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August 16, 2012

  • NASA Plans Second Mars Mission

    NASA Plans Second Mars Mission Human mission set for the 2030s Charles F. Bolden, Jr.

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  • An Innocent Man Tries to Rebuild His Life

    An Innocent Man Tries to Rebuild His Life Sedrick Courtney, who spent 16 years in prison for a crime he didn’t commit, has been exonerated as a result of DNA evidence.

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  • Jackson is Being Treated for a Bipolar Disorder

    Jackson is Being Treated for a Bipolar Disorder U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr., is being treated for a bipolar disorder, officials of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., announced on Monday.

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  • Mississippi Has the Most Obese Residents

    Mississippi Has the Most Obese Residents Here are the states of fatness The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced on Monday that 12 states have very high obesity rates and that African Americans really need to step away from the table. The 12 states, where at least 30 percent of the adult population is obese, are: Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas and West Virginia. Mississippi, which is home to the nation’s largest black population, has the highest adult obesity rate.

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  • Fisk to Share Stieglitz Art

    Fisk to Share Stieglitz Art Fisk University has received a payment of $30 million as part of an agreement to share the Stieglitz Art Collection with the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Ark.

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  • FAMU to Provide Alternative to Band Performance During Halftime

    With its famous Marching “100” band prohibited from participating in this season’s football halftime shows, officials of Florida A&M University said they will provide alternative entertainment.

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  • Report: Schools Suspend Black Students at a High Rate

    Report: Schools Suspend Black Students at a High Rate by Frederick H. Lowe As students prepare to return to class for a new school year, a major university has released a blistering report that paints African Americans as poster children for out-of-school suspensions.

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  • Miss. District Runs School-to-Prison Pipeline

    Miss. District Runs School-to-Prison Pipeline The U.S. Justice Department on Friday reported that Meridian, Miss., operates a school-to-prison pipeline in which police arrested black students and jailed them for minor infractions such as dress-code violations.

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  • Drug Trafficking Explodes in 'Coup-Prone' Guinea-Bissau

    Drug Trafficking Explodes in 'Coup-Prone' Guinea-Bissau Special to the Trice Edney News Wire from GIN (TriceEdneyWire.com) – A massive drug trade in the West African coastal nation of Guinea-Bissau is worrying world leaders at the United Nations.

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  • Report: Sikh Temple Shooter Was a Skinhead

    Report: Sikh Temple Shooter Was a Skinhead Wade Michael Page, who shot and killed six members of the Sikh Temple in Wisconsin before turning the gun on himself, was a member of the Northern Hammerskin, one of the oldest, most-violent and most-dominant skinhead organizations in the United States, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups.

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  • Albert C. Freeman, Jr., 78

    Albert C. Freeman, Jr., 78 Albert C. Freeman, Jr., an actor and Howard University professor has died, university officials recently announced. He died Aug. 9. He was 78 years old.

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  • NYC Police Kill Man in Times Square

    New York City Police shot and killed on Saturday a knife-wielding man with a history of mental problems in Times Square. Police fired 15 shots at Darrius Kennedy, 51, hitting him at least seven times before he died.

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  • Defensive Player of the Year Kicked Off LSU Football Team

    Defensive Player of the Year Kicked Off LSU Football Team Last year’s Heismann Trophy finalist Tyrann “Honey Badger” Mathieu has been dismissed from the Louisiana State University football team for violating school and team rules.

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  • SuperPAC Calls President Obama a Bigot

    by Zenitha Prince (TriceEdneyWire.com) - A new SuperPAC has launched an ad campaign that accuses President Barack Obama of supporting racist behavior against whites.

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  • The NorthStar’s Week in Black History

    The NorthStar’s Week in Black History August 16 through August 22 August 16 1963 ----- The U. S. Postal Service offered for sale on this date a postage stamp, featuring the image of a broken chain, issued to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation.

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  • Romney Picks Ryan, Creating an All-White Male Team

    Romney Picks Ryan, Creating an All-White Male Team Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican nominee for president, has selected Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan as his running mate, creating an all-white-male team, which looks like an anachronism in the age of diversity.

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  • NAACP Gives Ryan All 'Fs'

    NAACP Gives Ryan All 'Fs' The "Comeback Team" Is the "Thowback Team" (TriceEdneyWire.com) - U. S. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), who has received consistent Fs on the NAACP Civil Rights report card, is Republican Mitt Romney’s pick for vice president.

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  • Advocates Will Appeal Photo-ID Ruling

    Advocates Will Appeal Photo-ID Ruling by Frederick H. Lowe Voting-rights advocates said they will appeal to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court a lower court decision upholding the commonwealth’s restrictive voter photo-ID law.

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  • Police Release “Re-enactment” Video

    Police Release “Re-enactment” Video The video is designed to back their claim that handcuffed man shot himself in the head Jonesboro, Ark.

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Dr. Roy Simon Bryce-Laporte
Dr. Roy Simon Bryce-Laporte

Roy Simon Bryce-Laporte, 78

Dr. Roy Simon Bryce-Laporte, a scholar of the African diaspora and black migration, died July 30 in a Maryland assisted-living center, where he had lived for the past two years after suffering a series of strokes. He was 78 years old.

Dr. Bryce-Laporte was the founding director in 1973 of the Research Institute on Immigration and Ethnic Studies at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. He also founded in 1969 the African American Studies Department at Yale University.

Dr. Laporte was born Sept. 9, 1933, in Panama City, Panama. He moved to the United States during the1950s and graduated in 1960 from the University of Nebraska, where he also earned a master’s degree in sociology. The University of California at Los Angeles awarded him in 1968 a doctorate in sociology.

Dr. Bryce-Laporte, who in 1989 became a member of the Sociology and Anthropolgy Department at Colgate University, is considered a pioneer in the study of black migration to the United States. He focused on historical studies about  African-Americans, African-Caribbeans and African-Hispanics, according to Colgate University’s website. He told the Washington Post that 2 million black people voluntarily immigrated to the United States between 1820 and 1980.

Dr. Bryce-Laporte was also director of the Africana and Latin Studies Program at Colgate, and he was a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of sociology and anthropology emeritus at the university.

Dr. Bryce-Laport is survived by his companion, Marian D. Holness, three children, a brother, two sisters and three grandchildren.

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