jade Goody says she will have surgery on Sunday, March 1, 2009 or Monday, March 2, 2009 as part of her cancer treatment.
(AP Photo/PA, Chris Radburn)


A May 3, 2006 file photo Jade Goody with her autobiography, in a London bookstore. Jade Goody, a dental assistant turned reality-TV star whose whirlwind journey from poverty to celebrity to tragedy became a national soap opera and morality tale in Britain, has died. The 27-year-old had cancer and died in her sleep early Sunday March 22, 2009 at her home in Essex, southeast England, her publicist Max Clifford said.
(AP Photo/PA, Yui Mok)


An undated file photo of Shilpa Shetty (right) and Jade Goody in Mumbai.

Reality TV Star Jade Goody Dies After Cancer Fight
By NANCY ZUCKERBROD, Associated Press Writer Nancy Zuckerbrod, Associated Press Writer 2 hrs 49 mins ago

LONDON – Jade Goody's family asks for "privacy at last" after the death at 27 of the brash former dental assistant who turned her tumultuous life and struggle with cervical cancer into a one-woman reality show.

Mocked as a slob, then celebrated as an everywoman, Goody lived one of the world's most public lives, with cameras capturing everything from her racial slurs to her cancer diagnosis and chemotherapy.

Goody gained fame in 2002 at age 21 when she joined the British version of the reality television show "Big Brother," in which contestants live together for weeks and are constantly filmed. She became a highly divisive star and something of a national touchstone who sparked debate about race, class and celebrity.

During filming of an Indian version of "Celebrity Big Brother" in the summer of 2008, Goody received a diagnosis of cervical cancer by telephone from a doctor in Britain. The camera captured the deeply personal moment, which was shown repeatedly on TV.

The progress of her illness was chronicled in detail in the tabloid press and weekly magazines. She underwent surgery and chemotherapy in the public eye — filming part of the experience.

The Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, who heads the Church of England, said Goody showed a brave side in the face of death.

"If in her earlier career it was all about her, then I think at the end it was about something else," Williams said.

Bald and frail, Goody married fiancee Jack Tweed last month in an elaborate event staged at an elegant countryside hotel outside London. The wedding was shown on television and the photos were sold, prompting criticism.

But Goody, who grew up in a poor London neighborhood, defended herself — saying she wanted her two young sons to have a better life than she had. Goody's father was a heroin addict who served jail time for robbery and died in 2005; her mother was a former crack addict who lost the use of an arm in a motorcycle accident.

"People will say I'm doing this for money," she said. "And they're right, I am. But not to buy flash cars or big houses — it's for my sons' future if I'm not here. I don't want my kids to have the same miserable, drug-blighted, poverty-stricken childhood I did."

Goody's publicist said last month that the cancer had spread to her liver, bowel and groin.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Sunday that Goody used her fame to help others.

"She was a courageous woman both in life and death, and the whole country have admired her determination to provide a bright future for her children," Brown said. He also praised her for her efforts, after her diagnosis, to raise awareness about cervical cancer and the need for screening.

Though many praised Goody in recent months for the way in which she handled her illness, she was often mocked in the press during her stint on "Big Brother" for her weight, her big mouth and her apparent lack of general knowledge. She branded the English region of East Anglia "East Angular," and asked whether it was abroad.

She didn't win the show, but she earned millions through television and magazine appearances, an autobiography, a perfume and a series of exercise videos.

Goody was labeled a racist bully for her treatment of another contestant, Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty, while filming the British version of "Celebrity Big Brother" in 2007. Goody bad-mouthed Shetty's cooking of Indian food, mocked her accent and referred to her as "Shilpa Poppadom." While complaints against the show skyrocketed, so did ratings.

Goody's treatment of Shetty sparked anger in India and Britain — even becoming the topic of debate during a House of Commons question-and-answer session with then Prime Minister Tony Blair. A major sponsor suspended its advertising deal with "Celebrity Big Brother," and a chain of perfume shops pulled a Goody-endorsed fragrance, ironically named "Shh..."

After television viewers voted to evict Goody from the show, Goody — herself of mixed race — insisted she wasn't a racist. "I argue like that with everybody. It wasn't just because of the color of her skin that I was that aggressive," she said during an interview on Britain's GMTV.

Shetty and Goody eventually reconciled. On Sunday, Shetty told the BBC, "I am deeply saddened, but I am glad Jade is out of pain and that she died peacefully with her family around her."

After Goody was evicted from the "Celebrity Big Brother" house, the Indian Tourism Office invited Goody to travel to the country. She did, visiting charity projects and later agreeing to appear on the Indian reality show.

"The people of India have only seen a small part of me, and I'd like to show them that there is more to me," Goody said. "I'm a mother of two, a businesswoman. I can't be all that bad."

Goody is survived by Tweed and her two sons, Bobby and Freddie, with an ex-boyfriend, television presenter Jeff Brazier. She also is survived by her mother, Jackiey Budden.

Budden told reporters Sunday: "Family and friends would like privacy at last."

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Chickens Coming Home To Roost??? Gunmen Kills 4 Oakland Police Officers & Is Killed By Police...


This is an undated photo combo of images released by the Oakland Police Department of Oakland Police officers from left: Sgt. Mark Dunakin, Officer John Hege, Sgt. Daniel Sakai and Sgt. Ervin Romans. A man wanted for violating his parole killed three police officers and gravely wounded Hege during the in two shootings Saturday, March 21, 2009.
(AP Photo/Oakland Police Department)


This is an undated photo released by the Oakland Police Department of 26-year-old Lovelle Mixon. Mixon was killed during a shoot out with police that left three officers dead and one gravely wounded Saturday March 21, 2009.
(AP Photo/Oakland Police Department)

Police: Fourth Oakland Police Officer Has Died
By TERRY COLLINS and LISA LEFF, Associated Press

OAKLAND, Calif. – An Oakland police officer shot during a traffic stop died Sunday, bringing to four the number of officers killed on the deadliest day in the department's history, police said.

Officer John Hege, 41, died at Highland Hospital after being gravely wounded in the first of two shootings on Saturday, Oakland police spokesman Jeff Thomason said.

A 26-year-old parolee wanted on a parole violation opened fire on Hege and 40-year-old Sgt. Mark Dunakin after they pulled him over Saturday afternoon, police said. Dunakin died that day. Hege was hospitalized with a major brain injury and survived through the night, his family said.

Suspect Lovelle Mixon was slain later Saturday afternoon in a gunfight with police that left two more officers dead. Thomason identified those officers as Sgt. Ervin Romans, 43, and Sgt. Daniel Sakai, 35.

Oakland police said never in the department's history had so many officers been killed in the line of duty in a single day.

The violence began when Hege and Dunakin, both on motorcycles, stopped a 1995 Buick sedan in east Oakland just after 1 p.m., Thomason said. The driver opened fire, killing Dunakin and gravely wounding Hege.

The gunman then fled on foot, police said, leading to an intense manhunt by dozens of Oakland police, California Highway Patrol officers and Alameda County sheriff deputies. Streets were roped off and an entire area of east Oakland was closed to traffic.

Around 3:30 p.m., officers got an anonymous tip that the gunman was inside a nearby apartment building. A SWAT team entered the building and the gunman opened fire, police said. Romans and Sakai were killed and a third officer was grazed by a bullet, police said.

Officers returned fire, killing Mixon, Acting Oakland police Chief Howard Jordan said.

"It's in these moments that words are extraordinarily inadequate," said Mayor Ron Dellums at a somber news conference announcing the slayings.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered flags at the state capitol flown at half-staff Sunday in honor of the slain officers. Schwarzenegger arrived in Oakland on Sunday to meet with Dellums and members of the police department.

"All four officers dedicated their lives to public safety and selflessly worked to protect the people of Oakland," he said in a statement. "Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of those lost, the Oakland Police Department and law enforcement officers throughout California during this difficult time."

Police said Mixon used different weapons in each incident. One gun was used at the first scene and an assault rifle was used at the apartment building where he was hiding.

"(Mixon) was on parole and he had a warrant out for his arrest for violating that parole. And he was on parole for assault with a deadly weapon," said Oakland police Deputy Chief Jeffery Israel.

Police said they did not know why the officers initially stopped the suspect, but said it apparently was a routine traffic stop. Thomason said Mixon had an extensive criminal history and was wanted on a no-bail warrant.

Reached by telephone late Saturday, Dr. John S. Hege said his son loved being a policeman and recently became a motorcycle traffic patrol officer. "He liked excitement," he said.

As for the slain shooting suspect, Hege said, "The man was evidently terribly desperate. It is a sad story."

LaTasha Mixon, 28, of Sacramento said Sunday her cousin was "not a monster." She said her family's prayers were with the slain officers' relatives.

"We're devastated. Everybody took a major loss. We're crushed," she said.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


See Also on W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio:

Enough Is Enough! February 6 March Of Stolen Lives Braves Massive Police Intimidation...
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2009/02/enough-is-enough-february-6-march-of.html

*W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Radio Special*
Enough Is Enough!!! Ending Police Brutality In The 21st Century
Some More Perspectives On Oscar Grant Tragedy...

Former Police Officer Who Murdered Oscar Grant III Caught In Nevada...
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2009/01/former-police-officer-who-murdered.html

For More Info About Police Brutality Please Listen To W.E. A.L.L. B.E. News & Radio's "Brave Mothers Rally Against Police In-Custody Brutality/Homicides" segment (Original Air Date Dec. 28, 2008):
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/weallbe/2008/12/28/Tha-Artivist-PresentsWE-ALL-BE-News-Radio

Saturday, March 21, 2009

The Tigers Heading For The Sweet 16 Dance...


Memphis' Tyreke Evans drives to the basket against Maryland.
Orlin Wagner/Associated Press


KANSAS CITY, Mo. – You don’t step on Superman’s cape. You don’t spit into the wind. You don’t pull the mask of the ’ol Lone Ranger.

And you certainly don’t tell the Memphis Tigers that they play in a “questionable” basketball conference.

The Conference USA champion Tigers, prodded by Maryland guard Greivis Vasquez’s comments on Friday that Memphis needs to “play against some good competition, and we’re pretty good,” destroyed the Terps from beginning to end in an 89-70 NCAA West Regional second-round victory Saturday afternoon.

Though the Tigers said they were more motivated for atoning their subpar first-round win over No. 15 seed Cal State Northridge, they admit Vasquez’s words subtly sparked a flame that Memphis turned into a raging bonfire.

“We heard what he (Vasquez) said and we just went out and showed him the conference we play in isn’t too bad,” said U of M freshman guard Tyreke Evans, who scored 11 of his team-high 19 points in the game’s first 4:41 as the Tigers blew the door off the Terps before the first TV timeout.

Memphis (33-3), playing with a focus and fire that got the Tigers a No. 2 seed, shot 70 percent from the field in the first half, led by 20 at halftime and tried hard not to think about the 80-degree weather awaiting them at their Sweet 16 site Thursday in Glendale, Ariz.

“If we make shots, we’re going to beat people,” U of M coach John Calipari said. “If we don’t make shots, we’re a good enough defensive team where we can hang in and beat you in the end.”

Memphis made lots of shots on Saturday, shooting 58.5 percent from the field (31-of-53), including 10-of-19 threes (52.6 percent).

U of M guard Doneal Mack, who hadn’t made a shot in his last five NCAA Tournament games, hit 5-of-7 3-pointers and finished with 17 points. Robert Dozier and Shawn Taggart were huge, combining for 31 points and 19 rebounds. Robert Sallie came off the bench and scored 13, hitting 3-of-4 3s.

The Tigers’ 27th straight victory advanced them to the Sweet 16 for a fourth straight year, something only done once previously in school history. The U of M will play the winner of Sunday’s Missouri-Marquette game in the West semi on Thursday in Glendale, Ariz.

As for Vasquez, he had 18 hard-earned points on 8-of-16 shooting, only getting hot for a brief spell. He also got a technical foul in the second half.

Memphis fans, taking note of Vasquez’s comments that he thought Maryland played in a better league (the Atlantic Coast Conference), chanted “ACC, ACC” with the Tigers ahead by 20-plus points.

Afterward, Vasquez sent up the white flag of surrender.

“They proved me wrong, that’s what the sport is all about,” said Vasquez, who added he didn’t regret any of his previous comments.

Michael Steele- Putting A Black Face On The Grand Obstructionist Party.



Vantage Point

Articles and Essays by Dr. Ron Daniels

In a calculated move to “reinvent” itself the Republican National Committee recently elected Michael Steele as its Chairman. As a former Lt. Governor of Maryland, Steele was the first African American to hold statewide office. Now, he has the distinction of being the first African American to be elected Chairman of the Republican National Committee, an achievement that might seem odd for a party where Black membership is miniscule. After Barack Obama soundly defeated John McCain to win the White House, the election of Steele is a not so subtle attempt to put a “new face” on the Republican Party. There is an obvious need for the Party to broaden its base among growing constituencies of people of color minorities in the country. It is not by accident that the Republicans have also trotted out Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, who is of Indian descent, as a potential presidential candidate for 2012.



The question is whether putting a Black face on the Republican Party will make a difference. The likely answer is no. In the first instance, Republicans should understand that Blacks and people of color did not vote for Barack Obama simply because of the color of his skin. They voted in record numbers for a Black man because of his vision for America and the content of his politics. Had someone with the political views of Alan Keyes, Condoleezza Rice or Clarence Thomas been the candidate, Blacks would have avoided them like the plague. The problem with the Republican Party is not the color of the person who serves as its Chairman but the content of its politics and policies.



The GOP is virtually lily White because its brand of conservatism is antithetical to the interests of Blacks and other people of color. Moreover, its failed pro-rich, pro-corporate, unfettered market, anti-poor and working class economic philosophy have virtually bankrupted the economy. Rather than cooperate with President Obama as he strives to lift the nation out of the worst economic disaster since the Great Depression, the Republicans have responded by railing against the stimulus package, the mortgage foreclosure relief initiative and the new budget. They have offered nothing but the same old exhausted Reagan-Bush prescriptions. Smarting from a crushing defeat in the last election and devoid of any substantive new ideas, from the perspective of most Blacks, they have once again revealed themselves as the Grand Obstructionist Party (GOP).



Viewed in that light, the election of Michael Steele is superfluous. Recent events have made it abundantly clear that Michael Steele is only the titular leader of the GOP. Even before the recent flare-up with Rush Limbaugh there were fears among conservatives that Steele was a closet moderate. He was able to quiet his critics by promptly parroting the conservative line. But then he made the mistake of assuming he was the real leader of the GOP only to face the rude awakening that the real “boss” appears to be the rabid radio talk show host and gadfly of orthodox conservatism, Rush Limbaugh.



Appearing before the Conservative Political Action Conference, Limbaugh lashed out at President Obama’s efforts to rescue the economy and defended his call for the President to fail! Attempting to assert his leadership as Chairman of the GOP, Michael Steele labeled Limbaugh’s speech “incendiary.” Within days it was clear who the real boss of the GOP is when Limbaugh publicly chastised Steele, forcing him to give a “yes suh boss” style apology. Steele said his condemnation of the talk show host was “inarticulate.” The unmistakable conclusion to be drawn from Limbaugh’s smack down of “Chairman” Steele is that the GOP is firmly in the grasp of the right wing of the Party.



There was a time when the Republican Party was much more diverse ideologically. It had a robust liberal and moderate wing in the 50’s and 60’s. Republican Senators Jacob Javits and Kenneth Keating of New York, Senator Clifford Case of New Jersey, New York Mayor John Lindsey and Governor Nelson Rockefeller were well known liberals who championed the cause of civil rights. Governor William Scranton of Pennsylvania was a highly respected moderate. Senator Edward Brooke, an African American Senator from Massachusetts, and notable personalities like baseball legend Jackie Robinson were prominent members of the Republican Party. In fact for generations most Blacks identified with the Republican Party because of memories of Abraham Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation -- and the brutal reality that the most stalwart defenders of segregation in the South were Democrats. It was not until the election of John F. Kennedy in 1960 that Blacks finally made the decisive shift to the Democratic Party.



The lesson for the Republican Party is that people vote their interests. As long as Blacks saw some hope in the Republican Party because there were liberal and moderate political leaders who supported civil rights, a sizeable segment of the Black electorate voted for Republicans. However, as the Party began to dramatically move to the right, Blacks increasingly viewed the Republican Party’s strategy, tactics and political agenda as a direct threat to the interests of Black America. Richard Nixon unabashedly sought to expand the base of the Republican Party by reaching out to White southerners with veiled appeals to their racism. Ronald Reagan blatantly associated the “burden of government” social programs with Black people and attacked affirmative action as reverse racism. The Republican Party emerged as a major “obstruction” to Black interests and aspirations.



In the most recent period, the Republican Party has sought to expand its base among Blacks by identifying or breeding “Black conservatives” to carry their water. But because these talking heads, analysts and pundits are simply Black faces mouthing the conservative cause, the GOP has gained little traction in the Black community, and they never will. Michael Steele is simply the latest and most glaring example of the flawed strategy of attempting to put a Black face on the Grand Obstructionist Party. Rush Limbaugh has shown Blacks and people of color the real face of the GOP!


Dr. Ron Daniels is President of the Institute of the Black World 21st Century and Distinguished Lecturer at York College City University of New York. He is the host of An Hour with Professor Ron Daniels, Monday-Friday mornings on WWRL Radio 1600 AM in New York and Night Talk, Wednesday evenings on WBAI 99.5 FM, Pacifica New York. His articles and essays also appear on the IBW website www.ibw21.org and http://stateoftheblackworld.blogspot.com. He can be reached via email at info@ibw21.org.



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Bill Tatum: “I Did It My Way”


By Herb Boyd
Special to the AmNews
Published: Thursday, March 12, 2009

(1933-2009)

Whoever selected the music for the home going services for Wilbert “Bill” A. Tatum last Friday at Riverside Church was in touch with the late publisher’s spirit. Vocalist Kevin-Anthony with his version of “I Did It My Way,” in many ways captured the essence of Tatum, who died February 25, while vacationing in Croatia with his wife, Susan. He was 76 and succumbed to multiple organ failure.

“Yes, there were times, I’m sure you knew,” Kevin-Anthony sang, “when I bit off more than I could chew. But through it all, when there was doubt, I ate it up and spit it out. I faced it all and I stood tall; and did it my way.”

Indeed, Tatum faced it all and stood tall once he had made up his mind, and he did it his way, which, in most cases was not the Black way or the white way, but the right way.

And each of those who stepped up to the church’s lectern drove home this point about the provocative, controversial editor. “He facilitated the work of philosophers and prophets,” the Rev. Dr. Brad R. Braxton said during his greetings, thereby setting the tone for the two hours of fond memories. “His cup of knowledge was filled to overflowing.”

Governor David Paterson recalled spending time with Tatum as a co-host on his breakfast show on WLIB many years ago and how Tatum would have relished taking on the New York Post for its publication of a recent racist cartoon. “Every Thursday (when the Amsterdam News hit the stands) you could expect Bill to give us the truth, and you know that truth crushed to earth will rise again.”

For those interested in gauging the pulse of the community, the Amsterdam News and Tatum’s editorials were required reading, said Mayor Michael Bloomberg. “We didn’t always see eye-to-eye,” the mayor admitted, “but that didn’t stop me from liking him.”

“Because of Bill Tatum, Harlem is a better place,” said former Mayor David Dinkins. “He built many bridges in his lifetime.”

Some of those bridges reached as far away as Stockholm, Sweden where and his family often ventured. Those visitations must have resonated with special meaning for his daughter Elinor and his wife when vocalist/pianist Margareta Svensson performed “Vem Kan Segla,” a Finnish-Swedish folk song, and “Send in the Clowns.”

As he had done at Chuck Sutton’s funeral, Congressman Charles Rangel came with a plaque and brief remarks, informing the crowded sanctuary that Tatum’s name and contributions would be entered into the Congressional Record.

This was followed by warm reflections from Elinor’s goddaughter, Alyssa Kapasi and one of Tatum’s favorite poems “Around the Corner,” dramatically delivered by Roz Abrams. “Around the corner,” Abrams began, “I have a friend/in this great city that has no end,/yet the days go by and weeks rush on/and before I know it, a year is gone. And I never see my old friend's face/for life is a swift and terrible race…”

During his lifetime Tatum, who began his journalistic career as a young reporter for his father’s papers in North Carolina, ran a swift but productive race, and the lengthy obituary, that was read silently, is but a sketch of his accomplishments. He was a formidable community activist after completing his education at Lincoln University and Occidental College in California, did a stint in the military, and with such partners as Percy Sutton and H. Carl McCall purchased the Amsterdam News in 1971.

For a while he was also part owner of two radio stations and ultimately by the mid-eighties was the sole owner of the paper that would bear his indomitable vision until he ceded the operation to his daughter in 1997.

“Very few of our elders who founded institutions have provided the guidance and then turned their businesses over to their children,” Elinor said during her time at the podium. “But he did.”

President Barack Obama sent a letter expressing condolences from himself and wife Michelle. He praised Tatum’s commitment to and impact on journalism; and his brining to the forefront, issues concerning the African American community.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was unable to attend the services but sent a message in which she recalled visiting Tatum at the VA Hospital, and to discover that he was leading a protest while confined to a wheelchair. He may have been confined to a wheelchair, “but he never stopped standing up for what he believed in,” Clinton wrote.

Attorney Victor Kovner, NAACP stalwart Hazel Dukes, and author Sidney Offitt each offered praise and remembrances for a man and a friend “who was determined to defend us all,” Dukes asserted.

“If there was one word that personified Bill Tatum for me, it would be ‘faithful,’” said the Rev. Al Sharpton during his eulogy. “He was never afraid to defend the scorned, and there was nothing too controversial or remote for him. He never retreated.”

Nor can we expect Tatum’s soul to ever be completely still, despite the glorious admonitions intoned by Diana Solomon-Glover’s during her rendition of “Be Still My Soul.”

A recording of “Balm in Gilead” echoed through the church as part of the recessional, and it the voice of Paul Robeson, who like Tatum, never took a step back when stepping up to represent his people.

For those interested in supporting the Amsterdam News Educational Foundation, send donations to 34 East Third Street, New York, NY 10003.

Visit The Amsterdam News Online:
http://www.amsterdamnews.com

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‘Black Press Giant’ Wilbert ‘Bill’ Tatum Dies In Croatia


WILBERT "BILL" TATUM

NEW YORK (NNPA)—The New York Amsterdam News has announced the death of “Black Press giant” Wilbert “Bill” Tatum, publisher emeritus, CEO and chairman of the board of the newspaper that is in the midst of its centennial celebration.

Tatum, 76, died in a hospital in Croatia, Feb. 25, after a brief illness.

His wife, Susan, and family were working to bring Tatum’s body back to the U.S. from Croatia, a country in Central Europe. His daughter, Elinor Tatum, publisher and editor-in-chief of the nationally known and respected weekly newspaper, has expressed her gratitude for the outpouring of support and condolences from leaders in the Black Press, political, public service and Black leadership communities across the nation.

As funeral plans were still incomplete at NNPA deadline, salutes were being echoed across the nation for Tatum, who during his tenure, expanded the readership and influence of the Amsterdam News, New York’s oldest Black newspaper.

NNPA Chairman John B. Smith Sr., who has known Tatum more than 30 years, describes him as “a true and stellar newspaperman, who personified fairness, justice and determination to better the beloved community…He made certain, throughout his four decades at his publication, to [write] truth-to-power editorials to advance the African-American diaspora, in particular, and the nation and world, overall.”

Tatum, highly esteemed as a businessman as well as a publisher and civil rights leader, gained respect from every facet of society and across political lines.

Democratic Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, former New York senator, said, “Bill was a dear friend, an inspiration, and a leader among journalists and indeed throughout his community. As the longtime publisher of the Amsterdam News, New York City’s oldest African-American newspaper, and former deputy borough president of Manhattan, Bill’s leadership and advocacy on behalf of civil rights, his community, and journalistic integrity is an inspiration to all of us.”

Republican Mayor Michael Bloomberg, with whom Tatum frequently sparred, saluted him in a heartfelt statement upon his death.

“It’s a big loss for a paper that has been influencing and reflecting city politics for over 100 years now,” said Bloomberg. “Bill helped build the company into a major employer in Harlem, but the paper’s voice really was heard across the city—and, on many occasions, around the world. He covered issues of concern to African-Americans in ways that other media outlets did not, and he gave many young writers opportunities they might not otherwise have had.”

From politicians to civil rights activists, Tatum carried major influence.

New York Action Network President Al Sharpton described Tatum as “an iconic and vitally important figure in both journalism and civil rights. I first met him when I was a teenager involved in civil rights work in New York and have known him over 30 years,” he says. “His courage, his tenacity, his sagacity, and his advocacy are unparalleled in African-American journalism. We have lost a great advocate, a penetrating writer, an unmatchable institution builder, and for me, a great friend and father figure.”

In the 1960s, the Amsterdam News, not yet owned by Tatum, had become the premier newspaper for the Civil Rights and Black Nationalist movements. The paper gave a platform to both the nonviolence, civil disobedience philosophy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Black Nationalist teachings of Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm X.

Tatum, along with a group of businessmen, purchased the Amsterdam News in 1971.

Tatum had a brief stay in the mainstream media in 1993, when he was named publisher and editor of the N.Y. Post amid the bankruptcy fight at the paper as well as discrimination allegations at both the Post and N.Y. Daily News. Both publications had no reporters of color on their city desks and no minority editorial managers.

“With Mr. Tatum’s passing we lose not only a wise and scholarly elder, but also a vanguard,” said Marquez Claxton, a co-founder of the 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care. “[He] who cultivated a solid and irreplaceable institution in the form of the Amsterdam News. We lose the physical presence, but the spirit and instruction is clear, we must remain ever vigilant, defiant in the face of oppression or obstacles and committed to the truth and its honest communication. He joins the ancestors and we join his family in mourning Bill Tatum…the man, the myth, the legend.”

(NNPA Editor-in-chief Hazel Trice Edney contributed to this article.)

Visit The Amsterdam News Online:
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Mumia Speaks... Wilbert 'Bill' Tatum: Black Journalist


Passing On The Legacy: Wilbert Tatum With Daughter Elinor

Wilbert 'Bill' Tatum was a Black journalist, first, last and always -- as writer, columnist, editor and publisher of the New York Amsterdam News.

Tatum, who recently died at 76 while vacationing with his wife, Susan, in Dubrovnik, Croatia, was no longer the paper's publisher, but he was always a presence there.

His daughter, Elinor, succeeded him years ago as the editor and publisher, and spoke succinctly and eloquently of her father's accomplishments when she said, "My father understood what being a Black journalist in America was about and knew he had to fight for every single journalist of color. He also had to speak to the general public about Black America and he told stories no one else would and he stood up for what he believed in" (Jet magazine, Mar. 16, 2009, p.28)

Under Tatum, the Amsterdam News was a site where many in the nationalist, radical and cultural community could tell their stories, and that included everything from the Nation of Islam to the Five Percenters; from ex members of the Black Panther Party to the New Black Panther Party. The energetic N. Y. Caribbean and continental African communities had a voice there -- all part of New York's expansive Black community in all of its flavors.

Tatum did what has been rare for Black journalists -- the creation of journalistic institutions that continue to carry on.

Tatum's legacy will long be remembered.

--(c) '09 maj


==================

The Power of Truth is Final -- Free Mumia!

Audio of most of Mumia's essays are at: http://www.prisonradio.org

Mumia Abu-Jamal's new book -- JAILHOUSE LAWYERS: PRISONERS DEFENDING PRISONERS V. THE USA, featuring an introduction by Angela Y. Davis -- will be released soon!
It will be available from City Lights Books at a 30% discount weeks before you can get it at any other bookstore, or from Amazon.

Sign up for an email alert and when the book becomes available for sale you'll receive an email letting you know: http://www.citylights.com/book/?GCOI=87286100448090

In support of Mumia and the publication of JAILHOUSE LAWYERS, organizations around the country will be holding "More Than a Book Party" events on or around Mumia's birthday, April 24, 2009.

If you are planning to organize an event or would like to order in bulk, you can also receive a 45% discount on any bulk orders of 20 copies or more. The book retails for $16.95, for orders of 20 copies or more the discounted price would be $9.32 per book, plus shipping and handling. Prepayment would be required and books are nonreturnable. If you or your organization would like to place a bulk order, please contact Stacey Lewis at 415.362.1901 or stacey@citylights.com

Let's use the opportunity of the publication of this brilliant, moving, vintage Mumia book to build the momentum for his case, to raise the money we desperately need in these challenging economic times, to get the word out – to produce literature, flyers, posters, videos, DVD's; to send organizers out to help build new chapters and strengthen old ones, TO GET THE PEOPLE OUT IN THE STREETS … all the work that we must do in order to FREE MUMIA as he faces LIFE IN PRISON WITHOUT PAROLE OR EXECUTION!

Please make a contribution to help free Mumia. Donations to the grassroots work will go to both INTERNATIONAL CONCERNED FAMILY AND FRIENDS OF MUMIA ABU-JAMAL and the FREE MUMIA ABU-JAMAL COALITION (NYC).

WWW.FREEMUMIA.COM

Please mail donations/ checks to:
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See Also On W.E. A.L.L. B.E....

‘Black Press Giant’ Wilbert ‘Bill’ Tatum Dies In Croatia:
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2009/03/black-press-giant-wilbert-bill-tatum.html


Bill Tatum: “I Did It My Way”:
http://weallbe.blogspot.com/2009/03/bill-tatum-i-did-it-my-way.html


Visit The Amsterdam News Online:
http://www.amsterdamnews.com