Texas Southern’s Tray Walker to the Baltimore Ravens

maxresdefaultThe Baltimore Ravens took Texas Southern All-SWAC cornerback Tray Walker in the fourth round of the 2015 NFL Draft Saturday.

Walker was regarded as an emerging draft prospect after turning heads at the NFL super regional combine.

The 6-foot-2, 200-pound corner ran the 40-yard dash in 4.42 seconds. He also has a 36 1/2 inch vertical leap, a 10-7 broad jump, a 4.05 short shuttle and a 6.7 three-cone drill.

Last season at Texas Southern, Walker played in every game last season and intercepted four passes. He finished his career with seven interceptions in the last three seasons.

Arizona Cardinals Draft Former Delaware State Lineman Rodney Gunter

imageThe Arizona Cardinals took Delaware State’s Rodney Gunter in the fourth round of the NFL Draft today.

Gunter, the 116th pick in this year’s draft, is DSU’s first NFL draft pick since wide receiver Darnerien McCants was taken by the Washington Redskins in 2001.

He’s also the Hornets’ highest draft pick since receiver John Taylor was selected by the San Francisco 49ers in the third round in 1986.

Gunter was a four-year starter from 2011 to 2014, competing in each of the Hornets’ 45 games during the span. He was an All-MEAC First Team selection in 2013; and second team pick in 2012 and 2014.

His career stats include 99 solo tackles and 89 assists, 37 tackles-for-loss and 18 sacks. He was the Hornets’ sack leader in each of the last three seasons.

dsuhornets.com

HBCU Free Agent NFL Signings

nfldraft

Updated: 1:07 PM EST, 5/5/2015

Checkout the players at the country’s 107 historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) drafted to the NFL over the weekend. (#HBCUpride!)

Lynden Trail – Norfolk State – Houston Texans.
Arthur Miley – Southern – Carolina Panthers.
Travis Lee – Miles College – Cleveland Browns.
Tavarus Dantzler – Bethune Cookman – Green Bay Packers
Jerry Lovelocke – Prairie View – Baltimore Ravens
Phil Sims – Winston Salem State – Arizona Cardinals
DJ Williams – Grambling State – Pittsburgh Steelers
Mike Lee – Fort Valley State – Atlanta Falcons
De’Ante Saunders – Tennessee State – Cleveland Browns
Marcus Reed – Fayetteville State – Green Bay Packers
Keenan Lambert – Norfolk State – Seattle Seahawks
Ryan Griffin – Jackson State – Detroit Lions
Nigel Crawford –Saint Augustines – Pittsburgh Steelers

Google Is Embedding Engineers At HBCU Campuses To Fix Tech’s Diversity Problem

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (AP) — Howard University freshman Alanna Walton knew something was different about the professor teaching her introduction to computer science course.

First, there was her name: Professor Sabrina. She was an African American woman, kept office hours until 2 a.m. if that’s what it took to see everyone, and had an additional title: Google In Residence.

“It was an awesome class,” said Alanna who has already chosen her major at the Washington D.C.-based university: computer science.

In ongoing efforts to diversify Silicon Valley’s tech sector, Google is embedding engineers at a handful of Historically Black Colleges and Universities where they teach, mentor and advise on curriculum.

(HBCU Hackathons, HBCU Lifestyle)

Today 35 percent of African Americans receiving computer science degrees come from those schools, but they don’t make their way to Silicon Valley’s top tech firms. Google is typical — about 1 percent of its technical staffers are black.

Last year a push by civil rights advocate Jesse Jackson prompted several dozen tech firms to release workforce diversity data which showed under-representation of African Americans, Latinos and women in the field.

In response, businesses, universities and community leaders have launched initiatives aimed at diversifying their ranks, both ethnically and by gender. The Anita Borg Institute and the National Center for Women and Information Technology have partnered with many companies to support female engineers.

Facebook offers “Facebook University,” an internship for low income minority college freshmen interested in computer science. Intel has committed $300 million over the next five years toward diversifying its workforce, while Apple has a $50 million partnership with nonprofits to support women and minority computer science majors.

Google decided to go to the source, sending a handful of software engineers to teach at Howard, Hampton University in Hampton, Virginia, Fisk University in Nashville, and Spelman and Morehouse colleges in Atlanta.

They taught introductory courses, but they also trained students on everything from how to send a professional email to how to make it through a software engineering job interview, which can involve a lot of time solving coding questions at a white board.

This summer, 30 of those students will be Google interns. And Howard University graduating senior Christopher Hocutt, 21, whose friends jokingly call him Mr. Google, will be starting at the company full-time.

Hocutt said the Google In Residence professors convinced him to apply.

“What they discovered was a lot of people weren’t even applying to Google because we didn’t believe we were skilled enough to do it,” he said. “Once we realized we have the skills, we just needed mentorship to make our resume look good, get through the interview, have confidence to try.”

Read more here.

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel Not Happy With This Spike Lee Joint Film Title

Reports of Spike Lee’s newest project that focuses on the Englewood neighborhood in Chicago is bringing about some heated contention as of now because of the film’s title, ‘Chiraq’.

The title of Spike Lee’s up and coming film, ‘Chiraq’ has attracted some negative feedback from some of the biggest politicians in the city of Chicago. This new Spike Lee Joint will highlight violence in the Englewood neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois.

The proposed undertaking, which is reportedly situated to highlight the gun violence in the city’s Englewood neighborhood, has gotten the consideration of the city’s councilman William Burns and Mayor Rahm Emanuel. Evidently, they’re not too satisfied with the film’s title, which is a famous handle created by neighborhood rappers who contrast the city’s wrongdoing rates with an Iraqi war zone.

Gaia. Englewood Chicago, August 2012. (photo © Thomas Fennell IV)

Recently Emanuel met with Lee at City Hall to examine the producer’s arrangements to film in the Windy City. “We had a legit, candid discussion,” Emanuel said amid a public interview. “He said that while the motion picture is about the area of Englewood, I was clear that I was not content about the title.”

[pull_quote_center]He added, “I let him know likewise that there are great individuals that live in Englewood who are raising their family and there’s a ton of constructive things that are occurring in Englewood chiefly determined by the individuals that make up Englewood.”[/pull_quote_center]

Many resounded the Mayor’s slants, saying the film’s title is a “slap in the face” to the citizens who pay their expenses and work to clean up the city’s negative picture. “South Sider’s and West Sider’s as of now stroll around with a monstrous chip on their shoulders,” he said amid a meeting with the Illinois Film Office. “There’s a sense the media just comes to cover dead bodies and not the positive things that happen consistently. What’s more, why is this gentleman from New York coming to do a film about Chicago?”

While there’s no official word on Lee’s musings to reexamine the title, Burns assumes the city’s occupants ought to have a say in the film’s title, given Lee’s late $3 million film industry assessment credit demand.

Spike Lee is a graduate of Morehouse College in Atlanta. To date, Lee has apparently courted Kanye West, Common, Jeremy Piven and Samuel L. Jackson to star in “Chiraq,” which will be shot for Amazon Prime.

The Princeton Review Names Spelman in Annual Guide to Green Colleges

ATLANTA — The Princeton Review has named Spelman College as one of the most environmentally responsible “green” colleges in its “Guide to 353 Green Colleges: 2015 Edition.” Spelman is the first and only HBCU to be included in the guide, which profiles colleges with exceptional commitments to sustainability based on their academic offerings and career preparation for students, campus policies, initiatives and activities. Schools included in the guide are located in the United States, Canada and Egypt.

The colleges in the guide were chosen based on Green Rating scores (from 60 to 99). Spelman received an 88 Green Rating. Only schools with Green Rating scores of 83 or higher made it into the guide. The data used in the guide was calculated in summer 2014 using information from The Princeton Review’s 2013-14 survey of school administrators from 861 colleges. Each school in the 2015 guide has a write-up report on topics such as the academic institution’s use of renewable energy, recycling and conservation programs to the availability of environmental studies and career guidance for green jobs.

The Princeton Review first published the guide in 2010 and it remains the only free, annually updated downloadable guide to green colleges.

Hampton Research Team to Lead NASA Search For Life on Distant Worlds

Hampton, VA –  Hampton University Professor William B. Moore and a team of HU researchers have been selected by NASA to lead the Living, Breathing Planet Project. This project, funded through a $3.8 million grant from NASA’s Astrobiology program, is a part of the NASA Exoplanet System Science (NExSS, pronounced “nexus”) program. This research will help determine the past and present habitability of Mars and even Venus and will form the basis for identifying habitable and eventually living planets around other stars.

Hampton University Professor William B. Moore

“The search for life and living worlds beyond Earth addresses some of most profound questions humanity can ask,” said Moore. “Hampton University’s Atmospheric and Planetary Science department is bringing its expertise in atmospheric measurements and planetary science together with our university, industry, and NASA partners to understand what future observations of planets around other stars can tell us about the likelihood of life there.”

The Living, Breathing Planet team will conduct a multi-disciplinary investigation into the way that stars use magnetic fields and stellar winds to strip or sometimes sip away the atmospheres of planets that orbit them. Moore will lead researchers from HU’s Atmospheric and Planetary Science Department, the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, the National Institute of Aerospace, Science Systems and Applications, Inc., the University of Maryland College Park, the University of Virginia, and Virginia Tech to study how the loss of hydrogen and other atmospheric compounds to space has profoundly changed the chemistry and surface conditions of the planets of the Solar system and those being discovered around other stars. Up to 5 Hampton University graduate students will be supported by this project, and opportunities to join the team are available.

“This interdisciplinary endeavor connects top research teams and provides a synthesized approach in the search for planets with the greatest potential for signs of life,” says Jim Green, NASA’s Director of Planetary Science. “The hunt for exoplanets is not only a priority for astronomers, it’s of keen interest to planetary and climate scientists as well.”
CoRoT2bThe team’s investigation will reach across vast distances using data collected from telescopic and spacecraft investigations of the planets orbiting our sun and other stars. The team will integrate geochemical, atmospheric sampling, remote sensing and telescopic observations with detailed physical models to investigate the processes that link the destiny of a planet’s atmosphere with the dynamics of its host star and space environment in order to answer fundamental questions about what makes a planet habitable and how habitability can be reliably identified.

“NExSS is a new way for NASA to bring together its broad spectrum of talent to illuminate problems of fundamental significance to humanity,” said Moore. “The program includes participation from all four branches of NASA science: Astrophysics, Earth Science, Heliophysics, and Planetary Science, and we at Hampton University are excited about our role leading a team.”

NAACP Prez Cornell William Brooks Brings In Commencement Address At Jackson State

Cornell William Brooks, President and CEO of the NAACP, is bringing in the commencement address at Jackson State University today, and you can now watch live!

Fun fact: Brooks attended Jackson State University, where he received a BA in political science with honors.

Click here to view the JSU Spring Undergraduate Commencement.

Barack Obama: What I Think The People of Baltimore Want Is The Truth

Barack Obama recently responded to news of charges made against six Baltimore police officers in the Freddie Gray case. He said, “What I think the people of Baltimore want…is the truth,” according to White House pool.

“It is absolutely vital that the truth comes out on what happened to Freddie Gray.”

Although the POTUS says that he is in no position to comment on the legal process involved on the matter, he insists “that justice needs to be served.”

Yesterday news that the death of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man that was viciously attacked and subdued by Baltimore police officers, was ruled a homicide was greeted with cheers from those wanting justice. Gray’s death is “the latest symbol of police brutality in America,” some say. 

Morehouse College professor Marc Lamont Hill perfectly sums up why young black people are letting their voices be heard, sometimes by rioting. He said in a series of tweets:

[pull_quote_center]I pray for peace in Baltimore. But it’s foolish and unrealistic to expect peace without justice as a necessary precondition. Riots are what happened in Kentucky after the basketball team lost the championship.What we’re seeing is an international wave of UPRISINGS. … To dismiss these uprisings as mere thuggery and criminality is to delegitimize and pathologize black rage.[/pull_quote_center]

The youngest top prosecutor of any major city in America, Marilyn Mosby, is now overseeing the Freddie Gray investigation.

[Read more: Meet Marilyn Mosby, Tuskegee Grad Overseeing the Freddie Gray Investigation

Mosby is a product of a historically black university, Tuskegee University in Tuskegee, Alabama, who “comes from a long line of police officers.” 

[quote_box_center]“She has a natural affinity for police officers and law enforcement types, and at the same time, she is aware of the incredible number of complaints against the Baltimore City police department,” said Richard Woods, a Baltimore-based attorney whose practice is primarily criminal defense work.[/quote_box_center]

“It was important to have somebody who was willing to look at it from both sides, and Marilyn Mosby fit the bill,” Woods said. 

 

 

The Southern University “Human Jukebox” Marching Band Brings Out Floyd “Money”

The Southern University “Human Jukebox” Marching Band brings out Floyd “Money” Mayweather’s for his arrival ceremony to fight week festivities Tuesday at the MGM Grand Arena in Las Vegas.

The Human Jukebox played a “role in events leading to Saturday’s highly touted mega fight between Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao.”

The Political Power of the Black Sorority

After a five-month delay, Loretta Lynch made history last week. On Thursday, the Senate confirmed Lynch as the next U.S. attorney general, the first African American woman ever to hold this Cabinet position. Her long-stalled nomination sometimes seemed in doubt, held hostage to partisan jockeying between Democrats and Republicans. But one political bloc never gave up, relentlessly rallying its support behind Lynch: the black sorority.

During her initial hearing, the seats behind Lynch were filled with more than two dozen of her Delta Sigma Theta Sorority sisters arrayed in crimson-and-cream blazers and blouses, ensuring their visibility on the national stage. These Delta women—U.S. Representatives Marcia Fudge and Joyce Beatty among them—were there to lend moral support and show the committee that they meant business. The Deltas were not alone. The Lynch nomination also drew support from congressional representatives from other black sororities: Alpha Kappa Alpha members Terri Sewell and Sheila Jackson Lee took to the House floor to advocate for a vote while Sigma Gamma Rho members Corinne Brown and Robin Kelly and Zeta Phi Beta member Donna Edwards used social media and press conferences to campaign on Lynch’s behalf.

For Lynch, who co-founded the Delta chapter at Harvard University, the political support of the sorority sisters was not necessarily a surprise. But for those less familiar with the political activism of black sororities, their appearance at the Lynch hearing offered an unexpected crash course in the political influence of the black sisterhood.

Black sororities are not social auxiliaries of polite society, but are focused organizations with very specific civic and political goals. As elected officials from both parties are quickly finding out, these sorority-member activists are part of a growing power bloc of black women in the modern political landscape. As Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in particular has learned twice in the last few weeks, the black sisterhood will show up at your office and respectfully request that you take action on their requests without delay.

Outside of black communities, the sorority’s political influence, social action initiatives, and economic development often go unnoticed. Likewise on college campuses—particularly those that lie outside of the network of Historically Black Colleges and Universities—the general student body is largely unaware of the extent of black sororities’ work in communities and their contributions to expansive national programs in areas like education, health, and promotion of strong families.

Yet the reality is that black sororities are—and have been—hard at work on a political agenda that seeks to improve the American experience of blacks and women across the country. And unlike most other sororities, membership in a black sorority is not simply a college phase, but a lifelong commitment. Alumnae comprise 75 percent of the active membership of these groups. Black sororities do not confine their concerns to college campuses. And their fight for Lynch’s confirmation only represents the surface of over a century’s worth of work.

In order to understand the broader context of sorority politics, it’s worth taking time to look back at how these organizations developed, and to look forward to the new forms of political sisterhood that are emerging today.

Read more here.

Dr. Clarence E. Lloyd Sends a 100,000 Gift to Fayetteville State University

Dr.-Clarence-E.-Lloyd-JrDr. Clarence E. Lloyd, Jr., a radiologist in Winston-Salem, N.C., and a 1965 graduate of Fayetteville State University (FSU), has made a $100,000 donation to the institution. The gift was made at FSU’s 148th Founders Day Celebration on April 23, 2015. The gift is Dr. Lloyd’s contribution to the $25 million Campaign for FSU: From a Proud Legacy to a 21st Century University.

“This gift is a tremendous gesture on Dr. Lloyd’s part,” said FSU Chancellor James A. Anderson. “He, along with members of the Class of 1965, have always been loyal to FSU. Their continuous support of the university and its students speaks volumes of the love and dedication they have for their alma mater. I am extremely grateful to him for all that he has done and will continue to do for the institution.”

Dr. Lloyd currently serves as a radiologist at the Veteran’s Affairs Medical Center in Winston-Salem. A native of Williamston, N.C., Dr. Lloyd earned a bachelor’s degree from FSU in 1965. He taught high school for a year before going to North Carolina Central University in Durham, where he earned a master’s degree in molecular biology in 1970. For two years, he taught at Livingstone College in Salisbury, and then went on to earn a medical degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1975. From 1975-78 he specialized in radiology at Bowman-Gray School of Medicine where he was the first minority to finish the program at the school.

“I was at FSU on work study and financial aid,” Dr. Lloyd said. “I fed the animals in the science department. That was my job. Now, kids don’t have time to work, so I wanted to contribute to FSU. Had it not been for FSU, I would probably be back in Williamston or had gone to Vietnam and gotten killed. FSU gave me a chance and I wanted to give back.”

———

FSU is a constituent institution of The University of North Carolina and the second-oldest public institution of higher education in the state. FSU offers nearly 60 degrees at the bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral levels. With more than 6,000 students, Fayetteville State University is among the most diverse institutions in the nation.
For more information, call (910) 672-1474.

Meet Marilyn Mosby, Tuskegee Grad Overseeing the Freddie Gray Investigation

tumblr_inline_nnobkudQQg1tr2007_500(NBC

Baltimore’s state’s attorney probably did not expect to be thrust into the national spotlight during her fourth month on the job. And yet Marilyn Mosby — the youngest top prosecutor of any major city in America — now finds herself playing a key role in a local drama that has gripped the country.

The 35-year-old is tasked with determining whether charges are warranted in the controversial death of Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old black man who died after suffering a spinal cord injury in police custody. Gray’s death has inspired protests in Baltimore and nationwide.

On Thursday, the Baltimore police commissioner announced the department had handed confidential information on how Gray died over to prosecutors. The Justice Department is working on its own independent investigation.

Mosby did not return a call from NBC News requesting comment, but her office confirmed it had received the police department’s investigative file.

“However, the results of their investigation is not new to us,” the office said in a statement. ” We have been briefed regularly throughout their process while simultaneously conducting our own independent investigation into the death of Freddie Gray. … We ask for the public to remain patient and peaceful and to trust the process of the justice system.

Mosby is a Democrat who comes from a long line of police officers — but she has been vocal about holding cops accountable in the past.

[quote_box_left]“She has a natural affinity for police officers and law enforcement types, and at the same time, she is aware of the incredible number of complaints against the Baltimore City police department,” said Richard Woods, a Baltimore-based attorney whose practice is primarily criminal defense work.[/quote_box_left]

mosby1

Woods has known Mosby for years and supported her in her campaign for state’s attorney. “It was important to have somebody who was willing to look at it from both sides, and Marilyn Mosby fit the bill.”

Her interest in the justice system stemmed from tragedy: When she was growing up in inner-city Boston, her 17-year-old cousin was mistaken for a drug dealer and killed outside her home by another 17-year-old.

The former insurance company attorney is leading an independent investigation of the officers involved in Gray’s death on April 19. She has not said when she might decide if she will pursue charges.

She has spoken out against police officers numerous times. During her campaign for state’s attorney, in response to a Baltimore Sun investigation of allegations of police beatings, she said: “Police brutality is completely inexcusable. I’m going to apply justice fairly, even to those who wear a badge.”

Mosby is a mother of two daughters who met her future husband while she was studying political science at the historically black Tuskegee University in Alabama. She was the first in her family to graduate from college, was raised by a single mother, and has law enforcement in her blood.

“My grandfather, my uncles, my mother, my father — I have five generations of police officers. I know that the majority of police officers are really hard-working officers who are risking their lives day in and day out, but those really bad ones who go rogue do a disservice to the officers who are risking their lives and taking time away from their families,” she told Baltimore Magazine in January, when she started her tenure as state’s attorney.

Her surprise win last November is her first stint as an elected official. She bested incumbent Gregg Bernstein by portraying herself as a crime crusader, determined to keep repeat offenders off the streets.

“People who have zero regard for human life do not deserve to live among the residents of the greatest city in the world,” she said in a primary victory speech.

Mosby’s first stint in the Baltimore City State’s Attorney’s Office came after she graduated from Boston College Law School. She served first as assistant state’s attorney and then prosecuted some of the worst felonies in Maryland in the general trial division.

She left to go work as field counsel for Liberty Mutual Insurance for three years. In 2013 and 2014, she was named as one of the Baltimore Sun’s 50 Women to Watch.

Her husband, Nick Mosby, is a Baltimore city councilman who has spoken out about the riots that Gray’s death has prompted.

“This is bigger than Freddie Gray,” he said in an interview with Fox News on Monday night. “This is about the socioeconomics of poor urban America.” The rioters were exhibiting “decades-old anger and frustration for a system that’s failed them,” he added. Read more at NBCNews.com

Free Tuition for Wilberforce University Students

Free Tuition For Students At Wilberforce UniversityWILBERFORCE– A new report shows fewer parents are saving for their kids’ college education.

Right now, 1.2 trillion Americans are paying off college debt.

The new Wilberforce Promise will fund nearly 100 low income students to keep their money in their wallet.

Under the program, students would get a combination of grants, scholarships and work study to cover the entire four years of tuition including housing and food.

Only first-time undergraduate students are eligible for the Wilberforce Promise. Students have to enroll full-time, live on campus and maintain passing grades.

The Vice President of Enrollment says this a first step in addressing the national epidemic of college debt. Students will get a chance to receive grant opportunities like the Pell Grant or Ohio Grant and work study to help with other university costs.

No application is needed to enroll in the Wilberforce Promise, you only need to be a first year student to be considered. The program will be granted to students on a first come first serve basis.

Wilberforce says their new promise will help about 100 students during the 2015-2016 school year and expect the program grow.

Governor John Kasich is also trying to contain higher education costs. Back in February, he created a task force to see what can be done to leave less students in debt.

Nonpayment Causes Paine College to Drop Students

The Augusta Chronicle 

Paine College is dropping 35 students as a result of nonpayment of tuition, a “tough decision” being made to reduce the college’s debt and help remove Paine from a probation sanction with its accrediting body, according to Interim President Samuel

In a statement released Wednesday, Sullivan said the students have balances as high as $12,000 stretching over 18 months and administrators have taken intensive measures – like visiting students in their dormitories; making phone calls and sending e-mails – to encourage them to pay.

“Although this is unfortunate, we must protect the college’s financial future and work to be in compliance with the guidelines that were set forth by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges,” Sullivan said in the statement. “This is the last thing we want to do, but we must be held accountable.”

The purge accounts for only 5 percent of the college’s 699 students, according to enrollment figures on Paine’s Web site, but it comes as administrators continue an aggressive fundraising campaign to strengthen the college’s financial base and rectify past managerial failures that led to accreditation trouble.

The commission placed Paine on probation in June for violating 10 accreditation standards ranging from management of federal student financial aid to employing qualified financial officers. The probation, the most severe sanction possible and final step before accreditation is revoked, came after two years on a less severe warning sanction for similar violations.

In general, dropping students for nonpayment is not uncommon and most colleges withdraw students automatically by a certain date in the semester if their accounts are not settled, according to Mike Reilly, the executive director of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers.

Many institutions do not allow students to begin a new semester if they have unpaid charges from the previous term.

“There’s an expectation that you pay your tuition,” Reilly said.

Read more here.

Florida Congressional Reps Join New HBCU Caucus

Bradley Byrne, Gwen Graham, and Alma AdamsSunshine State News

Four representatives from Florida — Democrats Corrine Brown, Gwen Graham, Alcee Hastings and Frederica Wilson — joined more than 30 other members of Congress to start the Bipartisan Congressional Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Caucus on Tuesday.

Florida has four HBCUs: Florida A&M University (FAMU) and private schools Bethune-Cookman University, Edward Waters College and Florida Memorial University. Across the nation, there are more than 100 HBCUs with more than 300,000 students.

.S. Rep. Bradley Byrne, R-Ala., and U.S. Rep. Alma Adams, D-N.C., will co-chair the new caucus which defines it mission as “to highlight and address unique challenges that HBCUs face; and to make sure their needs are heard and recognized on Capitol Hill.” U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell, D-Ala., and U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., are the vice chairs. Members of the group range from liberals like U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., and U.S. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., to conservatives like U.S. Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., and U.S. Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C.  read more