High Schooler that Interviewed President Obama, Now Morehouse Man Hopeful

MTV.com

Noah McQueen experienced instability in his childhood, got into disciplinary problems for fighting, and completed his second year of high school with less than a 1.0 GPA.

But now, only a couple years later, he’s part of the My Brother’s Keeper initiative, has raised his grades, is involved with a ton of extracurricular activities, works with special needs children in a unified track program, and just sat down for a one-on-one interview with the President of the United States.

What?!

It’s not too often a high school student gets chosen to interview a world leader, but McQueen is no ordinary high school student. He’s turned his life around and is making taking concrete steps to ensure a bright future for himself. And this is only the beginning. For his next step, he wants to pursue a career in education and has set up a GoFundMe page to help with his high tuition costs for college.

MTV News caught up with Noah to talk about My Brother’s Keeper, get some advice on staying focused, and of course, see if he had any secrets to share about his buddy, Barack.

MTV: So, how are you involved with My Brother’s Keeper?

Noah McQueen: I’m a mentee and this is my first year in My Brother’s Keeper. My name was generated from my school. I went through an interview process from the White House to be in this program, and they asked me some really good questions about my background.

I get to try to help support the less fortunate, and help them improve in certain areas while giving them resources to succeed. read more…

LeMoyne-Owen Alum is NY 2015 Professional Woman of the Year

Garden City, NY (PRWEB) March 10, 2015

NAPW honors Cynthia Smith as a 2015 Professional Woman of the Year. Ms. Smith is recognized with this prestigious distinction for leadership in education administration. As the largest, most-recognized networking organization of professional women in the country, spanning virtually every industry and profession, the National Association of Professional Women is a powerfully vibrant networking community with over 600,000 members and over 200 Local Chapters.

Ms. Smith has more than 20 years of experience in the New York City Department of Education. Working as both an Administrator and a Teacher, she is passionate about nurturing the growth and professional development of young educators and the academic success of middle school students.

Currently, Ms. Smith is Academy Principal and has been instrumental in the development of numerous programs, including gender classes, professional development for teachers, program operations and parent engagement. For nearly ten years, Ms. Smith was District Science Coordinator for CSD 23, Brooklyn, overseeing all aspects of the districts science curriculum for pre-K through Grade 8. Prior to that position, Ms. Smith was a Science / Math Teacher for four years. read more…

Lane College Will Inaugurate 10th President

The Jackson Sun

The Investiture of Dr. Logan Hampton will occur at 3:30 p.m. March 22, in the Graves Auditorium and Chapel of the Chambers-McClure Academic Center (CMAC) according to a release from the school. This Investiture will include a formal processional of the Lane College Board of Trustees, distinguished guests, faculty, and staff. Immediately following the ceremony, an Inaugural Reception will be held.

Both events are open to the public.

Logan Hampton was named 10th President of Lane College by the Lane College Board of Trustees in June of last year. read more…

Rihanna Makes History as First Black Spokeswoman for Dior

(Black Enterprise) Music’s favorite Bad Gal is at it again, doing what she does best and adding a page to fashion history books too. Style and beauty goddess Rihanna just inked a deal with French fashion house Dior, making her the first black woman to ever partner with the brand.

Rihanna is said to star in Dior’s “Secret Garden” video series, according to Huffington Post. The series is famous for its mystical flair and models dashing throughout the Palace of Versailles, drenched from head-to-toe in Dior’s finest. She’ll also appear in a print campaign for the brand. Both the series and prints will be shot by Steven Klein.

RiRi is reportedly replacing Charlize Theron as the face of J’Adore Dior. The pop icon has been making a big imprint in the fashion realm since the beginning of her career. All of the latest Dior buzz is stirring just after photos of Rihanna in Harper’s Bazaar China surfaced the web. The “FourFiveSeconds” looked stunning in the Asian-inspired themed shoot.

This article originally appeared on Black Enterprise

Fayetteville State Bowling Team Finishes CIAA Southern Divisional with Perfect Record

FSUBroncos.com

Fayetteville, NC – The Fayetteville State University women’s bowling completed the 2015 CIAA Southern Divisional Event with a 3-0 baker’s record on Sunday, March 15th at the B&B Bowling Lanes. FSU improves to 35-5 overall and 30-0 in the division. The Lady Broncos have won 13 divisional titles from 14 years of competition.

Fayetteville State completed the team matches with a 6-0 record after the first two days of competition. FSU followed with victories over Johnson C. Smith (743-662), Saint Augustine’s (900-701), and Shaw (846-657) in baker’s matches on the third and final day. read more…

Baptist College Snubs Opposition To ‘Married’ Lesbian Bishop Speaker

One News Now

American Baptist College (ABC) refuses to reconsider its decision Tuesday to invite a “married” lesbian bishop to be a featured speaker at its annual lecture series this month despite protests — arguing that “true Christians” advocate “social justice.”

In a defiant tone against a group of pastors protesting the lesbian speaker being featured in the 58th Garnett-Nabrit Lecture Series, ABC Vice President for Administration, Finance and Legal Affairs Richard E. Jackson insists that most of the responses that he’s received over the lesbian bishop’s speaking engagement have been ones of shock as to why it’s an issue at all.

“The reaction I have gotten is ‘what’s the controversy, what’s the big deal?’” Jackson told the Christian Post. “You all are an educational institution.”

The speaker at issue is Yvette Flunder, the bishop of City of Refuge United Church of Christ, located in the heart of San Francisco, California.

Legalizing same-sex “marriage” along with 36 other states, the Golden State performs and recognizes such unions. Flunder is married to her lesbian partner, Shirley Miller, but such controversial same-sex unions are not recognized in Nashville, Tennessee, where the academic institution is located. The Volunteer State is one of just 13 left that have marriage amendments protecting the sacred institution as only between one man and one woman.

Refusing to hear or even recognize any biblical objections to the lesbian speaker’s lecture slated for March 18, Jackson is steamrolling ahead, discounting such concerns as antithetical to the spirit of academics championed at ABC.

“The school is not going to reconsider its invitation to Bishop Flunder,” Jackson succinctly stated. “We’re looking forward to her participation in the Garnett-Nabrit Lectures.”

Forwarding the Gospel of Christ or the ‘social gospel?’

Jackson alleges that those who aren’t on board with a lesbian speaker lecturing at a Christian college are not aligned with Christian principles that call them to serve the needy.

“I think that the first thing that we would have people to understand is that Bishop Flunder will be focusing most of her remarks and comments while at American Baptist College on the innovative nature of the ministry that she (Flunder) conducts that addresses the rights and needs of persons with HIV and AIDS,” Jackson expressed. “And I think that is completely compatible and consistent with the belief and philosophy of Christian people and Christian institutions to care for the least of us in any given society.”

Read more here.

Stay tuned to The Buzz for the latest on HBCU news.

NCCU’s NIT Play Begins at Miami

Bethune-Cookman’s Baseball Team Sweeps Doubleheader at North Carolina A&T

The Daytona-Beach News Journal

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Bethune-Cookman’s baseball team earned a Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference series sweep Sunday of North Carolina A&T, taking 7-4 and 16-5 wins in a doubleheader at War Memorial Stadium.

Wildcats (6-13, 6-3 MEAC) coach Jason Beverlin picked up his 100th coaching victory in the opener. The fourth-year coach has led the team to two NCAA regional appearances.

In the opener, Alex Seibold pitched five innings to earn the win, and seven different B-CU players had hits.

After falling behind 3-0 in the first inning, the Wildcats rallied in the third and fourth innings, respectively. read more…

University of Alabama Elects First African American SGA President in Nearly 40 Years

Huffington Post

On March 10, Elliot Spillers was elected the first African American SGA president at the University of Alabama in nearly 40 years. Prior to Spillers’ victory, Cleo Thomas was elected in 1976 as the first African American SGA president at the University of Alabama. Both Spillers and Thomas ran as independent candidates in opposition to “The Machine,” which was described in a 1992 Esquire cover story as “a secret society that for eighty years has controlled student politics at the University of Alabama… it acts as the political arm of twenty‐seven leading fraternities and sororities at the school.” Spillers is the first non-Machine candidate to win the SGA presidency since John Merrill in 1986, and Spillers credits a portion of his victory to dissenters within the Machine.

“The entire Machine is not a bad organization,” Spillers says. “It took members within that organization to stand beside me and go against the grain and get me elected to this office. Just like the rest of us on campus, they’re ready for change. They’re ready for an inclusive environment on campus.”

Spillers’ campaign aimed to create such an environment, with Spillers reaching out to Greek, non-Greek, and minority organizations on campus and publicizing the diversity of his platform on his campaign Facebook page. In total, 14,931 votes were cast on Election Day at the university, with Spillers earning 8,602 votes. Spillers received the highest number of votes of any other SGA candidate in the university’s history, and on a campus that has historically been plagued by voter apathy in response to the Machine, this year’s election featured the highest voter turnout in the history of the University of Alabama.

Read more here.

Aggies Win Two on Sunday at B&G Tournament

ncataggies.com

GREENSBORO – It was a great day for host North Carolina A&T who finished its inaugural  Blue and Gold Tournament with a pair of wins on Sunday afternoon at the Lady Aggie Softball Complex,

The Aggies (7-12) won their first game 5-4 over UMES (0-9) in an exciting matchup that lasted eight innings. A&T dominated in the finale with a 9-3 win over Norfolk State (1-10). A&T concluded its tournament with a 3-1 record.

Junior pitcher Janika May not only led her team defensively, but it was her walk-off triple to right field in the eighth inning that drove in the game-winning run. Due to the international tiebreaker rule, junior Alejandra Barcenas was placed on second to start the inning as the Aggies trailed 4-2. With one out, freshman Raven Gray tripled to right-center field to cut the score to 4-3. Sophomore Dasia Moore hit a sacrifice fly to left field to score Gray which tied the game at four. read more…

Kendrick Lamar Just Dropped His New Album, To Pimp a Butterfly

Time

The album was supposed to be released on March 23

Kendrick Lamar surprised the music world just before midnight on Sunday by dropping his new album, To Pimp a Butterflya week early.

With little fanfare, and in similar fashion to Drake’s album release in February, Lamar simply tweeted out the album title along with a link to the iTunes purchasing interface. The album was slated for release on March 23.

la-et-ms-kendrick-lamar-titles-new-lp-to-pimp--001

There may, however, have been some miscommunication between Lamar’s Top Dawg label and Interscope Records. Top Dawg CEO Anthony Tiffith let loose with an expletive-filled Twitter rant aimed directly at Interscope, who did not respond but did retweet Lamar’s original release post.

In early February Lamar released the track “The Blacker the Berry,” which you can listen to below.

Read more here.

Protester Charged with Shooting Officers in Ferguson

USA Today

A 20-year-old protester has been charged with shooting two police officers in Ferguson, Mo., last week, authorities said Sunday.

County Prosecuting Attorney Robert McCulloch said Jeffrey Williams was charged with two counts of assault in the first degree, one count of firing a weapon from a vehicle and three counts of armed criminal action.

McCulloch said Williams admitted firing the shots but said he was shooting at someone else.

“We’re not sure we buy that part of it,” McCulloch said, adding that the handgun used in the shooting has been recovered.

He said Williams was involved in the demonstration that was wrapping up when the incident took place. Williams, he said, was being held in lieu of $300,000 cash bail.

McCulloch said information provided by the public was key to the arrest. He encouraged anyone who knows anything about the shooting to contact police, saying the investigation was continuing.

Williams has had several minor run-ins with police and one felony arrest in St. Louis, court records show.

He spent two days in jail last March for failing to appear for court hearings for traffic infractions, including driving without a valid license and operating a motor vehicle without maintaining proper insurance. He also spent two days in jail in January 2014 for speeding.

Police arrested Williams in June 2013 for receiving stolen property, a felony, and credit card fraud. He was sentenced in March 2014 to two years probation.

Bishop Derrick Robinson of the Kingdom Destiny Fellowship International, who has been an organizer of Ferguson protests, later told CNN he spoke with Williams — and that Williams said he was not involved in protests. He said Williams told him the shooting occurred after he had been robbed by an unknown assailant.

The officers were shot during a protest just after midnight Thursday. One was shot in the face, the other in the shoulder. They were released from the hospital later Thursday.

Ferguson has been the scene of sometimes violent protests since the shooting death of unarmed black man Michael Brown, 18, by a white police officer in August. The shooting and subsequent investigation brought national attention and a Justice Department probe to the St. Louis suburb.

The Justice Department investigation found systemic racism in the police department, prompting the resignation of the city manager, a local judge and the city’s police chief.

Attorney General Eric Holder issued a statement lauding the investigative cooperation between federal authorities and St. Louis County officials.

“This arrest sends a clear message that acts of violence against our law enforcement personnel will never be tolerated,” Holder said in the statement. “In the days ahead, we will continue to partner with the authorities in St. Louis County to secure justice for all those affected by this heinous and cowardly crime. And we will continue to stand vigilant in support of public safety officers and the communities they serve.”

The officers wounded Thursday were from St. Louis County and Webster Groves. After the shootings, the highway patrol and county police took control of security duties from the Ferguson department.

Hours after the shooting, Holder and Obama condemned the attack.

“They’re criminals. They need to be arrested,” Obama said.

Read more here.

9 HBCU Students Just Made the Voter-ID War Hot Again

The Root

The voter-ID war just opened up a huge new front. This time in Tennessee. A group of nine students from HBCUs Fisk and Tennessee State have filed a federal lawsuit against the Volunteer State’s heavily contested and controversial voter-ID law.

The suit was filed by the Nashville Student Organizing Committee, a coalition of student activists established in February 2014. The plaintiffs were all disallowed from voting in 2014 because they carried student IDs as identification. NSOC retained the Washington, D.C.-based Fair Elections Legal Network, which then partnered with the local Nashville-based firm Barrett Johnston Martin & Garrison as part of a legal project to restore student voting rights in the state.

The case marks a highly unprecedented turning point in the ongoing conflict over voter ID and other Republican-led voter-suppression laws accused of targeting Democratic-friendly young, minority and low-income voters. With Republicans expanding their electoral gains in state legislatures, voter-ID laws have become a common feature in many key states and, as initial data suggest, disproportionately impacted large populations of color.

Observers are watching the new Tennessee case with heavy interest, since it appears to be the first student-led legal action of its kind. Some view it as Supreme Court-worthy and a savvy political maneuver on the part of black youth activists that could have far-reaching implications beyond Tennessee. The suit may very well advance because the Middle Tennessee federal district court is dominated by judges appointed by Democratic presidents. Chief Judge Kevin Sharp was recently appointed by President Barack Obama.

“Studies are showing that the voter-ID laws are suppressing youth turnout,” DePaul University political science professor Molly Andolina told The Root. Andolina anticipates the emergence of a growing black youth movement born out of frustration over issues such as police violence and voter ID that could influence the 2016 elections.

Christina Rivers, another DePaul University political scientist, agreed: “To the extent that #BlackLivesMatter converges with other potentially suppressive factors such as voter-ID laws, along with reductions in early and Sunday voting, it will likely mobilize voters.”

At the moment, said Doug Johnston, a Barrett Johnston lawyer on the case who has also worked aggressively against the state’s voter-ID law since its passage in 2011, the current suit doesn’t seek “to dismantle the whole voter-ID law.” However, it will seek to reverse what his clients view as violations of their constitutional rights under the 14th and 26th amendments. “The basis of this lawsuit is really very simple,” Johnston told The Root. “It’s an attempt to have students treated in the same manner as similarly situated individuals.”

Johnston points to identification cards for state university faculty and staff, which are perfectly legal to use at the polls—and yet student IDs are not accepted: “The law’s denial of the use of student IDs when exactly the same ID is OK for others is unconstitutional.”

In its complaint (pdf), NSOC argues that Tennessee’s strict voter-ID law, which only allows for a limited number of photo IDs, “intentionally discriminates against out-of-state college and university students, and has the purpose and effect of denying and abridging the right to vote on account of age.”

At the heart of the case is a dispute over out-of-state student rights; the nine plaintiffs, ages 18 and 19, are originally from states such as California, Illinois, Michigan and Ohio. But they are all legal residents of Nashville, holding official state-issued student IDs. Lawyers argue that the current Tennessee voter-ID laws are too restrictive: Even though out-of-state students can apply for free identification licenses at Driver Service Centers, the process is too burdensome and effectively prevents them from voting.

Lawyers for NSOC might be on to something. The Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law highlights Tennessee as being among 15 states with the most restrictive voter-ID laws in the nation. And a recent federal Government Accountability Office report found turnout among Tennessee voters ages 18-23 had dropped by more than 4 percentage points in recent election cycles since the law was enacted.

Tennessee House Republican Caucus press secretary Cade Cothren dismissed the notion that student voting rights have been violated and worries that “frankly, student IDs are easier to fake.” He told The Root, “If a student only has a student ID, they are eligible for a free ID from their local DMV.”

Read more here.

Stay tuned to The Buzz for the latest in HBCU news.

Is ‘Jody’ Coming To Empire?

Late night Saturday, singer and actor Tyrese may have foreshadowed an upcoming appearance on hit television show, Empire.

Tyrese uploaded a ‘throwback’ picture to Instagram of him and Empire’s leading lady – Taraji P. Henson. Tyrese and Taraji starred in classic film, ‘Baby Boy’ released almost fifteen years ago, in 2001. Not only is the movie very popular, it is heavily referenced.

Stay tuned for the next episode, the first-half of the season finale airing on Fox Wednesday, March 18, 8pm EST.

 

Spelman and Bennett Unite In First Joint Choir

WFMY News

GREENSBORO, N.C. — The Bennett College Choir is joining voices with Spelman College’s Glee Club for a “herstoric” moment for both institutions. The choirs of the only two historically Black colleges (HBCUs) for women in the nation will celebrate Women’s History Month with a joint performance Monday, March 16, 2015.

“The discussions between the two choirs started about five years ago,” said Valerie Johnson, Bennett’s choir director.

Campus Police Break Up Fight at Morgan State

WBALTV

Fights broke out at Morgan State University early Saturday morning after a dance the night before.

A video posted to Twitter shows university police breaking up several small fights outside the student center. No arrests were made.

One woman needed assistance after reporting difficulty breathing, the university’s public information officer said.

No other injuries were reported.

Friday night was the first time in a while that Morgan State University officials have allowed a dance on campus. Some students said the event quickly got out of hand.

“That just escalated from zero to literally 100,” said Juwan Hudgins, a sophomore.

“I saw helicopters and a lot of cop cars,” said Malik Thomas. read more…