2011-10-28

Statement by the President on the Court Approval of the Settlement of the Black Farmers Lawsuit

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 28, 2011

President Obama: “The U.S. District Court’s approval of the settlement between the Department of Agriculture (USDA) and plaintiffs in the Pigford II class action lawsuit is another important step forward in addressing an unfortunate chapter in USDA’s civil rights history. This agreement will provide overdue relief and justice to African American farmers, and bring us closer to the ideals of freedom and equality that this country was founded on. I especially want to recognize the efforts of Secretary Vilsack and Attorney General Holder, without whom this settlement would not have been reached.”

Foreground Nature of Talk Radio and Emotional Intensity of Content Make it Desirable Environment for Advertisers

Story/Research by Talkers Magazine: http://www.talkers.com/talk-radio-research-project/

Continuing with a fall tradition, the latest numbers have been compiled for TALKERS magazine’s annual release of its Talk Radio Research ProjectTM (TRRP). 

Primarily designed as an in-house vehicle to provide the TALKERS editorial staff with intelligence about the national talk radio audience as a resource for general background and to help answer basic FAQs from the press (such as “What kind of people listen to talk radio?”), the publication began honoring requests from radio stations to share this information. 

It has proven extremely valuable as a supplemental sales tool that provides a thumbnail qualitative overview of several leading spoken word formats’ audience profiles including demographics, political orientation, income, education and consumer tastes, habits and disposition.  These include the mainstay news/talk format as well as the recent additions of the sports talk and pop culture talk genres. 

The latest figures indicate that news/talk radio maintains its historic position as the most reliable attraction to draw adult audiences and inspire them to action in all audio broadcast media.  So do the relatively recent additions of sports talk radio and pop culture talk radio (with several specific differences indigenous to these formats).  These spoken-word genres also deliver attentive and highly desirable audiences that consume foreground radio with passion and attention. 

The people who regularly listen to news/talk, sports talk and pop culture talk radio are more than listeners –– they are radio fans!  In a nutshell, the foreground nature of commercial spoken word radio indicates that sponsors receive approximately three times the bang per advertising buck on talk radio than they do on music radio.

Other interesting aspects of this illuminating information include: sports talk listeners are culturally (and ethnically) diverse.  Caucasians constitute only slightly more than half the sports talk audience (51%) followed by African Americans (26%) and Hispanics (19%) making it one of the most multi-ethnic/racial buys in radio.  This is a crucially important aspect/asset of the sports talk audience that for the most part is lost on advertising agencies and radio sales departments which are still glued to selling demos as opposed to mindsets. 

The ethnic diversity of sports talk radio’s listenership is a rare and valuable quality of the format that sets it apart from the rest of radio!  And if advertisers wish to reach “younger demos” via the power of spoken word, they simply need to turn to popular culture talk radio (still erroneously referred to as “shock jock” radio) strewn across the FM dial as talkative morning shows on otherwise music-formatted stations.
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2011-10-27

CLYBURN STATEMENT ON ECONOMIC GROWTH REPORT

As the government reported today that the U.S. economy grew at a rate of 2.5 percent in the third quarter of this year, House Assistant Democratic Leader James E. Clyburn released the following statement:
"Today's report shows encouraging growth and signs that America's economy may be emerging from the worst recession in modern times, and that's certainly good news. But the recent report from the Congressional Budget Office shows we have much work to do to address the widening wealth gap that exists between the top one percent and everyone else.

As our economy continues to recover, we must focus on jobs and the needs of working families and make sure that everyone who is willing to work hard can have a decent shot at the American Dream."

Metro Networks, Clear Channel Cuts Coming

Story by DCRTV

DCRTV is hearing rumblings of cuts coming to Metro Networks in Silver Spring. And at parent Clear Channel stations nationwide. We should know more tomorrow, Wednesday.

On the way out, for sure, at Metro is John Frawley, VP of broadcasting, and Mollie Simpkins, a regional director of operations. No word on the fate of Jim Russ, head honcho at Metro's Silver Spring facility. Metro provides traffic and news reports for many DC and Baltimore area radio and TV stations.

A Metro source tells DCRTV that they should be categoried as "changes" rather than "cuts."

As for the Clear Channel cuts locally, no names yet. But the firm owns about a dozen radio stations in the immediate DC-Baltimore area.

Clear Channel staffs up National Programming Unit

Story by Inside Radio

On the heels of a massive wave of layoffs in its small and medium markets yesterday, Clear Channel Radio announced a series of appointments in its new National Programming Platforms division this morning. The new division will deliver content to the company’s on-air, digital and live event platforms.

Chief among the new appointments are five VPs, including veteran consultant Guy Zapoleon, who joins as VP of digital music programming. The four others are Dennis Clark (talent development), Zena Burns (digital programming platforms), Darren Pfeffer, (music & entertainment marketing) and Alissa Pollack (EVP of integrated music marketing). All positions are effective immediately.

Recently named president of national programming platforms Tom Poleman is in charge of the division, which will focus on developing on-air and digital programming content and live events for Clear Channel’s 850 stations. The division also includes Clear Channel’s programming operations center and its Premium Choice network, which imports and exports programming from region to region, market to market and station to station. Those continue to be helmed by SVP/GM of national programming platforms Darren Davis.

“This division will enable us to be even more relevant and effective for our audiences, partners and advertisers, and build our national scale and reach by putting together products, events and relationships that nobody else can,” Poleman says.

Zapoleon joins from his Zapoleon Media Strategies consultancy, tasked with contributing to the programming of the recently relaunched iHeartRadio with a focus on its 80 digital-only stations. Based in Boston, Zapoleon will also collaborate with the Clear Channel Digital team to combine the company’s custom radio algorithm with the expertise of its radio programmers. He began his career in Los Angeles at oldies KRTH as the station’s first music director. Zapoleon’s 30-year career includes programming KRQQ, Tucson, Pittsburgh’s B94 and KZZP, Phoenix and serving as national PD for the former Nationwide Communications. He’s credited with developing the nation’s first hot AC at “Mix 96.5” KHMX, Houston.

As VP of talent, Clark will work directly with key personalities, while creating a company-wide strategy to develop future talent. He also will contribute improvement initiatives across the company. Clark started his radio career at KIIS-FM, Los Angeles in 1986 as a staff producer for “Rick Dees in the Morning” and “Rick Dees' Weekly Top 40.” In 1995, he joined The Research Group where he became a strategic research consultant based in Europe. In 1999, he launched Dennis Clark Consulting, specializing in talent development and personality training. Clark returned to KIIS in 2005 as executive producer for the “On Air With Ryan Seacrest” morning show.

New York-based VP of digital programming platforms Burns will oversee national digital programming content and social content integration, including editorial, artist interviews, syndicated features, artist integration programs and exclusive iHeartRadio Music Festival content. Since 2006, Burns has worked as online PD for the company’s New York cluster. Prior to that Burns was entertainment director for TEEN People Magazine and the managing editor of TeenPeople.com at Time Inc.

As VP of music & entertainment marketing, New York-based Pfeffer, a 15-year Clear Channel vet, will be responsible for company-wide promotions and events, such as the iHeartRadio Music Festival. He’ll also create best practices and synergies around local station concerts, such as Z100’s Jingle Ball in New York. Pfeffer and Poleman were the executive producers for the recent iHeartRadio Music Festival. Most recently director of marketing for the company’s New York stations, Pfeffer began working at Clear Channel in 1995 as an intern in the promotions department at “Z100” WHTZ, New York.

`Pollack, currently EVP of integrated music marketing at CC-owned airplay monitoring service Mediabase, expands her role to work more closely with the national executive programming team in linking Clear Channel capabilities with artist and advertiser relationships. Remaining based in New York, Pollack will continue to oversee label business for Mediabase, online music testing service Rate the Music and M-score, which gauges music performance based on PPM data licensed from Arbitron. Another Z100 alumnus, Pollack began her career as an intern at the station in 1991 before becoming producer for the former “Love Phones” syndicated show. She joined Premiere Radio Networks, which houses Mediabase, as a regional marketing director in 1997.

Other appointments announced by Clear Channel include Marissa Morris as manager of artist relations and promotions. Morris will coordinate artist integration programs, promotions and events. And Melissa Webb as senior director, tasked project management and analysis across the National Programming Platforms department.

Cumulus Los Angeles Cuts Include Legendary Jock Jim Ladd.


So far the cuts at Cumulus’ Los Angeles stations have not affected any air talent at news/talk KABC. Production directors at both KABC and KLOS-FM – Howard Hoffman and Mike Sherry, respectively – are out as is KLOS-FM program director Bob Buchmann.

But Southern California radio fans are shocked to find legendary jock Jim Ladd – ironically, the subject of Tom Petty’s “The Last DJ” – has been sacked. The 63-year-old Ladd received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2005.

CLYBURN STATEMENT ON PRESIDENT OBAMA’S STUDENT LOAN PLAN


WASHINGTON, DC – Assistant Democratic Leader James E. Clyburn today issued the following statement on the announcement of President Obama’s initiatives to assist Americans with the repayment of their student loans. The President’s plan moves up the implementation of a Congressionally-passed plan that links loan repayments to the income of the borrower and lowers the payment cap to 10 percent. It caps the terms of loan repayment to 20 years and encourages loan consolidation at lower interest rates.

“We need to support smart investment in education to build ladders of opportunity for people who are working harder and harder and struggling to get by with little or no real hope of ever getting ahead. The wealth gap continues to widen in this country.

The Congressional Budget Office recently reported that over the last 28 years, those in the top one percent have enjoyed a staggering 275 percent gain in income while folks in the middle 60 percent have seen their incomes grow by 40 percent and those in the lower 20 percent have experienced an income gain of only 18 percent. Working families are falling farther and farther behind and deserve a better shot at the American Dream.

“For far too many families today, the cost of higher education has meant daunting debt and endless loan repayments, so I welcome President Obama’s plan to ease the burden of student loans. These common sense solutions will make a real difference for people struggling in this tough economy.”

2011-10-26

Clear Channel Reduction In Force Begins

Story by All Access

ALL ACCESS confirms that the rumored CLEAR CHANNEL "reduction in force" is underway. It seems as if this is taking place primarily in the smaller markets, so far -- with a few exceptions.

One outgoing programmer told ALL ACCESS, "They simply told me that programming would be delivered in a different manner, eliminating the need for my position."

A CLEAR CHANNEL spokesperson told ALL ACCESS the reason for the RIF, "We're launching a new strategy for our regional market radio stations that will improve local programming in smaller markets by using assets and resources in those markets that their competitors don't have. It reflects new approaches to programming, talent, technology and other valuable resources -- based on CLEAR CHANNEL's most effective and efficient stations.

"The new strategy leverages CLEAR CHANNEL RADIO's unmatched resources to serve our local listeners, advertisers and communities better -- there will be more localization, not less. At the same time, it offers new opportunities for our best on-air and programming talent to be heard in more places and grow their careers. This new strategy is about doing things differently to help our company grow faster.

"We looked at all our regional market stations with a fresh eye to determine how we could respond to the challenges of the marketplace and deliver a much better product to listeners than we have in the past -- and better than our competitors can provide. With this new strategy, we'll also generate higher ratings for our advertisers and marketing partners and give our best people bigger roles."

CLEAR CHANNEL declined to comment on specific names or totals of persons leaving the company. But ALL ACCESS is hearing an estimate that it's "many hundreds of folks" who are part of the RIF.

Propofol Expert testifies in Dr. Conrad Murray trial

Westwood One Founder Norm Pattiz says W.O. first program was a Motown special, inspired from listening to Los Angeles R/B radio station KGFJ's Motown Marathon

Norm Pattiz

Story by: Talkers Magazine

During his special remarks at last week’s historic Los Angeles Regional Talkers Forum,Westwood One founder, and current CEO of Courtside Entertainment Norm Pattiz shared the story of the early days of the ground breaking syndication firm that he started in one office in Westwood back in the late 1970s.

Telling the packed house of talk media professionals that he launched the company with “$10,000 and a working wife,” Pattiz describes how his background as a well-connected former L.A. television sales manager served to bring sponsorships to packaged radio programs — thus shifting the network radio business model from a direct cash to barter system and opening the door to the tremendous growth that followed.

Patiz talks about Westwood One’s first show being an urban radio cross-over Motown special stating, “Being a television guy and not a radio guy, I didn’t know the rules of radio and if you don’t know the rules, you can’t be limited by them.” Pattiz’s speech can be seen exclusively on TALKERS TV. If you are using a mobile device, click here to view the video.

2011-10-25

Al Sharpton interviews Michael Moore on Occupy Wall Street


President Obama Re-Finance Plan for mortgages underwater


The White House

Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release October 24, 2011

Remarks by the President on the Economy and Housing

Private Residence, Las Vegas, Nevada

2:15 P.M. PDT


THE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon, everybody.


AUDIENCE: Good afternoon!


THE PRESIDENT: Thank you for letting me block your driveways. (Laughter.)


AUDIENCE MEMBER: You’re welcome.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, it is wonderful to be with all of you. And I want to thank Jose and Lissette and their wonderful children for letting us set up right in front of their house, and we just had a wonderful visit.

Without a doubt, the most urgent challenge that we face right now is getting our economy to grow faster and to create more jobs. I know it; the people of Nevada know it; and I think most Americans also understand that the problems we face didn't happen overnight and so we’re not going to solve them all overnight either. What people don’t understand, though, is why some elected officials in Washington don’t seem to share the same sense of urgency that people all around the country are.

Last week, for the second time this month, Republicans in the Senate blocked a jobs bill from moving forward -- a bill that would have meant nearly 400,000 teachers, firefighters, and first responders being back on the job. It was the kind of proposal that in the past, at least, Republicans and Democrats have supported. It was paid for, and it was supported by an overwhelming majority of the American people. But they still said no.

Your senator, Majority Leader Harry Reid, he’s been fighting nonstop to help get the economy going. But he’s not getting some help from some of the members of the Nevada delegation. So we need them to get their act together. Because the truth is, the only way that we can truly attack our economic challenges, the only way we can put hundreds of thousands of people back to work right now is with bold action from Congress.

That’s why I’m going to keep forcing these senators to vote on common-sense, paid-for jobs proposals. But last month, when I addressed a joint session of Congress about our jobs crisis, I also said that I intend to do everything in my power to act on behalf of the American people -- with or without Congress.

So I’m here to say to all of you -- and to say to the people of Nevada and the people of Las Vegas -- we can’t wait for an increasingly dysfunctional Congress to do its job. Where they won’t act, I will.

In recent weeks, we decided to stop waiting for Congress to fix No Child Left Behind, and decided to give states the flexibility they need to help our children meet higher standards. We took steps on our own to reduce the time it takes for small businesses to get paid when they have a contract with the federal government. And without any help from Congress, we eliminated outdated regulations that will save hospitals and patients billions of dollars.

Now, these steps aren’t substitutes for the bold action that we need to create jobs and grow the economy, but they will make a difference. So we’re not going to wait for Congress.

I’ve told my administration to keep looking every single day for actions we can take without Congress -- steps that can save consumers money, make government more efficient and responsive, and help heal the economy. And we’re going to be announcing these executive actions on a regular basis.

Now, today what I want to focus on is housing, which is something obviously on the minds of a lot of folks here in Nevada. Probably the single greatest cause of the financial crisis and this brutal recession has been the housing bubble that burst four years ago. Since then, average home prices have fallen by nearly 17 percent. Nationwide, more than 10 million homeowners are underwater. That means that they owe more on their homes than those houses are worth. And here in Las Vegas, the city that’s been hit hardest of all, almost the entire housing market is under severe stress.

Now, this is a painful burden for middle-class families. And it’s also a drag on our economy. When a home loses its value, a family loses a big chunk of their wealth. Paying off mortgage debt means that consumers are spending less and businesses are making less and jobs are harder to come by. And as long as this goes on, our recovery can’t take off as quickly as it would after a normal recession.

So the question is not whether or not we do something about it -- we have to do something about it. The question is, what do we do and how fast do we move? One idea that I’ve proposed is contained in the jobs act that is before Congress right now, and it’s called Project Rebuild.

A lot of homeowners in neighborhoods like this one have watched the values of their home decline not just because the housing bubble burst, but also because of the foreclosure sign next door, or the vacant home across the street. Right now, there are hundreds of thousands of vacant homes like these and more than a million unemployed construction workers. That doesn’t make any sense when there’s work to be done and there are workers ready to do it.

So Project Rebuild connects the two by helping the private sector put construction workers to work rehabilitating vacant or abandoned homes and businesses all across the country. That will help stabilize home prices in communities like this one. And it will help families like the Bonillas to buy a new home and build a nest egg.

This is something that Congress can pass right now, because it’s in the jobs bill. We will put construction workers back to work and we will rebuild homes all across Nevada and all across the country.

If Congress passes this jobs bill, we can get Project Rebuild moving right away. If Congress acts, then people in Nevada and all across the country can get significant relief. But remember what I said. We can’t just wait for Congress. Until they act, until they do what they need to do, we’re going to act on our own, because we can’t wait for Congress to help our families and our economy.

Over the past two years, we’ve already taken some steps to help families refinance their mortgages. Nearly one million Americans with little equity in their homes have gotten assistance so far. And we’ve also made it easier for unemployed homeowners to keep their homes while they’re looking for a job. And we’re working to turn vacant properties into rental housing, which will help reduce the supply of unsold homes and stabilize housing prices here in Las Vegas and all across the country.

But we can do more. There are still millions of Americans who have worked hard and acted responsibly, paying their mortgage payments on time. But now that their homes are worth less than they owe on their mortgage, they're having trouble getting refinancing even though mortgage rates are at record lows.

So that's going to soon change. Last month, I directed my economic team to work with the Federal Housing Finance Agency -- or FHFA -- and their partners in the housing industry to identify barriers to refinancing, knock those barriers down, and explore every option available to help many American homeowners to refinance.

And today, I am pleased to announce that the agency that is in charge is going to be taking a series of steps to help responsible homeowners refinance and take advantage of low mortgage rates. So let me just name those steps.

Number one, the barrier will be lifted that prohibits responsible homeowners from refinancing if their home values have fallen so low that what they owe on their mortgage is 25 percent higher than the current value of their home. And this is critically important for a place like Las Vegas, where home values have fallen by more than 50 percent over the past five years.

So let me just give you an example. If you've got a $250,000 mortgage at 6 percent interest rates, but the value of your home has fallen below $200,000, right now you can’t refinance. You’re ineligible. But that’s going to change. If you meet certain requirements, you will have the chance to refinance at lower rates, which could save you hundreds of dollars a month, and thousands of dollars a year on mortgage payments.

Second, there are going to be lower closing costs, and certain refinancing fees will be eliminated -- fees that can sometimes cancel out the benefits of refinancing altogether, so people don't bother to refinance because they've got all these fees that they have to pay. Well, we're going to try to knock away some of those fees.

Third, there's going to be more competition so that consumers can shop around for the best rates. Right now, some underwater homeowners have no choice but to refinance with their original lender -- and some lenders, frankly, just refuse to refinance. So these changes are going to encourage other lenders to compete for that business by offering better terms and rates, and eligible homeowners are going to be able to shop around for the best rates and the best terms.

So you take these things together, this is going to help a lot more homeowners refinance at lower rates, which means consumers save money, those families save money, it gets those families spending again. And it also makes it easier for them to make their mortgage payments, so that they don't lose their home and bring down home values in the neighborhood.

And I'm going to keep on doing everything in my power to help to stabilize the housing market, grow the economy, accelerate job growth, and restore some of the security that middle-class families have felt slipping away for more than a decade.

Now, let me just say this in closing. These steps that I’ve highlighted today, they're not going to solve all the problems in the housing market here in Nevada or across the country. Given the magnitude of the housing bubble and the huge inventory of unsold homes in places like Nevada, it's going to take time to solve these challenges. We still need Congress to pass the jobs bill. We still need them to move forward on Project Rebuild so we can have more homes like this, and wonderful families having an opportunity to live out the American Dream.

But even if we do all those things, the housing market is not going to be fully healed until the unemployment rate comes down and the inventory of homes on the market also comes down. But that's no excuse for inaction. That's no excuse for just saying “no” to Americans who need help right now. It's no excuse for all the games and the gridlock that we’ve been seeing in Washington.

People out here don’t have a lot of time or a lot of patience for some of that nonsense that's been going on in Washington. If any member of Congress thinks there are no unemployed workers or no down-on-their-luck neighborhoods in their district that would benefit from the proposals in the jobs bill, then they better think again. They should come and talk to the families out here in Nevada. These members of Congress who aren’t doing the right thing right now, they still have a chance to take meaningful action to put people back to work, and to help middle-class families and homeowners like the Bonillas.

But we can’t wait for that action. I'm not going to wait for it. So I’m going to keep on taking this message across the country. Where we don't have to wait for Congress, we're just going to go ahead and act on our own. And we're going to keep on putting pressure on Congress to do the right thing for families all across the country. And I am confident that the American people want to see action. We know what to do. The question is whether we're going to have the political will to do it.

All right? So thank you so much, everybody. God bless you. God bless the United States of America. Thanks for welcoming me to your neighborhood. (Applause.)

2011-10-24

Gadhafi's Heirs: Dead Dictator's Sons Speak Out

story by ABC News
written by Jeffrey Kofman and Kevin Dolak

Just one of Moammar Gadhafi's eight children is still unaccounted for following the Libyan dictator's death last week, and although he is currently wanted by the International Criminal Court, Libya's former heir apparent is still trying to reclaim his father's glory.

Saif Al-Islam Gadhafi, the London-educated son who was to succeed his father and carry on the dynasty is possibly still at large. Libya's interim government had said he was captured this weekend, but at the very same time the 39-year-old appeared on Syrian television.

"We continue our resistance. I'm in Libya, alive, free and intend to go to the very end and exact revenge," Saif Al-Islam Gadhafi was heard saying on Syrian TV. "I say go to hell, you rats and NATO behind you. This is our country, we live in it, and we die in it and we are continuing the struggle."

The short message was broadcast on Syrian TV station Al-Rai on Sunday and was soon uploaded by several users onto YouTube. It's not clear if the audio-only message was broadcast live or was a recording. The Al-Rai station broadcasts into Libya, and in the past has broadcast messages from Moammar Gadhafi.

As the hunt for Saif intensifies, his brother Saadi Gadhafi, who escaped the country in September as rebel forces began to close in, has publicly lashed out about the death of his father and brother.

Under house arrest in Nigeria, Saadi issued a blistering condemnation of the way his father was treated after capture.

"These barbaric executions and the grotesque abuse of the corpses make it clear that no person affiliated with the former regime will receive a fair trial in Libya," he said through his publicist.

As news and video footage of his death surfaced, the United Nations' High Commission for Human Rights called for an investigation into the events surrounding his death; though video seems to show him in rebel custody, he allegedly died in "crossfire."

Libya's acting Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril said that he would not oppose a full investigation under international supervision into his death, according to The Associated Press.

The fate of one of Gadhafi's other sons, Moutassim Gadhafi, is quite clear however: his body now lies with his father's on display in a meat refrigerator for all of Libya to see.

"This is his destiny because of all the evil he has done," one Libyan spectator said after lining up to see for himself the body of the man who ruled Libya for 42 years and his fifth son.

All of the dictator's eight children lived their lives as lavishly and as ruthlessly as their father.

Three of the Gadhafi children -- Moutassim, Khamis and Said al-Arab -- have been killed in the revolution. Three more, Hannibal, Mohammed and Gadhafi's only daughter Aisha – once called the Claudia Schiffer of North Africa -- are now living in exile in Algeria with Gadhafi's wife Safia.

Across Libya there is little sympathy for anyone in the Gadhafi family. The interim government officially declared the country liberated this weekend, and has promised to bring democracy.

While celebratory gunshots rang out across the capital of Tripoli, it has been one non-stop party as Libya begins its transition to democracy. A new interim government is expected to be declared within a month, with elections for a constitutional assembly expected within eight months.

2011-10-22

Radio One Detroit Closes Local Marketing Agreement to Operate WGPR FM 107.5

Story by PR Newswire

Radio One, Inc.'s Detroit market has entered into a Local Marketing Agreement (LMA) to assume operating responsibility for WGPR FM 107.5. Radio One Detroit will be moving its HOT Hip Hop and R&B station 102.7 to its new home on 107.5 effective Monday, October 24, 2011 at 12:01am.

President Obama's Weekly Address: Bringing Home Our Troops -- October 22, 2011

President Obama discusses how the death of Moammar Qadhafi in Libya and the announcement that troops from Iraq will return home by the end of the year are strong reminders that the United States has renewed its leadership in the world.

2011-10-21

President Obama Has Ended the War in Iraq


Story by White House
Written by Matt Compton

In 2008, in the height of the presidential campaign, then-Senator Obama made a promise to give our military a new mission: ending the war in Iraq.

As the election unfolded, he reiterated this pledge again and again -- but cautioned that we would be "as careful getting out of Iraq as we were careless getting in."

Last year, the President made progress toward achieving that goal. He brought an end to the combat mission in Iraq, and through the course of the past 14 months, more than 100,000 troops have returned to their families.

Now, that promise will be wholly fulfilled. Today, President Obama announced that the rest of our troops will be home by the holidays:

Over the next two months, our troops in Iraq—tens of thousands of them—will pack up their gear and board convoys for the journey home. The last American soldiers will cross the border out of Iraq—with their heads held high, proud of their success, and knowing that the American people stand united in our support for our troops. That is how America’s military efforts in Iraq will end.

But this moment represents more than an accomplishment for the President. It marks a monumental change of focus for our military and a fundamental shift in the way that our nation will engage in the world:

The United States is moving forward, from a position of strength. The long war in Iraq will come to an end by the end of this year. The transition in Afghanistan is moving forward, and our troops are finally coming home. As they do, fewer deployments and more time training will help keep our military the very best in the world. And as we welcome home our newest veterans, we’ll never stop working to give them and their families the care, the benefits, and the opportunities that they have earned.

It’s Hamer Time! - Commentary by Raynard Jackson

Commentary by Raynard Jackson

Fannie Lou Hamer (pronounced hay-mer) was one of the unsung pillars of the civil rights movement in the U.S. She was a phenomenal woman—a woman of great determination and great purpose. She was not one to hold back her feelings, especially when fighting for equality.

In 1964 she was elected Vice-Chair of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP). Their stated purpose was to challenge Mississippi’s all-white delegation to the Democratic National Convention (DNC) which was held in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

Democratic President, Lyndon Johnson was furious that a group of Blacks would challenge the Democratic Party and interfere with his reelections plans. Johnson often referred to Hamer as “that illiterate woman.”

Out of desperation, Johnson sent top Democratic Party officials to negotiate with the MFDP, most notably, Senator Hubert Humphrey from Minnesota (he was lobbying very hard for Johnson to choose him as his running mate for Vice President).

Johnson offered to give the MFDP two non-voting seats at the upcoming convention in exchange for their silence and had secured the endorsement of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).

Humphrey had indicated to the group that if the group didn’t agree to this deal, Johnson would not choose him as his running mate. Hamer was always considered the moral conscious of the group and here is her response to Humphrey: “Do you mean to tell me that your position is more important than four hundred thousand black people's lives? Senator Humphrey, I know lots of people in Mississippi who have lost their jobs trying to register to vote. I had to leave the plantation where I worked in Sunflower County, Mississippi.

Now if you lose this job of Vice-President because you do what is right, because you help the MFDP, everything will be all right. God will take care of you. But if you take [the nomination] this way, why, you will never be able to do any good for civil rights, for poor people, for peace, or any of those things you talk about. Senator Humphrey, I'm going to pray to Jesus for you."

As a result of her principled stand, Hamer was excluded from future negotiations. Johnson was so afraid of Hamer that he pressured the MFDP to agree to allow the DNC to select the two delegates to be seated in order to prevent Hamer from being chosen. The MFDP ultimately rejected the proposed deal.

But what does that say about the rest of the leadership of the MFDP—that they would allow their “moral conscious” from attending future meetings?

Black leadership, those sanctioned by whites, have always been easy to silence because they have no conscious. They want to be liked. They want to seen in photographs.

Of all of her many accomplishments, she was best known for what would eventually be the epitaph that would be written on the tombstone on her grave: “I am sick and tired of being sick and tired."

Where are the Fannie Lou Hamers of today? I cannot imagine Hamer allowing Obama, Pelosi and Reid to get away with their total disregard of issues of concern to the Black community. I can’t imagine her “cutting a deal” just to get an invitation to the White House are to be seen standing next to someone in power. She never lost sight of the goal.

Hamer had very little leverage, other than moral suasion, to use against Johnson and the Democrats; but yet forced the DNC to change their platform for the 1968 election. Today, Blacks have money, votes, and media; but lack the will to use moral suasion or any other means to affect change.

The supposed Black leaders of today seem only to be concerned about being invited to the White House for a photo opportunity. Black Elected officials are too afraid of criticizing Obama. But what are they afraid of? Obama hasn’t given them anything that he could take away from them! Yet, in my private conversations with many of these people, they constantly complain about how Obama is ignoring them and their issues.

Are they not “sick and tired of being sick and tired?”

California representative Maxine Waters is one of the few elected officials to publically criticize Obama, but she also apologizes to him in the same sentence.

So, to all my Black Democratic friends, I challenge you to get on the phone to your Black leaders and all the Democratic Party officials and let them know in no uncertain terms that “it’s Hamer time!”
_____________________________________________________________________

Raynard Jackson is president & CEO of Raynard Jackson & Associates, LLC., a D.C.-public relations/government affairs firm. He is also a contributing editor for ExcellStyle Magazine (www.excellstyle.com), Freedom’s Journal Magazine (www.freedomsjournal.net), and U.S. Africa Magazine (www.usafricaonline.com).

2011-10-20

Gaddafi's Libyan rule

Syndication One News-Talk Network's photographs from the King Memorial Dedication

Keynote Speaker of the King Memorial Dedication was President Barack Obama, here joined by the First Lady, Vice President Biden, Dr. Jill Biden, President of the MLK National Memorial Project Foundation Harry Johnson, and Secretary Salazar of the Interior to honor Martin Luther King Jr. during the dedication ceremony for the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial “Four more years” was shouted by the crowd when President Obama was introduced as keynote speaker by Harry Johnson (photo by WH Photographer Pete Souza).

The co-founder of the SCLC with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Fred Shuttlesworth was 90 year old Rev. Joseph Lowery, who speaks of his days with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (photo credit Syndication One News-Talk Networks' Ty Smith)

Former US Ambassador and Atlanta Mayor, and key organizer for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., spoke of his days with Rev. King at Morehouse College, and in the civil rights movement. Young was on the balcony at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis on April 4th 1968 when King was assassinated.(photo credit Ty Smith)

The surviving member of Dr. King’s siblings is his older sister Christine King Farris, who shares moments about her younger brother, including the day Martin was born at home in Atlanta, Ga.(photo credit Ty Smith)


Rev. Dr. King’s daughter Rev. Beatrice King speaks of how proud she was of her father and the unfinished work that needs to be done (Photo Credit Ty Smith).

King Monument (photo by Ty Smith)

Syndication One News-Talk Network’s talk show host and civil rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton delivers a fiery speech that moved the crowd to its' feet, reminding all that the King Memorial is ours to cherish, but King’s dream toward complete equality continues. (photo by Ty Smith)
King Memorial Program Backdrop (photo by Ty Smith)

Former CBS anchor and reporter Dan Rather talks about the great respect he had for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (photo by Ty Smith)

Bryant Gumbel: David Stern Is Eager to be Viewed as a ‘Plantation Overseer’

Bryant Gumbel


“Finally, tonight, if the NBA lockout is going to be resolved any time soon, it seems likely to be done in spite of David Stern, not because of him,” Gumbel said. “I say that because the NBA’s infamously egocentric commissioner seems more hellbent lately on demeaning the players rather than his game’s labor impasse.

“How else to explain Stern’s rants in recent days? To any and everyone who would listen, he has alternately knocked union leader Billy Hunter, said the players were getting inaccurate information, and started sounding ‘Chicken Little’ claims about what games might be lost if players didn’t soon see things his way.

“Stern’s version of what has been going on behind closed doors has of course been disputed, but his efforts were typical of a commissioner who has always seemed eager to be viewed as some kind of modern plantation overseer, treating NBA men as if they were his boys. It’s part of Stern’s M.O., like his past self-serving edicts on dress code or the questioning of officials. His moves were intended to do little more than show how he’s the one keeping the hired hands in their place.

“Some will of course cringe at that characterization but Stern’s disdain for the players is as palpable and pathetic as his motives are transparent. Yes, the NBA’s business model is broken. But to fix it, maybe the league’s commissioner should concern himself most with the solution and stop being part of the problem.”

Al Jazeera reports that Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi is dead

 Muammar Gadhafi had been on the run since the capital, Tripoli, fell two months ago

Al Jazeera has acquired exclusive footage of the body of Muammar Gadhafi after he was killed in his hometown, Sirte.

Abdul Hakim Belhaj, an NTC military chief, said Gadhafi had died of his wounds after being captured near Sirte on Thursday.

The body of the former Libyan leader was taken to a location which is being kept secret for security reasons, an NTC official said.

"Gadhafi's body is with our unit in a car and we are taking the body to a secret place for security reasons," Mohamed Abdel Kafi, an NTC official in the city of Misrata, told Reuters news agency.
Read more »

Arbitron to eliminate cell-phone targets

story by Inside Radio

Having "cell-phone-only" (CPO) households in a research sample has long been seen as critical because they are believed to behave differently than persons living in landline households. But as mobile phone usage patterns change and Arbitron evolves to address-based sampling in PPM markets, CPO targets will be phased out.

2011-10-18

Blacks Leaving Historic Neighborhoods To Return South

story in the Huffington Post
written by Trymaine Lee
photo by the Library of Congress

CHICAGO — Nearly seven decades ago, James Middleton was just a toddler when he watched a white man shoot and kill a black man in the little town of Lambert, Mississippi.

He had tagged along with his father to run errands and, giddy with excitement, sat in his daddy's Ford as they pulled up to a local restaurant. There was a commotion out front —a family friend arguing with the eatery's white owner, who had a pistol in his hand.

"You nigger!" Middleton recalls the white man shouting. "I'll kill you!"

The friend ran. Gunshots followed.

"I looked down and I could see this man, still trying to breathe, and blood was coming out of his chest," says Middleton. "I don't like to remember bad things. But it seemed like bad things were always happening to black folks."

Middleton's baptism in Southern violence was a consequence of being black at a time and place of cradle-to-grave segregation and senseless death. The specter of violence and inequality that his family endured eventually drove them more than 600 miles north to Chicago, making them a ripple in the wave of millions of blacks who fled the South in search of a better life.

They moved into a little place on Chicago's West Side with other working-class blacks. (The South Side, he said, was reserved for the more well-to-do and professional set). They joined a network of relatives, friends and other migrants.

The Middletons were among an estimated six million blacks to flee the South between 1915 and 1970, to northern cities like Chicago, Philadelphia, New York City, Detroit and Los Angeles in the west. They found work on automobile assembly lines or in manufacturing plants and factories in the industrial North. They laid roots, raised families and gave their children opportunities that many could never have imagined for themselves back home.

But today, generations later, amid higher costs of living, concerns over crime and what many perceive as too few job opportunities in those same cities, African Americans are returning to the South in the largest numbers since the first Great Migration, according to sociologists and those who have studied the new migration. During the 1940s, roughly 1.5 million blacks migrated to the North. Between 2000 and 2010, an estimated 1,336,097 blacks moved to seven major southern cities alone, according to the Brookings Institute, which compiled the most recent data from the U.S. Census.


THE NEW DEMOGRAPHICS

Former magnets for black migrants, including Illinois, Michigan, New York and California, all have had black population declines. Atlanta has even overtaken Chicago as the city with the second-largest black population behind New York City. The black population in Atlanta has grown in the past decade by 473,493. In Dallas it grew by 233,890, and in Houston by 214,928 over the same period. Today, 57 percent of the country's black population lives in the South, a 50-year high, according to the most recent census data.

Today's migrants are chasing the same things their forebears sought decades earlier, according to those who have studied the return migration. Others are retiring or returning to familial homesteads, reclaiming land their relatives never let loose.

"There are places like Harlem that no longer have majority black populations because many of the black folks who have lived there for the last 50 or so years have decided to cash in, and they are going to live somewhere more affordable, places that don't come with the urban baggage that maybe we didn't ever want but put up with because this was our best chance at a solid economic future," said Khalil Muhammad, director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, part of the New York Public Library and renowned for its collections of historic artifacts. "Those people are going to places that look just the way they want them to look. They are not going to be shackled by a political nationalism or the segregation of the past."

Meanwhile, Chicago has lost about 181,000 African Americans over the past decade, a drop of 17 percent. Many have fled to the Chicago suburbs. But to a greater extent, who is leaving and where they're going is difficult to determine, according to demographers. But Brookings Institute reports that these new migrants tend to be financially stable and more educated. Many are students, professionals or retirees.

James Middleton, who is 72, and his wife of 53 years, Barbara, have a grown son, now living in Houston, and a granddaughter in Chicago who is considering moving to the South or West, they say -- an indicator of just how much less promise many see in what was once the "promised land" of the North.

"At that time there wasn't a lot of differences between there and here, in terms of the way people took care of their families," Middleton says of Chicago when he first arrived. "It was simple. We stayed with relatives, and other relatives had relatives, so you were always around people that was concerned about you."

"It was a vast difference between how things are today and how things were then," he adds. "Then it was like that saying, it took a village to raise a child. Everyone chipped in, whether they were neighbors or not. Now the professionals, the school teachers ... they are trying to get away."


THE END OF EXILE

During the summers of her youth, Sherry Williams and her siblings relished the trips back "home" from Chicago to Inverness, Miss., where they ran free and spent lazy summer days by the local fishing hole, living, if only for a few weeks, an idyllic country life.

Those connections still run deep in Williams' family and in other families whose roots stretch back to the South.

"For the most part, most of the people who I know that have started to return to the South, their mindset is that they never were Chicagoans," says Williams, 51, who was born in Chicago but whose mother left Inverness in 1942. "They physically lived here, but really, they truly believe the South is home, and that this is just the place that they moved to seeking work and absolutely for the opportunity to vote, attend better schools and just better themselves."

She said that many of the children of those migrants found themselves financially strapped. "But back home, the family has always had that land, that 'heir property' that many people find themselves going to," Williams says. Her family still owns a home and some land in Mississippi, which a revolving cast of cousins has occupied off and on.

Williams' daughter, Joi Tucker, 20, a third-year student at Alcorn State in Lorman, Miss., said she chose to leave Chicago because life is "definitely a lot easier" in the South. She said she plans on staying there after she graduates to attend graduate school and find work there. She says she's "courting" Alabama, Tennessee and Atlanta.

"It's kind of like a sci-fi movie," Tucker says. "You go home and see people just disappearing."


"AIN'T GOING BACK"

Quinn Chapel A.M.E church is Chicago's oldest black congregation. During the Civil War era it played a pivotal role in the abolitionist movement and Underground Railroad. On a recent afternoon, more than a dozen men and women, many with graying hair, met for Bible study. Many were born in the South, in Mississippi, Georgia or Tennessee.

"Oh, I've seen the change, people moving back," says Dorothy Cunningham, 83, who was raised in Memphis but moved to Chicago with her family when she was 13.

Her church has seen its ranks dwindle amid generational and geographic shifts, as well as the closing of nearby public housing complexes. Cunningham has spoken with family or friends, and she says that they've told her that one downside to moving South is culture shock for the younger children and teens unused to the social mores and the slower pace of life there.

Still, while many African Americans have opted to return "home" to the South, there are still some who intend to stay in the North. They say they have left the Old South behind, and they're unconvinced the New South has much more to offer.

"I left a long time ago," says Mack Sevier, owner of Uncle John's Barbecue, a little no-table joint on the south side of the city. Sevier moved from Augusta, Ark., on May 18, 1962, the day he graduated from high school. "I ain't going back," he says.

Sevier says he found exactly what he was looking for: the opportunity to be his own boss. He occasionally goes back down South, he says, usually to pick up favorite foods, like the southern-grown sweet potatoes he uses to make his pies.

Bronzeville is a South Side neighborhood in Chicago that historians cite as the city's first black neighborhood, founded by former and fugitives slaves in the 1840s. On an unseasonably warm evening recently on Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Arlander Wade, 63, stood on the sidewalk outside of his recently purchased condo in one of the area's huge, historic "greystone" homes.

He pointed across the street to a parking lot where the Regal Theater once stood, a place where jazz and blues greats once sang or played. The street, running through the heart of historic Bronzeville, once was Grand Boulevard, a gem in the black community and home to people like Robert S. Abbott, the founder of the Chicago Defender, Daniel Hale Williams, one of the nation's first black surgeons, and Oscar Stanton De Priest, the first post-Reconstruction African American elected to Congress.

"It took me 63 years, but I finally made it to Grand Boulevard," says Wade, a retired postal worker whose mother was born in Georgia, his father in New Jersey. "I don't know why people are going. All these young people are moving because they don't know what they have right here. They are hoping for something better, but what they're running from, they're running to. Everyone they saw on 43rd Street last week will be waiting for them in Atlanta by the time they get there. They can have that. I finally made it."

However determined Wade is to stay, he is surrounded by a fast-flowing ebb tide of African-American migrants leaving Chicago behind -- people like Joi Tucker, the Alcorn State University student.

"A lot of people are going back to their mother's home, grandparents' home and going back to their land," she says. "People down here show black people love."

WALMART AWARDS MILLION DOLLAR GRANT TO CBCF -- Funds to Support Internships to Develop Next Generation of Leaders

WASHINGTON, D.C. - The Congressional Black Caucus Foundation (CBCF) today announced a $1 million grant from Walmart to support the CBCF/Walmart Emerging Leaders Internship Program. The announcement marks Walmart's renewed commitment to supporting deserving African-American college students who are interested in internships on Capitol Hill or with government agencies. Walmart has donated $2 million to this program since 2006.

The CBCF/Walmart Emerging Leaders Internship Program is a semester-long internship program that prepares participating students for careers in public service or the private sector. As a result of Walmart's funding, interns also receive a stipend and housing during their internships.

"CBCF is proud to accept this generous award from our partners at Walmart," said CBCF Chairman Donald M. Payne. "There is nothing more important than investing in the futures of our young people. The grant will help to ensure that CBCF will be able to develop leaders who will be primed to make a positive impact on the lives of African-Americans. It is a guaranteed return on investment that is immeasurable," he said.

"Diversity is core to Walmart's success and we are always honored to partner with organizations that share our commitment to helping minority students succeed in life. The congressional internship program is a wonderful example of an initiative for African-American students that works," said Kimberly Woodard, Walmart's director of federal government relations and CBCF board member. "The program's success over the last six years has raised the bar for congressional internships and we commend the CBCF for its commitment to promoting diversity on the Hill."

Walmart's first grant to the CBCF in 2006 - an initial $1 million, three-year grant, established the CBCF/Walmart Strive for Excellence Scholarship Program and the CBCF/Walmart Emerging Leaders Internship Program. The programs were created to provide students with the funding and experiences needed to reach their educational and career goals. Since 2007, more than 80 exceptional college-aged students have participated in the internship program.

"Walmart has been a great friend to CBCF in helping young people to connect the dots between community, governance and the importance of public policy which aims to improve the quality of life for millions of African-Americans. What better way to hone those skills than in our nation's capital," said Elsie L. Scott, Ph.D., president and chief executive officer of CBCF.

The funding also supports the CBCF partnership with the George Washington University's Semester in Washington Program to give interns an opportunity to earn academic credit. This partnership offers a combination of hands-on coursework and networking opportunities with like-minded peers and professional politicos.

For more information about CBCF's internship programs, application criteria and deadlines, go to http://www.cbcfinc.org/

2011-10-17

Hebert Cain's model Supreme Court Judge is Clarence Thomas...

President Obama speech at the King Memorial Dedication 10/16/2011

FCC Says No To WWIN-FM Upgrade

FCC Says No To WWIN-FM Upgrade - 10/14 - In his Friday TRI radio biz newsletter, Tom Taylor tells us that Radio One won't get a signal upgrade for Baltimore's Magic 95.9, WWIN-FM, because too many radio dial neighbors objected. The Lanham-based firm had asked the FCC for permission to move the adult urban contemporary station's city of license from Glen Burnie to Arbutus and increase power from 3,000-watts to 6,000-watts. However, complaints came from two DC stations - CBS's rhythmic contemporary WPGC and Howard University's adult urban contemporary WHUR, complaining of possible interference to their 95.5 and 96.3, respective, signals in the Baltimore area. Complaints also came from Cumulus's WSOX, 96.1, in Red Lion PA and Prettyman's WICL, 95.9, in the Hagerstown area.

Check FCC decision out in the below link:
http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2011/db1013/DA-11-1705A1.pdf

2011-10-11

Antelope attacks biker


Click link below to see video of Antelope attacking biker:

2011-10-10

Al "Just Win Baby" Davis dead at 82

Owner of the Oakland Raiders, Allen "Al" Davis, dead at 82 (July 4, 1929 – October 8, 2011)

2011-10-07

Clyburn Commends President Johnson-Sirleaf on Nobel Peace Prize



WASHINGTON – U.S. House Assistant Democratic Leader James E. Clyburn released the following statement today on Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf receiving the Nobel Peace Prize along with Liberian activist Leymah Gbowee and Yemeni opposition leader Tawakkul Karman:

“Upon hearing of her selection for the Nobel Peace Prize, I am reminded of President Johnson-Sirleaf’s remarks to the U.S. Congress about her beloved Liberia following her historic election: ‘We will strive to be America's success story in Africa, demonstrating the potential in the transformation from war to peace.’ America and Liberia have been inextricably linked since the U.S. helped to establish the African nation in 1819. That relationship was tested during the Liberian civil war, but President Johnson-Sirleaf’s election renewed our friendship, and I was pleased to lead the effort in Congress to provide U.S. aid to rebuild the Liberian infrastructure destroyed by war and neglect. I have seen first-hand the strides President Johnson-Sirleaf has made in transforming the country and was honored to make the trip to Liberia with a Congressional delegation in 2006, which would not have been possible for security reasons prior to her time in office. Liberia is an emerging success story, and its bright future can be attributed to the extraordinary leadership and determination of its first female president.

“Peace has been the President’s ultimate mission as she has broken barriers and led her war-torn country with passion and compassion. This Harvard-educated, well-respected economist has demonstrated that women can be leaders and visionaries in a part of the world where many countries don’t allow women to participate in government. She has shown us all that democracy can survive and thrive in the face of opposition who seek chaos.
“When she visited my district this year, President Johnson-Sirleaf took great pride in reporting that Liberian youth now ‘do not know a gun and do not have to run,’ which is a reminder to us all not to take for granted the blessing of peace. President Johnson-Sirleaf has returned that blessing of peace to a new generation of Liberians, and I can think of no one more deserving of the Nobel Peace Prize.”

2011-10-06

CLYBURN STATEMENT ON REVEREND SHUTTLESWORTH

WASHINGTON – U.S. House Assistant Democratic Leader James E. Clyburn released the following statement on the passing yesterday of Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth at the age of 89:

“This nation has lost a towering figure for justice and the rights of all human beings, and I have lost a dear friend and mentor.

“When I reflect upon the life and legacy of Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth, I am reminded of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s famous Letter from the Birmingham Jail, in which he wrote, ‘I am in Birmingham because injustice is here.’ Reverend Shuttlesworth courageously stood up to injustice in Alabama and elsewhere and taught us through his example the power of creative nonviolence for the cause of social justice.

“I feel fortunate to have been with him earlier this year as we celebrated the anniversary of the march at the Edmund Pettis Bridge. He was one of those people whose impact was not fully appreciated until his later years when he received well-deserved recognition for his significant contributions. I am proud to be associated with his wonderful legacy as the 2010 recipient of the Fred L. Shuttlesworth Human Rights Award.

“I remember during the marches and demonstrations for civil rights in the 1960s, he was one of those people who made you feel that everything you were undertaking was well worth the risks. His was a tremendous life well-lived.

“May God grant eternal rest to the Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth.”

History of the King Memorial

January 15, 1929 Martin Luther King, Jr. (originally named Michael King) is born in Atlanta, GA.

February 25, 1948 King is ordained and is appointed associate pastor to his father, the pastor at Ebenezer Baptist Church.

June 8, 1948 King graduates from Morehouse College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology.

May 6-8, 1951 King graduates Crozer Theological Seminary with a Bachelor of Divinity degree.

June 22, 1952 While attending graduate school at Boston University, King is initiated into the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.

June 18, 1953 King marries Miss Coretta Scott.

May 17, 1954 The United States Supreme Court rules unanimously that racial segregation in public schools is unconstitutional in Brown vs. the Board of Education, stating that “separate can never be equal.”

October 31, 1954 King is installed as the twentieth pastor at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, AL.

June 5, 1955 King receives his Ph.D. degree in Systematic Theology from Boston University.

December 5, 1955 Dr. King is elected President of the Montgomery Improvement Association, the group formed to coordinate the bus boycott.

December 20, 1955 Buses in Montgomery are integrated after federal injunctions are issued against many city and bus company officials. In the months before integration of buses occurs, the United States Supreme Court upholds an earlier ruling that declares mandatory bus segregation laws unconstitutional.

February 14, 1957 The Southern Christian Leadership Conference ("SCLC") is formed ; Dr. King is named its first president.

February –March 1959 Dr. and Mrs. King spend a month in India as guests of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, studying Mohandas K. Gandhi’s techniques of nonviolent resistance.

March – April, 1962 Dr. King is arrested during a demonstration in Birmingham. On April 16, he writes his famous “Letter from the Birmingham Jail,” in which he describes the motivation and defends the need for nonviolent, direct action.

October 1, 1962 James Meredith becomes the first black man to enter the University of Mississippi. He is enrolled by order of the Supreme Court and escorted onto campus by U.S. Marshals.

October 16, 1962

Dr. King meets with President John F. Kennedy at the White House, urging him to support civil rights.

May 3-5, 1963 At a protest in Birmingham, young demonstrators are attacked with dogs and assaulted with water from fire hoses by order of Eugene “Bull” Connor, Director of Public Safety. Media coverage of the event provokes a national outcry against the tactics employed by segregationist leaders.

June 11, 1963 Governor George C. Wallace attempts to stop integration of the University of Alabama by preventing black students and Justice Department officials from entering. Governor Wallace removes himself from blocking the entrance after President Kennedy federalizes the Alabama National Guard.

August 28, 1963 At the historic March on Washington, the first large integrated protest march, Dr. King delivers his famous “I Have a Dream” speech from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on the Mall in Washington, DC.

September 15, 1963 The Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama is bombed, killing four young girls and injuring many worshippers. Dr. King delivers a eulogy for the girls.

Summer 1964 The Mississippi “Freedom Summer” Project, a voter registration drive, is organized and instituted by Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and Student Nonviolent Coordination Committee (SNCC), with the aid of the SCLC.

July 2, 1964 Dr. King attends the signing of the Public Accommodations Bill, a part of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, by President Lyndon B. Johnson.

August 25, 1964 Dr. King speaks at the Democratic National Convention, where the Democratic Party refused to seat members of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.

December 10, 1964 Dr. King accepts the Nobel Prize for Peace in Oslo, Norway.

February 9, 1965 Dr. King meets with President Johnson and other leaders to discuss voting rights for African-Americans.

March 21-25, 1965 More than three thousand march from Selma to Montgomery under the protection of federal troops. Along the way, their numbers increased to twenty-five thousand. The march ends in Montgomery, where Dr. King gives an address from the steps of the state capitol.

Summer 1965 Riots break out in Watts, a neighborhood in Los Angeles, California.

August 6, 1965 President Johnson signs the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

Spring 1966 To rally support for the election of black candidates, King makes a “People to People” tour of the South.

May 16, 1966 Dr. King makes an anti-war statement at a Vietnam War protest in Washington, DC.

June 8-24, 1966 Dr. King, many civil rights leaders and supporters continue James Meredith’s “March Against Fear” after Meredith is shot.

Summer 1967 Riots occur in 164 U.S. cities. The largest riots break out in Newark, New Jersey and Detroit, Michigan calling attention to the struggles faced by African Americans in Northern cities.

December 1967-1968 The SCLC forms and organizes the Poor People’s Campaign, a movement intended to alleviate poverty for Americans of all races and ethnicities.

April 4, 1968 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. is assassinated at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee.

April 7-9, 1968 April 7, 1968, declared a day of mourning, is marked by memorial events and religious services across the country. A silent march is held in Memphis, and on April 9, a funeral service at Ebenezer Baptist Church and a funeral procession take place in Atlanta.

November 2, 1983 The Martin Luther King, Jr. Federal Holiday bill, a measure proposed in every legislative session from 1968 by Rep. John Conyers is signed by President Ronald Reagan, declaring King’s birthday a national holiday. However, the first legal holiday nationwide does not occur until January 20, 1986.
Read more »

Civil Rights Leader Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth passes



Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth (born Freddie Lee Robinson on March 18, 1922 – October 5, 2011) was a civil rights activist who led the fight against segregation and other forms of racism as a minister in Birmingham, Alabama. He was a co-founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, was instrumental in the 1963 Birmingham Campaign, and continued to work against racism and for alleviation of the problems of the homeless in Cincinnati, Ohio, where he took up a pastorate in 1961. He returned to Birmingham after his retirement in 2007.


Shuttlesworth was portrayed by Roger Robinson in the television miniseries King. The Birmingham Airport is named after him.

Early life

Born in Mount Meigs, Alabama, Shuttlesworth became pastor of the Bethel Baptist Church in Birmingham in 1953 and was Membership Chairman of the Alabama state chapter of the NAACP in 1956, when the State of Alabama formally outlawed it from operating within the state. In May, 1956 Shuttlesworth and Ed Gardner established the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights to take up the work formerly done by the NAACP.

The ACMHR raised almost all of its funds from local sources at mass meetings. It used both litigation and direct action to pursue its goals. When the authorities ignored the ACMHR’s demand that the City hire black police officers, the organization sued. Similarly, when the United States Supreme Court ruled in December 1956 that bus segregation in Montgomery, Alabama was unconstitutional, Shuttlesworth announced that the ACMHR would challenge segregation laws in Birmingham on December 26, 1956.

On December 25, 1956, unknown persons tried to kill Shuttlesworth by placing sixteen sticks of dynamite under his bedroom window. Shuttlesworth somehow escaped unhurt even though his house was heavily damaged. A police officer, who also belonged to the Ku Klux Klan, told Shuttlesworth as he came out of his home, “If I were you I’d get out of town as quick as I could”. Shuttlesworth told him to tell the Klan that he was not leaving and “I wasn’t saved to run.”

Fred Shuttlesworth led a group that integrated Birmingham’s buses the next day, then sued after police arrested twenty-one passengers. His congregation built a new parsonage for him and posted sentries outside his house.


Southern Christian Leadership Conference
In 1957 Shuttlesworth, along with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rev. Ralph Abernathy from Montgomery, Rev. Joseph Lowery from Mobile, Alabama, Rev. T.J. Jemison from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Rev. C.K. Steele from Tallahassee, Florida, Rev. A.L.Davis from New Orleans, Louisiana, Bayard Rustin and Ella Baker founded the Southern Leadership Conference on Transportation and Nonviolent Integration, later renamed the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The SCLC adopted a motto to underscore its commitment to nonviolence: “Not one hair of one head of one person should be harmed.”

Shuttlesworth embraced that philosophy, even though his own personality was combative, headstrong and sometimes blunt-spoken to the point that he frequently antagonized his colleagues in the movement as well as his opponents. He was not shy in asking King to take a more active role in leading the fight against segregation and warning that history would not look kindly on those who gave “flowery speeches” but did not act on them. He alienated some members of his congregation by devoting as much time as he did to the civil rights movement, at the expense of weddings, funerals and other ordinary church functions.

As a result, in 1961 Shuttlesworth moved to Cincinnati, Ohio to take up the pastorage of the Revelation Baptist Church. He remained intensely involved in the Birmingham struggle after moving to Cincinnati, and frequently returned to help lead actions.

Shuttlesworth was apparently personally fearless, even though he was aware of the risks he ran. Other committed activists were scared off or mystified by his willingness to accept the risk of death. Shuttlesworth himself vowed to “kill segregation or be killed by it”.