Latin Sorority, Lambda Theta Alpha Chartered At Johnson C. Smith University

On March 18th at 9 pm the ladies of Lambda Theta Alpha introduced it’s first chapter at Johnson C. Smith University. LTA is the first Latina Sorority founded in the United States.

LTA was founded in 1975 by 17 ladies on the campus of Kean University in Union, New Jersey. The purpose of the organization is to create a support group for women in higher education and unite the community on campus.

It is an established academic sorority. Like other black Greek organizations the ladies of LTA has a unique call, hand-sign and also perform traditional salutes, chants and strolls. This year they have welcomed new chapter at Boise State, Syracuse University, and California State University.

3
Lambda Theta Alpha – Vanderbilt University

Lambda Theta Alpha

lambda-theta-alpha-greek-lettersLambda Theta Alpha was founded at Kean University in 1975 and later incorporated into an academic sorority in 1979. As the first Latina-based sorority in the nation, Lambda Theta Alpha strives to develop strong leaders that produce and engage in political, social, and cultural activities. Based on the principles of unity, love and respect, the sorority was established for the unification of women through charitable and educational programs. Although Lambda Theta Alpha is Latin by tradition, the sorority is inclusive to all women regardless of race, color, creed, sexual orientation or religious beliefs. Lambda Theta Alpha is a proud member of the National Association of Latino Fraternal Organizations (NALFO).

alsac-lambda-shieldSt. Jude Children’s Research Hospital has been the official philanthropic partner of Lambda Theta Alpha since 2010. LTA chapters across the country raise funds and awareness for St. Jude through campus and community events. Many LTA chapters host a signature event, the LTA Softball Tournament in the spring of each year.

For the latest on HBCU news, stay tuned to The Buzz.

Students Protest UVA Student Martese Johnson’s Bloody Arrest

About 1,000 students gathered at the University of Virginia campus Wednesday night to demand justice for a student who was injured during an arrest and appears in a photo with a bloody face as he is being held down by an officer.
Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe has also called for an investigation into the early-morning arrest of Martese Johnson, whose lawyer said he needed 10 stitches in his head.

Johnson was charged with two counts: obstruction of justice without force, and public swearing or intoxication, Charlottesville General District Court records show.

virginia_student_arrest-e1426770639991The Alcoholic Beverage Control agent who made the arrest, listed in court records as J. Miller, said in the arrest report that Johnson “was very agitated and belligerent.”

A statement from a group calling itself “Concerned Black Students,” however, claims the arrest of Johnson was unprovoked and extreme.

[quote_box_center]“The brutish force used resulted in his head and bodily injuries,” the group said in a statement. “His treatment was unprovoked as he did not resist questioning or arrest.”[/quote_box_center]

Read full via NY Post

 

A Dreamy Night of Deaf Jam Poetry by Howard University

WASHINGTON, D.C., March 11, 2015- Howard University’s Springfest committee presents its third annual, Deaf Jam Poetry benefit concert for the School of Communications speech and hearing clinic. Positive vibes will flood Crampton Auditorium at 7pm on March 31, as performers share the beauty of language through poetry and music.

Deaf Jam is a benefit concert that embraces African American culture, and speaks affirming reassurances regarding our colorful expressions and our unique cultural contributions to music and art. With all that is happening in our communities across this country, from Ferguson, Missouri to New York City, there can be no doubts that cultural enrichment and enlightenment is much needed to promote peace, appreciation and harmony.

The power of the arts through poetry and music is undeniable. It has the capacity to change lives through inspiration, reconciliation and cooperation. Such will be the force of this year’s event. A surprise celebrity host, famous for her thought provoking artistic expression will moderate the event. While the creative word’s from our poetic performers linger in your mind, guest will be elevated into a dreamland of passion and peace. Only to be awakened by a special guest performer, who will close the show and have our audience craving more.

Deaf Jam is for the dreamers, for the healers, for the storytellers and for the lovers of all kinds. That’s why for the 2nd year in a row Alex and Ani, a jewelry company committed to building a culture that focuses entirely on mindful actions, has agreed to be our sponsor. They will also have a bangle bar with merchandise for purchase, located in the bottom of Crampton Auditorium with the Deaf Jam art gallery.

Three years ago this event was created on the foundation of love and empathizing with those who suffer from hearing and speech disabilities. Standing on that same foundation, today Deaf Jam is a meditation on the value of love that spreads through music, words and activism. Last year we were able to attract over 400 hundred guest and raise over $4,000 for the speech and hearing clinic in the School of Communications. As we grow and reach new limits, Deaf Jam lovingly invites you to come dream with us

American Baptist College To Re-open New Dorm

Nashville, Tennessee

American Baptist College, an Historical Black College and University in Nashville, Tennessee, is set to re-open a dormitory that has not been open in over 15 years. The monumental ribbon cutting ceremony is set to take place at 5pm today.

The project manager, Rev. Martin Espinosa 88′, says that it is a 3.7 million dollar project and has asked the college’s alumni to support the college at a greater level.

Alumni have already answered the call. Rev. Dr. Julius Scruggs gave $10,000 on top of a $35,000 gift he already gave to the school. Rev. Dr. Forrest Harris 79′, the president of American Baptist College, has donated the $1,000 to the college and has pledged to give another $9,000 to the school for the project.

The dorm, Griggs Hall, was the home of several of the students who were instrumental to the Civil Rights Movement such as John Lewis, William Barbee, Rev. Dr. Bernard LaFayette, Rev. Dr. CT Vivian, James Bevel and many others. The students were taught the tactics of nonviolence by Rev. Dr. Kelly Miller Smith in this dormitory.

 

For the latest on HBCU news, stay tuned to The Buzz.

Spelman College Co-Valedictorian Twins Continue to Aim High After Graduation

(The Root)

After making history two years ago as the first twin co-valedictorians at Spelman College, Kirstie and Kristie Bronner continue to break new ground as they build careers as youth pastors at Word of Faith Family Worship Cathedral in Austell, Ga. Located in the outskirts of Atlanta, the church is pastored by their father, Bishop Dale Bronner, and one of the largest in the metro area.

 “We strongly believe in faith and work,” Kirstie Bronner tells The Root. “None of us is perfect, so achievement and success come as a product of faith and work.”

After graduating from college, the identical twins published a self-help book with the aim of inspiring other young people. Double Vals: The Keys to Success in College and Life Beyond serves as a resource for high school and college students on how to strive for success through faith, discipline and hard work. The 175-page guide also provides tips about studying, scheduling, living a balanced life and committing to excellence.

The Bronner twins, each of whom maintained a 4.0 grade point average, come from a long line of success seekers. Members of their family own Bronner Bros., a hair and beauty supply company. They intend to carve out their own path to success, focusing on the spiritual side of things and not straying far from the church in their work and deeds, they say.

“God is a huge part of our lives,” Kirstie says. “When we were focused on academics in college, we never lost our foundation in Christ, slept in on a Sunday or used it as an extra Saturday.”

Intent on forging careers in ministry, they became youth pastors at Word of Faith after serving as youth event coordinators, planning conferences, monthly worship and social events, and retreats for their contemporaries with the help of volunteers they recruited.

Today the young women, who majored in music, are also directors in the church’s music department. They lead the Ignite Youth Praise Team, teach the 150-voice Ignite Youth Choir and oversee the Ignite Youth Band (performing a mix of contemporary Christian and gospel music).

They joined the glee club at Spelman freshman year and had scored leadership roles by their senior year.

Initially they had planned to release a music CD after graduation but then decided to focus on their book first.

These days the sisters tour the country delivering their message of inspiration. While they have no official ties to the #BlackLivesMatter campaign, Kirstie Bronner says their message is in sync with the movement, whose focus is to halt police brutality against black Americans.

“We tackle the root of the issues,” Kirstie says. “With racism there is always a hatred that lies up under it and so does low self-esteem. You would not feel the need to put someone else down if you weren’t trying to lift yourself up in the process.”

She continues, “A tinge of self-hatred … comes along with racist issues out there. We urge people to stay spiritually rooted.”

Joe DiFilippo, Fresno Vice Principal, Caught On Video Saying ‘I Just Don’t Like The Black Kids’

Huffington Post

A California school official has been placed on leave after a video surfaced in which he can be heard saying “I just don’t like the black kids.”

Joe DiFilippo, vice principal of Scandinavian Middle School in Fresno, California, was recorded by a student outside the school cafeteria, district spokesman Jed Chernabaeff told the Fresno Bee.

The full clip, which can be seen below, was posted on YouTube on Friday and shows a man identified as DiFilippo leaning against a pole while several kids speak, mostly off camera.

“Who at this school do you not like?” one of the off-camera students asks. Kids continue to talk, with one saying something that sounds like “me… all of us, all of us.”

After about 10 seconds, DiFilippo says, “I just don’t like the black kids.”

The clip ends suddenly and it’s not clear if he was attempting to make a joke. If he was, parents aren’t laughing.

That’s not a joke,” Latricia Medley, who has a child in the school, told ABC 30. “That’s not a very funny joke.”

Medley told the station that she had spoken to DiFilippo before the incident and never got the sense that he was racist. Now, however, she wants him fired.

She’s not alone.

If he said it, he needs to be fired,” Ann Frank, who also has a child in the school, told the Fresno Bee.

Some African-American students told the paper they felt targeted by DiFilippo because of their skin color.

The district told the media that DiFilippo will be on paid administrative leave while the incident is investigated. According to Transparent California, DiFilippo earns $87,449.44 per year in salary and benefits.

Read more here.

Hampton Coach Edward Joyner ‘Calling On Jesus’ For Help Against Kentucky

(ESPN) 

Edward Joyner picked up his phone and made the call he suggested he would.

It doesn’t appear like his friend on the other end of the line thinks much of the Hampton Pirates coach’s chances against the top-seeded Kentucky Wildcats.

After joking about having Jesus on speed dial after arriving in Dayton for the First Four of the NCAA tournament, his Pirates delivered a 74-64 win over the Manhattan Jaspers that set up a monumentally more difficult challenge on Thursday. But it appears Joyner’s sense of humor is still intact.

“Hold on, I told you all I had Jesus on speed dial,” Joyner said with a phone to his ear in his postgame news conference. “Hey, Jesus, first of all, you can’t play so I ain’t worried about you being hot. They want to know how much of a mountain and what our odds are. Hello? Hello?

“I guess he’ll get back to me.”

The Pirates may well need some divine interference against the undefeated, top-ranked Wildcats, but they lived to fight another day in the Midwest Region thanks to a gritty outing from Quinton Chievous, who scored 15 points and had 13 rebounds.

The veteran guard may need some prayer over the next two days just to get in the lineup against the Wildcats after suffering a sprained ankle late in the victory that could leave Hampton without two of its top four scorers thanks to another ankle injury for Dwight Meikle.

“It’s a heck of a mountain, you know what I’m saying?” Joyner said. “We know that. We’re going to go try to play, we’re going to go compete and let the chips fall where they may.

Read more here.

Lawyer: Ferguson Shooting Suspect ‘Was Beaten in Custody’; Gave False Confession

The Root 

A lawyer representing the man who was charged in the shooting of the two Ferguson cops says claims that his client roughed up while he was in police custody, and gave a false confession under duress, the Daily Mail reports.

Jerryl Christmas, the attorney of 20-year-old Jeffrey L. Williams, said that Williams had bruises across his back and on his shoulders and neck as well as marks on his head and a lump on his head. Christmas said that he met with his client on Monday but was not allowed to take pictures. He also notes that detectives then questioned his client after he was beaten.

“I think under those circumstances he would have said anything,” Christmas told Yahoo News. “Anytime someone is questioned without counsel and then I see that kind of bruising, then I’m suspicious about any statements that he may have voluntarily given.”

Williams’ mug shot does appear to show markings on his face and neck, although it is not clear if those were the ones to which the lawyer was referring.

Read more here.

HBCU Students Gives Up Days of Spring Break for a Good Cause

Several students attending Atlanta Black colleges gave up days of their spring break to help register Ferguson voters instead. 

Clark Atlanta University, Morehouse College, Morehouse School of Medicine and Spelman College students recently went down to Ferguson to help residents vote before the deadline on April 7, the Afro American reports.

The college students was joined with the Atlanta chapter of the NAACP and arrived in Ferguson on March 8 and knocked on doors to encourage people to vote. Many of the students are reported giving up days of their spring break in order to help out this year.

[quote_box_center]From IBTTimes.com: The students and chaperones from the Atlanta branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which sponsored the trip, planned to canvass Ferguson neighborhoods Sunday to collect completed voter-registration forms and secure follow-up contact information in advance of municipal elections April 7.[/quote_box_center]

The Times revealed that each student volunteered before ongoing Attorney General Eric Holder and the DOJ shed some light on the “racial discrimination and unconstitutional treatment of Ferguson’s African-American residents by their elected officials.”:

[quote_box_center]The students said they are giving up a portion of their spring-break vacations to make the trip. Each of them volunteered before this week’s release of a searing report of a U.S. Justice Department investigation, which revealed stories of racial discrimination and unconstitutional treatment of Ferguson’s African-American residents by their elected officials and by the majority-white law-enforcement agency that those officials oversee.[/quote_box_center]

Blake Stoner, one of the several college students making the trip to Ferguson, says his grandfather was one of many white Freedom Riders that had risked their lives protesting racial segregation by boarding buses hand-in-hand with African-Americans, “It just seemed right,” Stoner said.

He added: “…after the whole Mike Brown thing, it’s just the time to work. It’s really that simple. You can’t drop the ball now.”

3 Morgan State Football Players Stabbed

The Baltimore Sun

Three Morgan State University football players were stabbed on campus Tuesday afternoon, one of whom was seriously injured, according to police and university officials.

The incident happened outside a cafeteria around 2:05 p.m. after a suspect was observed “wildly swinging” a knife outside the facility, according to Clint Coleman, a university spokesman. The crime scene encompassed an area including residence halls and a practice football field.

A police spokesman said one victim was stabbed in the chest and taken to a hospital in very serious condition. Two other people were also injured.

Coleman later said none of the victims’ injuries were believed to be life-threatening. read more…

 

Common Suggests How to End to Racism

Journal Sentinel

The rapper/actor Common is on an incredible ride right now. He just won an Oscar and a Golden Globe for his song “Glory.”

He also stars in the movie “Run All Night,” which opens Tuesday with Liam Neeson.

Now, Common says we need to use common sense to end racism in this country.

Common recently appeared on “The Daily Show” with Jon Stewart and opened up with his thoughts on how black people and white people can move past the things that keep racism afloat. read more…

WSSU Could See Funding Increase with Governor’s Proposed Budget

Winston-Salem State University would get a small increase in its funding under Gov. Pat McCrory’s proposed $21.5 billion state budget for fiscal year 2015-16, a school official said.

The UNC School of the Arts likely would receive its current amount, and Forsyth Technical Community College would receive a decrease in its allocations under the governor’s budget proposal, officials said.

 

Legislators in Raleigh will negotiate and approve a final state budget. The 2015-16 budget year begins July 1.

Two weeks ago, the UNC board of governors approved increases to tuition and fees for every school in the UNC system.

WSSU would receive $88.17 million in the 2015-16 fiscal year under the governor’s budget proposal. The school’s current budget is $87.92 million, said Randy Mills, the school’s associate vice chancellor for finance and planning. read more…

Rep. Alma Adams Works to Support HBCUs

The Charlotte Observer

In her first leadership role as a member of Congress, North Carolina’s Rep. Alma Adams on Tuesday made sure that minority students and historically black colleges were included in a debate on how to improve the nation’s higher education system.

The longtime educator led the Democrats at a House Education and Workforce Training subcommittee hearing on the reauthorization of the Higher Education Act. She filled in for ranking member Rep. Rubén Hinojosa, D-Texas, who could not attend the hearing.

From her days in the North Carolina state legislature, Adams has long advocated for educational equity and fairness in funding for historically black colleges. After getting to Washington, D.C., the first bill she introduced in January was to reauthorize the Historically Black Colleges and Universities Historic Preservation program.

There are five HBCUs, as the schools are known, in North Carolina’s 12th District, which Adams represents. She taught at an HBCU, Bennett College, for 40 years and graduated from North Carolina A&T University, another historically black college. read more…

4 San Francisco Cops Investigated for Sending Racist Text Messages

The Root 

The conviction against San Francisco Police Officer Ian Furminger was supposed to end there, with him serving jail time for robbing drug dealers during his tenure as a supervisor in his bureau’s plainsclothes unit, CBS SF reports. But during a court filing, federal prosecutors came across racist and homophobic texts sent between Furminger and three other San Francisco police officers, who are now under investigation.

Their texts, sent between 2011 and 2012, spewed hatred toward African Americans, gays, Filipinos and Mexicans, according to the report.

In one text, Furminger wrote, “We got 2 blacks at my boys school and they are brother and sister! There [sic] cause dad works for the school district and I am watching them like hawks.”

And when Furminger told a fellow police officer that his wife’s friend was visiting with her black husband, Furminger and the officer wrote, “SFPD Officer: Get ur pocket gun. Keep it available in case the monkey returns to his roots, it’s not against the law to put an animal down.”

Furminger, “Well said.”

In another text, Furminger called another officer a “f–” and made racist remarks about Mexican and Filipino people.

Furminger was sentenced to nearly four years in prison for the robbery. His three police associates who allegedly engaged in this kind of offensive text messaging with Furminger were reassigned to administrative duty while the investigation takes place, CBS SF reported.

Read more here.

Protesting a Bishop Because She’s a Lesbian Is Moral Hypocrisy on the Part of Black Ministers

The Root

Within the last several days, a coalition of African-American pastors initiated a public protest against the president of American Baptist College in Nashville, Tenn., urging him to disinvite Bishop Yvette Flunder from speaking at an upcoming ABC lecture series because she is a lesbian and married to a woman.

In a press release, they called her invitation to speak at ABC “irresponsible, scandalous, non-biblical and certainly displeasing to God.” They’ve also raised objections to scheduled appearances by me and the Rev. Dr. Allan Boesak because we believe that gay and lesbian Americans deserve the same rights as everyone else, and we have taken public action to advance marriage equality.

I find this kind of moral hypocrisy and theological asymmetry detrimental to the people we are called to serve. The black community and the black family are suffering today, in part, because of the black church’s disregard for myriad systemic injustices. Many of our clergy have stood silent about efforts to disenfranchise voters of color and have shown indifference on matters of social morality: Where is the clergy-led movement in vocal opposition to poverty? When will church leaders mobilize their members in favor of banking reform, campaign-finance reform or increases in the minimum wage? Why can’t the kind of energy expended on the campaign against Bishop Flunder be put to use leading movements to end mass incarceration, the school-to-prison pipeline or the war on drugs?

The reality is that because the black church is wasting time and energy denying gays and lesbians a basic civil right, it has less to offer people in their everyday struggles. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. reminded us: “Any religion that professes to be concerned with the souls of men and is not concerned with the slums that damn them, the economic conditions that strangle them and the social conditions that cripple them is a dry-as-dust religion.”

When it comes to accepting and embracing our lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender brothers and sisters, too many black pastors are quick to stand in forceful opposition, clinging to the erroneous assumption that same-gender love is blasphemy, while professing to protect family, the church and “a biblical worldview.”

But where are the campaigns against clergy who commit other “sins” believed to undermine marriage, family, the Bible and the church? I have never seen this level of moral outrage against clergy who commit adultery, who have been divorced or who have been remarried multiple times. I have yet to see a movement of clergy—under the auspices of protecting marriage, family and “a biblical worldview”—seeking to deny equal treatment under the law to adulterers, fornicators, drunkards or those who have been divorced.

This kind of selective outrage undermines the ability of clergy leaders to minister with integrity and honesty.

My unapologetic support for LGBT Christians is not despite my view of Scripture but because of it. My careful and close reading of the Old Testament and the New Testament in their original languages leads me, as a believer and a Bible scholar, to very different conclusions about what those Scriptures commonly used to condemn gays and lesbians are actually referencing. But regardless of one’s view of Scripture, the issue of marriage equality is decidedly a matter of civil law. “Separation of church and state” is a deeply held tenet of Baptist heritage and belief, and the public-policy debate about “same-sex marriage” is about the right of LGBT couples to receive a civil marriage license issued by the state, not religious sanction.

Read more here.

Starbucks Wants Employees To Start Conversations About Race With Customers

Huffington Post 

An internal meeting with Starbucks employees held three months ago stirred a powerful discussion on race in America. It has since prompted the company’s CEO Howard Schultz to officially extended the invitation to join the conversation to customers across the country.

On Monday, the coffee giant launched a new campaign called “Race Together,” which aims to tackle the polarizing topic through a series of steps built to stimulate action and encourage customers to engage in conversations on race with Starbucks baristas.

“[‘Race Together’] is an opportunity to re-examine how we can create a more empathetic and inclusive society — one conversation at a time,” Schultz said in a statement on the company’s website.

Starbucks has sparked and sustained a growing discussion on race among its employees after Schultz held an internal meeting at the company’s headquarters in Seattle, following the deaths of unarmed black men in Ferguson, Missouri, and Staten Island, New York.

More than 400 employees attended the impromptu meeting in December 2014 and were given an open forum to candidly discuss race among their colleagues and share ideas and solutions on how to address the topic through a collective, company-wide mission.

“This was not about demanding change, but demonstrating a willingness to embrace change and begin to bridge the divide to empathy,” Linda Mills, a Starbucks spokeswoman, told The Huffington Post in an email.

“As these events came to an end, we realized that this is the beginning of a conversation and one we intend to continue as a company into the future.”

As part of the campaign, baristas are encouraged to engage in conversations on race with customers and distribute branded cups with the words “Race Together” handwritten on them.

“If a customer asks you what this is, try to engage in a discussion that we have problems in this country in regards to race and racial inequality,” Schultz said in a video shared by the company this week.

The company has also partnered with USA Today to release a special newspaper supplement on March 20th, which will include “conversation starters” that also urge customers to carry the discussion online using the hashtag #RaceTogether.

According to newspaper, readers will also be asked to fill in a blank in one question: “In the past year, I have been to the home of someone of a different race ___ times.”

Schultz — who has involved the company in several previous political discussions including a petition urging the end of the federal government shutdown as well as a pledge to hire more veterans, has been vocal on national debates but perhaps none as sensitive as the topic of race.

Read more here.