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August 30, 2012

  • Black Men More Likely to Die Following Prostate Surgery

    surgery by Frederick H. Lowe Black men suffering from prostate cancer receive lower-quality surgical care than white men, according to a study by Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center that was published in the Aug.

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  • Photo-ID Laws Pose Hurdle for College Voters

    Photo-ID Laws Pose Hurdle for College Voters New America Media College students returning to campuses in states with new voter photo-ID laws may find registering to vote far more challenging than registering for classes.

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  • will.i.am’s New Song Is a Hit on Mars

    will.i.am’s New Song Is a Hit on Mars will.i.am, the frontman for the Black Eyed Peas, has sold 56 million records on Earth. So what’s the next challenge? Mars, of course. NASA held an educational event on Tuesday to share its findings with students about Mars.

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  • State and Local Jobs Shrink

    State and Local Jobs Shrink by Frederick H. Lowe Jobs in state and local governments declined last year, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2011 Annual Survey of Public Employment & Payroll. In 2011, there were 16.

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  • Morris Brown College Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy

    Morris Brown College Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy by Frederick H. Lowe Morris Brown College, a Historically Black College, founded by the African Methodist Episcopal Church, has filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, citing debts of $10 million to $50 million and assets equal to that amount, according to court documents obtained by The NorthStar News & Analysis. In a U.S.

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  • Thousands In Togo Defy Ban on Rallies

    Thousands In Togo Defy Ban on Rallies (TriceEdneyWire.com) – Police wielding tear-gas cannons attempted to disperse more than a thousand Togolese citizens rallying in the capital, Lome, for fair elections scheduled for October.

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  • Art Africa Fair Calls For Entries

    Art Africa Fair Calls For Entries The Art Africa Miami Arts Fair has issued a call for entries for the event that will take place Dec. 5-9, 2012, in the city’s Overtown neighborhood.

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  • FAMU Lifts Restrictions on Organizations

    Florida A&M University’s clubs and organizations will resume recruitment in September under new rules intended to prevent hazing, promote better academic performance and emphasize  community service.   Greek-letter organizations will be able to start their membership-recruitment process beginning September 11 through on-campus interest meetings for the fall 2012 semester, William E.

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  • New Orleans Property Owners Sue Over Displacement for Hospitals

    (TriceEdneyWire.com) - Businesses and homeowners in New Orleans say they were underpaid when they were forced from lower Mid-City to make room for the University Medical Center and Veterans Health Administration hospital—both of which are under construction now. Property owners are suing the state, and the concern is that the city may end up paying for jury awards.

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  • Zimmerman Can Leave County to See Lawyers

    Zimmerman Can Leave County to See Lawyers A judge in the Trayvon Martin-George Zimmerman case agreed Friday to let the defendant travel out of Seminole County but only to go to his lawyers' offices in Orange County, the Orlando Sentinel reported.

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  • Majority Polled Predict Obama Will Win

    Majority Polled Predict Obama Will Win Despite Mitt Romney-affiliated political action committees’ abilities to out fund raise President Barack Obama, most voters believe the president will be re-elected. A USA Today/Gallup Poll, which surveyed voters Aug.

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  • The NorthStar’s Week in Black History

    The NorthStar’s Week in Black History August 30 through September 5 August 30 1932 ----- The United States Public Health Service, in conjunction with the Tuskegee Institute, conducted an infamous clinical study of syphilis from this date until 1972.  Black men were used exclusively as the research subjects.  A whistleblower’s report brought the specious 40-year study to a halt. Study researchers recruited poor, uneducated African-American men, most of whom were sharecroppers from rural Macon County, Ala., to study the progression of syphilis in the body.

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  • Jobs Are Priority No. 1 in South African Poll

    South Africans want the country’s government to create jobs as a way of ending double-digit unemployment. A Gallup Poll survey reported that 51 percent of South Africans wanted the government to create new jobs, compared with 18 percent who wanted the government to reduce corruption.

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  • Healthier Meals Await Oakland Students Returning to School

    Healthier Meals Await Oakland Students Returning to School New America Media BERKELEY, Calif. – Jennifer Le Barre, Oakland Unified School District’s nutrition services director, vows that students in Oakland’s public schools will know what a fresh peach is when they pick it up. Le Barre was speaking at a news briefing here August 16 on what some are calling a food revolution in Oakland’s public schools.

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  • Oprah Is Still the Top Paid Celebrity

    Oprah Is Still the Top Paid Celebrity Oprah continues her reign as Forbes magazine’s highest paid celebrity. Between May 2011 and May 2012, Oprah earned $165 million, besting filmmaker Michael Bay, who finished in the No.

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  • A Race About Race: Get Whose Country Back?

    A Race About Race: Get Whose Country Back? by A. Peter Bailey (TriceEdneyWire.com) - It was the 1992 Bill Clinton-George H.W. Bush presidential campaign that introduced the memorable political slogan: “It’s the economy, Stupid.

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  • Romney’s Creed: Blessed Are the One Percent

    Romney’s Creed: Blessed Are the One Percent by Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr. (TriceEdneyWire.com) - Raise taxes on the rich? “Class warfare," the Republicans rail.

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  • Same Old Song

    Same Old Song by Julianne Malveaux (TriceEdneyWire.com) - When I was all of 16 years old, I went to get a passport.  Why?  Richard Nixon had been elected president, and I was sure that he would impose such oppression that I might need to get out of the country.

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  • Obama’s Race Still Has Bearing on Media Coverage

    Obama’s Race Still Has Bearing on Media Coverage by Nadra Kareem Nittle (TriceEdneyWire.com) - Long before a little-known Illinois politician ran for president, the mainstream media focused on his race.

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  • Group Pushes for Weekend Early Voting in Ohio

    Group Pushes for Weekend Early Voting in Ohio ColorOfChange.org, a black online political organization, has launched an online petition drive demanding that Jon Husted, Ohio’s Secretary of State, extend early voting to weekends.

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  • Camerawoman Insulted Racially at Republican Convention

    Camerawoman Insulted Racially at Republican Convention Two Republican convention attendees threw peanuts at a black CNN camerawoman before screaming, “This is how we feed animals,” CNN said. “CNN can confirm there was an incident directed at an employee inside the Tampa Bay Times Forum earlier this afternoon.

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  • Right Attacks President Obama in New Film

    Right Attacks President Obama in New Film by Barry Cooper Conservative Indian-American writer and filmmaker Dinesh D’Souza is back bashing Barack Obama again – just in time for the November elections.

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U.S. Rep. Todd Akin
U.S. Rep. Todd Akin

Group Asks for IRS Inquiry on Baptist Nod to Akin

The Missouri Baptist Convention violated its tax-exempt, non-profit status by endorsing controversial U.S. Rep. Todd Akin for the U.S. Senate, the Americans United for Separation of Church and State alleges in a complaint filed with the Internal Revenue Service.

Americans United charged that Don Hinkle, MBC’s director of public policy, endorsed Akin  and Ed Martin for Missouri attorney general. The Pathway, a bi-weekly publication of the Missouri Baptist Convention, published the endorsements in May. Hinkle is editor of The Pathway.

The Washington, D.C.-based organization charged that the Jefferson City, Mo.-based Missouri Baptist Convention is prohibited from using its staff, its publications and other resources to support candidates for public office.

This is second major issue that has recently surfaced concerning Akin, who represents Missouri’s 2nd Congressional District.

Republican Party leaders are attempting to force Akin out of his race against incumbent U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill because of his controversial remarks. Aiken, an abortion opponent, suggested women would not become pregnant if they were victims of “legitimate rape. " So far, Akin, who has asked that his remarks be forgiven, has refused to quit the race.

In an article headlined, “Allegiance to God, Not to A Political Party," Hinkle wrote, “We want government leaders who  are righteous and who will pass righteous laws that serve the common good and bring glory to Jehovah God who established government is Sovereign."

“That is why,” continued Hinkle, “I personally support candidates like U.S. Rep. Todd Akin, a Republican who wants to challenge Democrat Claire McCaskall for her U.S. Senate seat and Republican Ed Martin, the St. Louis attorney who is running for state attorney general. I support them because they view many of the critical issues the same way I do and in a way that is consistent with God’s word.”

The Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United, called Hinkle’s statement misuse of religion for partisan political ends. Hinkle claims it was a personal endorsement.

“I believe the IRS should launch an immediate investigation,” Lynn said. “When church-goers put their money in the collection plate, they don’t expect it to be diverted to political purposes,” Lynn said.

He cited another instance when The Pathway endorsed Akin. That occurred in July 2012 when The Pathway published more than 100 names of current and former convention officials and pastors who endorsed Akin’s candidacy before the Missouri’s August 7 primary. Individuals who supported Akin’s opponents weren’t listed, Lynn said.

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