Paul Quinn College To Push Federal Help to Boost Urban Farming Efforts

The Dallas Morning News

Dallas is one of 27 U.S. cities selected for a federal program that uses food to help build economically stronger communities.

Called “Local Foods, Local Places,” the program was announced Monday and is a partnership between USDA and five additional agencies including the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Transportation.

The federal initiative, now in its third year, “helps communities increase economic opportunities for local farmers and related businesses, create vibrant places and promote childhood wellness by improving access to healthy local food,” according to a joint release from the agencies.

Dallas, one of 300 applicants, will receive technical assistance to create a local food branding campaign and establish a network among gardening and farming enthusiasts to “build public awareness, community cohesion, and relationships between growers and local businesses, and help community gardens share expertise and increase the size and variety of their yields,” the release said.

A “letter of interest” submitted as part of the city’s application focuses on issues such as childhood obesity and access to healthy foods, particularly in southern Dallas.

“For more than a decade, there has been a national effort to address childhood nutrition and obesity, along with addressing the prevalence of food deserts in urban centers,” the letter said. “Dallas’s southern sector struggles with these issues with the addition of neighborhood blight. Community gardens are one significant way in which to address these issues.

“There has been a groundswell of interest in Dallas for urban gardens, urban farms, and aquaponics as the potential resolve for community revitalization,” the letter said.

The letter also noted that many school and community urban gardens operate largely independently of one another. The city envisions a more unified approach.

“The first step may be in building a directory of urban gardens, urban farms, and neighborhood markets along with a contact list of local growers,” the letter said. “Because there are varying levels of expertise in the many components related to locally grown foods, it is crucial that a local council, association, assembly, or congress for mutual support and be formalized.”

The effort could help boost entrepreneurship as more would-be urban farmers get into the space, which could create more jobs, said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack.

Michael Sorrell is president of Paul Quinn College, where the 2-acre WE over Me Farm sees its mission as helping to “transform the health and well-being of under-resourced communities in southern Dallas by providing fresh, healthy, affordable food options.”

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Sorrell was not aware of the city’s application for the program until today, but he hopes Paul Quinn will play a role in helping move the effort forward.

“People deserve an opportunity, in one of the wealthiest cities in the country, to have access to fresh and affordable food,” Sorrell said. “And your zip code should not determine whether that happens. We have to be better than that.

“So when I learn of the city applying for programs like this it gives me great hope, because it says that people hear [that message] and understand it and are doing things to help people help themselves.”

It was not immediately clear how much money the city will receive for the project.

Howard Alum–Diddy, and Mark Wahlberg Donating 1 Million Bottles of Water to Flint

ABC 10

A bottled water company owned in part by Sean “Diddy” Combs and Mark Wahlberg is pledging to donate 1 million bottles of water to the residents of Flint, Michigan.

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AQUAhydrate says it’s sending 5,000 cases of water to Flint and will continue to provide bottles to residents until the city’s water problems are solved. The company says the water is expected to be delivered Wednesday.

High levels of lead have been detected in Flint’s water since officials switched from the Detroit municipal system and began drawing from the Flint River as a cost-saving measure.

Wahlberg and Combs first invested and became the face of the Los Angeles-based bottled water company in 2013.

Eminem, Wiz Khalifa and Big Sean are among other celebrities who have pledged support and donations to assist Flint’s water crisis.

Olympic Hopeful Allen Dooms Runs With Purpose

Allen Dooms, A Charlottesville Virginia native, knows without what he was put on this earth for, and that’s to run. He has no problem letting anyone know, that Track and Field is his calling. It is his hopes that instead of telling, he can show what he has to offer in the Rio 2016 Summer Olympics.

Always having an interest in being an athlete, strangely enough Dooms hadn’t been good enough at any other sport to progress for the long hall. Actually up until his Junior year in High School, Track and Field hadn’t even crossed his mind, he had dreams of becoming a Meteorologist. It was Allen’s brother Clifton Dooms who had been carving a lane for himself on their high school track team. After watching his brother’s success, Allen became fascinated , and  joined the team. “I wasn’t that good at first, but then I saw an opportunity to go to college, and you can get a scholarship for it. That’s what got me liking the sport, it was a window of opportunity for me.” Window of opportunity it was indeed, but not without an obstacle filled start.bme-olympic-215x215 (1)

After several  attempts at finding his niche with other colleges, Dooms attended Harcum Junior College. Spending only a year and a half there and coming out on top with good grades, he was the pick of the litter to a plethora of 4 year colleges. His shot came when  he was offered a scholarship to Radford University.

Excelling beyond measure at Radford, Allen shattered the school’s track records for their 100 meter dash, 60 meter dash, and 4×4 relay. After he and his time at Radford had ran its course, he made the decision to attend Virginia Union University for Graduate School, and run his last year of eligibility with the HBCU. Dooms majors in Theology at Virginia Union’s well known School of Divinity. “I just want to be a light in somebody’s life.”

Sonia: Talk to me about the differences between attending a PWI (Radford University) and an HBCU (Virginia Union University.)

Allen: There were a lot of differences, good differences. I got to see something different about who I am as a person. [At Radford] I couldn’t understand myself…I went to an HBCU,  and It helped me find myself and understand who I am just by being around my culture a little bit more. Going to Virginia Union, a school that started a year after  slavery was abolished, it made me really respect African Americans and HBCUs. If I would’ve known that back in High School, HBCUs would’ve been my first choice.

Currently taking time off from his  masters program, Allen is out to complete another mission before he goes back, and that’s a spot in the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Invited to the Olympic Trials after qualifying for a spot for the 100 meter dash, Allen’s best known time to date is 10.17 seconds.

The up and coming track star notes that there are peaks and valleys on the athletic path he’s chosen.

Sonia: What are the Pros and Cons of devoting your time to Track and Field?

Allen: The pro is that it’s a great career, the con is that it’s a lot of sacrifice.

For the next few months, Allen will have to wear that sacrifice on his sleeve. The Olympic Trials will take place July first, in Eugene, Oregon. Until then, he will be in isolation training in North Carolina, 160 plus miles from family and friends. “I’m in isolation training , I’m by myself right now. I really don’t talk to my friends anymore, just because I have to stay focused. I have to be mentally and physically fit, to compete at a high level so you know you have to take a lot of social distractions.” Dooms notes that another pro for him is that it’s simply fun for him, something that he enjoys immensely.

Allen’s style of training could easily be seen as quirky. While other runners  are putting fire to the race tracks with their cleats for training, he chooses to blaze different trails. Local parks are his terrain of choice when training and as odd as it may sound, it works for him. His playlist consists of a lot of 90’s R&B that pumps through his earbuds when he runs. Last but not least he has no set training time, whenever the urge comes to run, he indulges. Odd? Maybe. Effective? Absolutely.

Dooms isn’t nervous to find out his fate for the Olympics in . Awaiting the date, he states “I know I was made to do this.”

The Academy Awards ‘Risks Irrelevancy’, Civil Rights Group Seek Meeting

National Action Network Newsroom

The National Urban League, The National Action Network, and the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation released a joint statement on the irrelevancy of the Academy Awards. 484199289-the-rev-al-sharpton-president-of-the-national-action.jpg.CROP.rtstory-large

The letter can be found below:


The leaders of three leading national civil rights organizations today announced they will request a meeting with the trustees of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and other film industry leaders. The National Urban League, the National Action Network and the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation released the following statement in response to the ongoing struggle for diversity in the Academy’s awards nominations:

Following an awards nomination process that saw the nomination of no actors of color and no women writers, the Academy of Motion Picture Sciences promised a greater push for diversity.

That was a year ago.

Therefore, it rings hollow when the Academy – for the second year in a row – promises a greater push for diversity in response to another all-white acting nomination slate.

A lack of diversity in the entertainment industry is a complex issue without a simple solution. We are well-aware the problem neither begins nor ends with awards nominations.  But the overwhelmingly white, male, and older membership of the Academy dismally fails to reflect the vibrant creative filmmaking community.   Award nominations translate into box-office success, and the potential for box-office success determines which projects are greenlighted.

If the Academy cannot break this vicious circle, it risks its own irrelevancy.  According to the L.A. Times, the domestic and international television rights provide the academy with approximately $70 million annually.  ABC, which holds the domestic rights, is expected to garner at least $80 million in advertising revenue this year.  Furthermore, African-Americans attend the movies on average more often than whites, spending more than $1.1 billion annually on movie tickets.

It seems that the Academy’s board of trustees believes diversity is a problem that will resolve itself.  The nominations show otherwise.  We will be requesting a meeting with the Academy’s board members and other industry leaders where we will present a clear and specific blueprint for moving forward, and outline our plan to hold the Academy accountable.

More information can be found here. 

Majority Black College Faces Shutdown Thanks To Bickering Lawmakers

Huffington Post

As Chicago State University senior Charles Preston plans his future, he’s contending with a unique variable most other college students will never face: the possibility that his school will close before he can finish his degree.

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Shutdown looms for the nearly 150-year-old school — the only majority black public university on Chicago’s South Side — due to a state budget impasse in Springfield that has remained unresolved since last June.

Without a budget, everyone from Illinois’ state-funded schools to scratch-off lottowinners have gone unpaid.

CSU officials project its reserve funds will run out by March 1, more than two months before the end of the current semester. CSU relies on the state for approximately 30 percent of its budget, or about $36 million.

“The current budget situation is historically unprecedented and therefore makes it very difficult to predict exactly how it will eventually be resolved,” newly installedCSU President Thomas Calhoun Jr. said in a Jan. 14 memo to staff and students.

While the school committed to finishing the semester, Calhoun warned the financial crunch “may lead to a massive disruption of services.”

Neither students nor school officials are sure what that means in actual terms of staff payment or administrative function. CSU spokesman Tom Wogan said everyone at the school is dealing with the issue “day by day.”

“We have to get to the end of the semester one way or the other,” Wogan said Sunday. “We have a moral, legal and ethical obligation to do that.”

Preston, who has one additional semester left before graduation, said a school shutdown would not only jeopardize his future, but most certainly drive him deeper into student loan debt.

“I would be stuck in limbo,” Preston said, noting that his African-American studies major is not widely offered at other schools. “A lot of my credits would be untransferable to another school.”

This university is basically an oasis in the desert.” Charles Preston, CSU Senior

A coalition of CSU students have organized to pressure lawmakers into passing a budget, though Preston said the group is at a disadvantage with the shutdown threat less than six weeks away. Rumors of a possible shutdown didn’t start bubbling up on campus until about December.

“The lawmakers in the state tend to look at us as numbers, not as lives,” Preston said.

The majority Democratic legislature and Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner have been at odds for months over who’s to blame for the lack of budget, but it’s Rauner who is drawing the ire of the CSU community.

Rauner’s deputy chief of staff on Wednesday sent a memo to the Illinois legislature criticizing CSU’s pleas for financial help. Richard Goldberg wrote the school’s financial mismanagement was rife with “waste” and “cronyism,” according to The Associated Press.

“For them to all of a sudden go, ‘Hey, we’re sorta more broke than most,’ while they’ve been throwing money down the toilet — you know what? Let’s have some standards of behavior,” Rauner said a day after the memo’s release.

Read more here. 

Red Sox President Keynote Speaker at First Pitch Event, NCCU

NCCU Newsroom

Boston Red Sox President Sam Kennedy will serve as the keynote speaker for the fifth annual North Carolina Central University First Pitch Dinner and Silent Auction on Friday, Jan. 29, 2016, at the Sheraton Imperial Hotel and Convention Center in Durham North Carolina.

“Our First Pitch Dinner and Silent Auction is a tremendous opportunity for our NCCU baseball family to show their support and enthusiasm for our program,” said NCCU baseball head coach Jim Koerner. “With the addition of Red Sox President Mr. Sam Kennedy, this year’s event will again prove to be a great night of baseball.”

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The fundraising event to benefit the NCCU baseball program will begin with a cocktail and social hour from 6:30-7:30 p.m., followed by a sit-down dinner. There will also be a silent auction with authentic autographed memorabilia, including many items from Baseball Hall of Fame inductees, as well as a live auction and raffle. Guests will also have the opportunity to meet members of the 2016 NCCU baseball team.

For the fifth straight year, local radio legend, avid baseball fan, and Durham Bulls public address announcer Tony Riggsbee will be the emcee for the evening.

Individual tickets for the sit-down dinner and silent auction are $50, and only $25 for fans 12 years old and under, while a table of 10 can be purchased for $450. Tickets go on sale Wednesday, Dec. 16 at www.NCCUEaglePride.com.

A VIP Table Sponsor package is also available, including 10 tickets for the sit-down dinner and exclusive access to a VIP reception with Kennedy, as well as program recognition, official NCCU baseball apparel, 10 complimentary raffle and drink tickets, public address announcements at NCCU home baseball games, and 10 general admission tickets to an NCCU basketball game – all for $1,500.

A Title Sponsorship package includes everything in the VIP Table Sponsor package plus corporate branding on event marketing materials, seating at Kennedy’s table during dinner and the opportunity to throw out the ceremonial first pitch at a NCCU baseball game. To discuss sponsorship opportunities, contact Kevin Wilson at (919) 428-0506 / kwilso58@nccu.edu.

For more information on the fifth annual NCCU First Pitch Dinner and Silent Auction, contact Kia Robinson in the NCCU Athletics Development office at 919-530-7313 / krobin36@nccu.edu or Jim Koerner at the NCCU Baseball office at 919-530-6723 / jkoerner@nccu.edu.

SAM KENNEDY – PRESIDENT OF THE BOSTON RED SOX
Sam Kennedy, President of the Boston Red Sox, enters his 15th year in the organization. On Oct. 16, 2015, he succeeded his mentor, Larry Lucchino, as club President.

A native of Brookline, Massachusetts, Kennedy was among the first executives that Lucchino – who currently serves the organization as Red Sox President/CEO Emeritus – brought with him from the San Diego Padres to join his partners John Henry and Tom Werner in Boston shortly after acquiring the club from the Yawkey Trust in 2002. Since joining the club that year, Kennedy has been an instrumental part of the revitalization of the Red Sox brand, the financial stability of the franchise, and the preservation and protection of Fenway Park. Kennedy and his staff have dramatically increased all club revenue streams over the past decade. Under his leadership, the club sold out 794 consecutive games at Fenway Park, dating back to May 2003, establishing a Major League Baseball record. Kennedy and his team have set the industry standard in the area of corporate sponsorship, premium seating, and merchandising, and they have established Fenway Park as one of the premier destinations in New England for non-baseball events such as concerts, outdoor hockey games, soccer matches, and corporate functions.

Kennedy oversees the club’s general business matters, including Ticketing (sales, operations and service), Corporate Sponsorship, Broadcasting, Marketing, Social Media, Advertising, Fenway Enterprises (non-baseball activities at Fenway Park), and all Client Service. In 2003, he helped conceive and execute the successful sales and marketing plan for the new “Legends Suite” at Fenway Park, the Dugout Seats innovation, and new tasteful advertising positions above the Green Monster. In 2004, Kennedy secured a long-term partnership with Anheuser-Busch that was instrumental in the creation of the new Right Field Roof Seats at Fenway. In 2005, he was charged with developing the sales and marketing plan for the new club seats at Fenway Park that debuted in 2006. Kennedy also secured long-term naming rights deals for the EMC Club and the State Street Pavilion at Fenway Park. In 2009, he oversaw the successful negotiations with the National Hockey League and Hockey East to stage the 2010 “Bridgestone NHL Winter Classic” and “Sun Life Frozen Fenway” NCAA Division I outdoor ice hockey games at Fenway Park. In addition to ice hockey, 2010 also saw the return of professional soccer to Fenway Park when Kennedy and his team arranged for an international friendly between Celtic FC & Sporting Lisbon. In 2011, Kennedy was a member of the team that developed the business plan for the Red Sox new Spring Training home in Fort Myers, Florida, and he led the successful negotiations with JetBlue Airways to name the new facility “JetBlue Park at Fenway South.” Kennedy brought Frozen Fenway back to the ballpark twice more in the winters of 2012 and 2014, as nearly 100,000 people came through the gates to watch ice hockey and skate at Fenway. In 2012 and 2014, Kennedy facilitated two more friendly matchups between the storied Liverpool Football Club and AS Roma in front of sell-out crowds at Fenway Park, a celebrated part of Liverpool’s North American summer tour. Since 2003, Kennedy has been instrumental in facilitating Fenway Park as a premier concert venue for top-tier performers such as Bruce Springsteen, The Rolling Stones, Jason Aldean, Zac Brown Band, Jay Z and Justin Timberlake, Sir Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, Foo Fighters, and more. Kennedy took the lead on the successful negotiations that will brought American football back to Fenway Park for the first time in over 40 years. On Nov. 22 2015, the annual “Shamrock Series” came to Fenway Park as the Notre Dame Fighting Irish took on the Boston College Eagles. Kennedy also serves as a member the Red Sox Budget Committee, Major League Baseball’s Ticketing Committee, and as the club’s business liaison to Major League Baseball Properties and Major League Baseball Advanced Media.

In 2004, Kennedy helped create Fenway Sports Management (FSM), formerly Fenway Sports Group, which has emerged as one of the most well-respected international sports sales representation agencies in its 11-year history. FSM is one of the portfolios of companies owned by Fenway Sports Group, which includes the Boston Red Sox, Liverpool FC, New England Sports Network and Roush Fenway Racing. As FSM’s President, Kennedy has P & L responsibility and oversees Finance, HR, Legal, Sales, Corporate Consulting and Marketing. FSM’s client roster includes the Boston Red Sox, NESN, RFR, Liverpool FC, Boston College, Major League Baseball Advanced Media, the Deutsche Bank Championship, NBA superstar LeBron James, and Cleveland Browns’ quarterback Johnny Manziel.

Read more here. 

First African-American Governor to Speak at His Alma Mater, Virginia Union

According to The Richmond Times-Dispatch, “Former Gov. L. Douglas Wilder, the first African-American elected governor in the nation, will be at his alma mater next month to discuss his autobiography. The discussion and book signing will be at 11 a.m. Feb. 2 in the Wilder Library Lecture Hall at Virginia Union University in Richmond.”

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In 1990, the NAACP awarded him the Spingarn Medal. He is also a graduate of Howard University. After public service, he as served as an adjunct professor in public policy at Virginia Commonwealth University.

In 2015 he published an autobiography called, Son of Virginia: A Life in America’s Political Arena.

Virginia State University, Virginia Union University, Virginia Commonwealth University, Norfolk State University, and Hampton University all have buildings or schools on campus named after him in his honor.

 

 

Norfolk State University Rector Thomas Chewning Steps Aside To Allow for New Board Leadership

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Norfolk State Newsroom

NSU Board of Visitors Rector Thomas N. Chewning is stepping aside and returning to his board position as an at-large member. Current Vice Rector Dr. Byron L. Cherry Sr. will serve as acting rector until officer elections are held during the March board meeting. The change is effective immediately.

“Norfolk State University is an important and historic center of higher education,” Chewning said. “It has been an honor to serve as rector and lead this outstanding board. I look forward to continuing to be a member of the board, and support the University’s new strategies and initiatives.”

Chewning served as rector for three-and-half years and has been a member of the board since 2011. He extended his service as rector beyond an initial, and customary, two-year term to provide continuity of leadership while the University worked to remove the SACSCOC probation. Chewning oversaw the board’s support for the administration’s successful effort to have probation removed, which was accomplished in December. He also led the board’s work in 2013 to recruit and hire Eddie N. Moore Jr.  as interim president. Moore was named president earlier this month.

“Now that the sanction has been removed,” Chewning said, “and Eddie Moore has been elected president, it is time for someone younger with new energy to lead the board. I have complete confidence that the leadership in place will move the University forward.”

“Tom is an extraordinary person whose leadership skills are only surpassed by his generosity and interest in helping others,” Moore said. His judgement, managerial experience, and commitment to our mission are invaluable assets for the Norfolk State community.”

Chewning retired in 2009 as chief financial officer of Dominion Resources, a Fortune 200 company, after a 22-year career. He continues to serve in a number of leadership roles for community service organizations.

Cherry is CEO of Succeed to Lead, a financial management consulting firm based in Dumfries, Virginia, and a retired U.S. Army colonel. He also is a 1982 NSU graduate who majored in accounting.

Rev. Jackson Speaks in Support of Cash-Strapped Chicago State

Chicago Tribune

The Rev. Jesse Jackson told students at the cash-strapped Chicago State University on Friday that he is an ally to all Illinois public universities waiting for money to flow again from Springfield.

More than 100 students listened to Jackson speak Friday afternoon inside the Cordell Reed Student Union Building at the predominantly black university on the South Side.

Chicago State University is the first school in Illinois to publicly describe what effect the pending crisis is having on its operations. The university of about 4,600 students is expected to run out of reserve funds by March 1, putting its future in jeopardy, school officials acknowledged..

About 30 percent, or more than $36 million, of the Chicago State’s funding comes from the state.

“We really don’t know what’s going to happen,” said Paris Griffin, a Chicago State student who attended the rally and personally spoke with Jackson after his speech. “If we do make it through this semester, we’re not sure we’ll make it through semesters to come.”

Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner and powerful Democratic lawmakers have kept the funding spigot turned off as their seven-month-long impasse over a new fiscal budget continues to put universities and colleges in dire straits.

A letter sent last week from presidents of the state’s nine public universities to Rauner and legislators said the stalemate will result in public higher education being “damaged beyond repair.”

“We’re doing the best we can to express the consequences of what would happen if there is a massive disruption of services at Chicago State University to the legislature, to the leaders and to the governor,” said university spokesman Thomas Wogan.

Officials at Chicago State University are scrambling to find any possible way keep the school running past the beginning of March.

“We have the moral, legal and ethical obligation to complete the semester,” Wogan said.

The looming threat of shuttering public universities puts Illinois in “uncharted waters,” Wogan said. No public university in the country has ever shut their doors because of state funding problems, he said.

In order to help buffer students from the state budget problems, Chicago State University is covering about $5 million of state scholarships for low-income students known as Monetary Award Program grants, which were halted during the deadlock.

Operation Save CSU, a student-led organization, sprang up on campus to help raise funds for the school. Griffin, a member of the student movement and president of the university’s student government association, said students are working with the administration to find other ways to keep Chicago State University running.

Panthers’ Cam Newton Now Entertainer, Icon, Super Bowl Quarterback

The Charlotte Observer

The Carolina Panthers’ biggest star will play on the world’s biggest stage.

Cam Newton – entertainer, icon … and Super Bowl quarterback.

Newton turned in a vintage performance in a 49-15 victory over Arizona on Sunday in the NFC Championship Game, throwing for 335 yards, accounting for four touchdowns and sending the Panthers to the second Super Bowl in their 21-year history.

Newton will take the dab to Santa Clara, Calif.

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“We did what a lot of people said we couldn’t do. It’s not over, yet,” Newton said on a stage at Bank of America Stadium while the crowd serenaded him with “MVP!” chants.

Newton completed 19 of 28 passes for 335 yards and two touchdowns, ran for 47 yards and two more scores and dominated the first playoff meeting ever between two Heisman-winning quarterbacks.

It wasn’t even close, as the Panthers rolled to the highest point total in an NFC Championship Game.

The Panthers forced Arizona quarterback Carson Palmer into six turnovers – two fumbles and four interceptions. The Cardinals (14-4) finished with seven turnovers as a team, tied for the sixth-most in a playoff game during the Super Bowl era.

Carolina linebacker Luke Kuechly returned the last interception for a 22-yard touchdown for the game’s final points. Then because he’s Kuechly, aka Captain America, he celebrated the score by helping a guy who fell out of the stands to his feet.

There were plenty of other heroes for the Panthers (17-1), who will face Denver (14-4) in Super Bowl 50 on Feb. 7.

Free safety Kurt Coleman had two of the interceptions against Palmer.

Wide receiver Ted Ginn Jr. caught a touchdown and saved another one by running down cornerback Patrick Peterson on Newton’s lone mistake – a second-quarter pass that he floated over tight end Ed Dickson and into Peterson’s arms.

But that was the lone blemish for Newton, who now won’t be able to accept the MVP trophy, given that the NFL’s Honors awards program is the night before the Super Bowl.

No matter. He has the Panthers in position for their first Super Bowl title.

Newton indicated the Panthers won’t be going to northern California to hang out with Steph Curry or take a trip to wine country.

“We’re not going just to take pictures,” Newton said. “We’re trying to finish this thing off.”

Newton was at his best Sunday, dropping perfectly thrown passes inches over the outstretched hands of defensive backs, running over defenders and dancing to the delight of the 74,000-plus at Band of America Stadium.

The Cardinals had given up only one rushing touchdown to a quarterback all season. Newton had two before the fourth quarter – a 1-yard stretch across the goal line and a 12-yard somersault into the end zone.

Newton’s flip was extraneous – he bopped center Ryan Kalil on the head on his descent and took an unnecessary shot from safety Rashad Johnson.

But Newton does things his own way, no matter what Tennessee Mom might think.

From the earliest days of training camp in August, Newton signaled that he was done trying to fit in anyone’s box of how a quarterback should play. Newton likely had always felt that way, but last summer in Spartanburg was his first time really expressing it.

Whether he felt emboldened by the $103.8 million extension the Panthers gave him in June or was just tired of the “not a prototypical passer” talk is unclear.

And it doesn’t really matter.

But if there was any question before whether this was Newton’s team, there isn’t anymore.

“When you give a guy a contract like that, what are you saying to him?” general manager Dave Gettleman asked. “You’re saying we believe in you. We trust you. We love you. Here’s the keys to the Lamborghini.”

Newton stepped into the driver’s seat without his top target riding shotgun this season.

Newton was as disappointed as anyone when Kelvin Benjamin went down with the season-ending ACL injury in camp. Besides being Newton’s favorite receiver in 2014, Benjamin is one of Newton’s closest friends on the team.

Benjamin said he spoke with Newton shortly after the injury.

“I was like, ‘Bro, go do it. I’m going to be ready for next year,’” Benjamin said. “He went and did it.”

Newton stayed healthy all season, and the yards, touchdowns and victories kept piling up.

Newton will face a tough test in Santa Clara against the Broncos, the NFL’s best defense. The Broncos gave up 283.1 yards and 18.5 points during the regular season, and intercepted Tom Brady twice in Sunday’s 20-18 win in the AFC Championship Game.

Read more here.

Campus Insiders to Live Stream Honda Battle of the Bands for First Time

Campus Insiders

Campus Insiders will provide the first-ever live stream of the Honda Battle of the Bands Invitational Showcase on Saturday, January 30 at 3:00 PM ET. The event will be streamed live on CampusInsiders.com, the Campus Insiders mobile app, on the go90 app and on Campus Insiders’ connected TV platforms such as Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, Roku and Xbox.2016HBOB_Hero2-e1443124634169

The exclusive live stream of the Honda Battle of the Bands event is part of Campus Insiders long-term content partnership with Urban Sports & Entertainment Group (– — USEG) to produce and distribute live college sports and entertainment events which was announced in September 2015.

The Honda Battle of the Bands is celebrating its 14th annual marching band showcase for Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) and will feature the top marching bands representing eight different universities:

  • Alabama A&M University, Marching Maroon & White
  • Alcorn State University, Sounds of Dyn-o-Mite
  • Bethune Cookman University, Marching Wildcats
  • Jackson State University, Sonic Boom of the South
  • The Lincoln University, Orange
    Crush Roaring Lions
  • Prairie View A&M University, Marching Storm
  • South Carolina State University, Marching “101”
  • Tennessee State University, Aristocrat of BandsThe eight bands were selected through a process that included online fan voting, as well as feedback from bad directors, HBCU presidents and American Honda representatives. In addition to a $20,000 grant from Honda to support their music education programs, each participating HBCU will receive travel and accommodations to the Invitational Showcase in Atlanta.

“We are beyond thrilled to be able to expand coverage of the Honda Battle of the Bands, and share the unique experience it provides to fans,” Said Crowley Sullivan, Executive Vice President of Campus Insiders.

Read more here. 

Students in Hot Water for Pic with T-shirts Spelling Racial Slur

12 News, Phoenix

Local high school students were the talk of social media Friday after a photo of them displaying a racial slur on T-shirts was posted online.

The photo shows several students from Desert Vista High School in Ahwatukee forming an apparent racial slur with letters and symbols on black T-shirts.

The picture was taken the day of the annual panoramic yearbook picture for seniors. Students are allowed to wear pre-approved shirts with lettering or messages. The offensive configuration of letters and symbols did not appear in the panoramic picture, nor did any faculty member see or approve the display. But another photo shows a larger group of students wearing similar shirts with a different message, “Best you ever seen class of 2016.”

But regardless of the original message or the one shown in the photo parents, other students and the internet was outraged.

“I’m horrified that we live in a community like this. I’m just horrified,” said Marita Loghran, a mother of a Desert Vista student.

Marita’s husband expressing similiar concern saying it shouldn’t be tolerated anywhere.

“My children feel they’re in a hostile environment while other children think it’s funny. It’s disgusting,” said Paul Loghran, a father of a student.

A school district spokeswoman told 12 News the students took this photo after the official yearbook photo was taken.

Tempe Union High School District found out about the incident Friday and says it has taken swift disciplinary action.

“Words cannot express the outrage,” Jill Hanks from the Tempe Union High School District said. “What were they thinking? We had some students that made a really bad decision this morning.”

A spokeswoman told 12 News the photo is unacceptable and does not represent the student body or the district. The school’s Black Student Union also tweeted out a picture of some of the students, saying the incident does not reflect their beliefs.

Read more here.

Bill Cosby: Can His Reputation Recover at Black Colleges? Maybe Not.

When Bill Cosby, “the father of America,” walked slowly into a Pennsylvania courthouse with the assistance of a walker in late 2015 and answered to charges that he drugged and sexually assaulted a woman, he appeared to trip over something but recovered from the stumble.

Just a month later, Hampton University in Virginia announced that Cosby no longer serves on the university’s board of trustees following more than 60 women who made sexual assault allegations against Cosby over the years, and Hampton may not be the last black college to cut ties with Cosby—and the reputation of Cosby may never recover.

This is quite the fall from grace for one of the only black celebrities who actually can be recognized with helping to promote the mission of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) all over the country. (Cosby’s hit TV show The Cosby Show and its spin-off, A Different World, set at the fictional Hillman College, both helped to increase the attendance at black colleges by 24 percent from 1984 to 1993, according to the leader at Dillard University Walter Kimbrough, also known as “Hip-Hop Prez” to many of his students. Cosby became “America’s Dad” during this time.)

Even if FAMU continues to work with Cosby, lots of people in the black college community agree that they’re feeling betrayed by this charge.

The state of Ohio’s only public historically black university had already taken action in 2015, removing Cosby’s name from one of their buildings on campus. The Dayton Daily News reports that Bill and his wife Camille has donated more than $2 million to the university, though.

FAMU’s decision on the matter is likely to be announced on Friday, looking to cut ties or not with Cosby who had developed a friendship with former President Frederick Humphries in the mid-1980s, and donated thousands to the university and also awarded an honorary doctorate by Humphries in 1992. Current FAMU students and alumni say the historically black university shouldn’t have to pull the plug just yet, citing his work to help promote and give back to black colleges nationally.

But even if FAMU continues to work with Cosby, lots of people in the black college community agree that they’re feeling betrayed by this charge.

Update: After this editorial was written, FAMU officials released a statement saying that they’re thankful for the many contributions Cosby and his wife, Camille, has given to the black college over the years, adding that “Hundreds of FAMU students have benefited significantly from Drs. William and Camille Cosby’s gifts given to the university more than 20 years ago.” The Tallahassee Democrat also reports that FAMU is unlikely to cut ties with Cosby, not following several other universities that have distant themselves from the comedian.

Fisk University Cultivates Scholars, One by One

Tennessean 

Networking has become one of the most important tools for the millennial.

It has become less about what you know and more about who you know.

As the world grows closer together on an international basis, it is essential that students become attached to an institution that will aid in this interpersonal bridge.

Fisk University is that aid for many students in this country.

Becoming the president of the Fisk University Student Government Association has allowed me to see, in depth, how great the Fisk brand works for the whole student body.

The Fisk brand has carried many of its budding scholars abroad to London, Beijing, Johannesburg, Geneva and other destinations.

It has also carried many into various professional fields to which they commit themselves to servant leadership.  This, however, is not what distinguishes Fisk University from other American higher learning institutions.

The difference between Fisk and other institutions resides in the type of cultivation that takes place.

“Cultivating Scholars & Leaders One by One” is a mantra that the Fisk University administration and faculty pride themselves into chanting.

There is no doubt that this chant is embedded within the Fisk curriculum. Small classrooms and experimental learning are all mechanisms that are utilized by the university to bring the students closer within the greater community.

This closeness is often met with excellence by the student body because of the brand that has been maintained for many years.

The Fisk brand is what continues to bring the millennial generation to Fisk University semester after semester. This inspires many to aspire to become greater legends.

The word “legend” may seem such a massive label to put on young adults, but the type of care and education that Fisk University provides its students can only build such persons.

It is my sincere hope that the Fisk brand continues to reach out not only to the Nashville community but continues to extend throughout the nation while providing hope and a promise to resolve the troubles of the nation.

Fisk will continue to send out her best sons and daughters to answer the call of service. This answer will be echoed by many others who will follow, and Fisk University will continue to impact the world in education, the arts and social change for another 150 years.

Read more here. 

FAMU Unlikely to Cut Ties to Cosby

Tallahassee Democrat 

Florida A&M University is unlikely to follow several other universities that have severed ties with under fire comedian/philanthropist Bill Cosby.

In 1996, Cosby and his wife, Camille, donated $100,000 to establish a scholarship in honor of tennis great Althea Gibson, who graduated from FAMU in 1953.

The donation was matched with $100,000 from the state, in addition to $18,750 in combined proceeds from Gibson’s participation in a golf tournament and state match for an endowed scholarship fund for students majoring in physical education, recreation and health.

In 1987, the Camille Olivia Hanks Cosby Endowment in the Arts was created with a $325,000 gift from Camille and Bill Cosby and a $100,000 match from the state.

According to FAMU, the $325,000 donation also enabled $100,000 in state matching funds to be awarded to the School of Business and Industry for an eminent scholar’s chair.

Elise Durham, FAMU assistant vice president for communications, issued this statement Thursday following requests from the Democrat seeking comment regarding FAMU’s intentions in light of dozens of sexual assault allegations filed against the famed comedian.

“Hundreds of FAMU students have benefited significantly from Drs. William and Camille Cosby’s gifts given to the university more than 20 years ago,” Durham said. “To date, the Althea Gibson endowed scholarship and the Camille Olivia Hanks Cosby Scholarship have benefited students in several disciplines to the tune of over $400,000.

“FAMU is thankful for Cosby’s interest in higher education and his investment in FAMU.”

In 1992, FAMU awarded Cosby an honorary doctorate during a convocation at Bragg Stadium presided over by President Frederick Humphries.

Cosby faces three charges following an indictment in December on three counts of aggravated indecent assault involving a case in Philadelphia with a woman formerly associated with Temple University. Dozens of other women have come forward with allegations of being sexually abused by Cosby, some dating back decades.

Cosby’s attorneys have denied the claims.

Spelman University, which received $20 million from Bill and Camille Cosby in the 1980s, voted to terminate an endowed professorship that was established with the donation. Berklee College of Music also ended a scholarship under Cosby’s name.

Read more here.

Southern University Working to Fill 3 Chancellor Posts

The New Orleans Advocate

The Southern University system is working to fill three chancellor openings.

 Six semifinalists have been named in the search for a new Southern University at Shreveport chancellor, and search committees are working to find potential new leaders for Southern University’s Law Center and Agriculture Center.

Southern University President and Chancellor Ray Belton previously served as chancellor of Southern University at Shreveport. His promotion to head of the system and chancellor of the Baton Rouge campus opened a position on the two-year campus in the northwest corner of the state.

On top of that, former Law Center Chancellor Freddie Pitcher resigned from his position following a system leadership overhaul last year, and Leodrey Williams, the long-time leader of Southern University’s Agricultural Center, recently retired.

Nine people have applied to become chancellor of the law school, including Southern University Alumni Federation President Preston Castille Jr., and three administrators at the Law Center: interim Chancellor John K. Pierre, Vice Chancellor Russell Jones and Vice Chancellor Roederick C. White Sr.

Meanwhile, the six semifinalists to lead the Shreveport campus will be interviewed in Shreveport on Jan. 29.

Read more here.