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Black<br />

journalism.columbia.edu<br />

Alumni ‘The Help’ crackled with emoti<strong>on</strong>, 7<br />

Network<br />

Newsletter /Our 30 th year/ September 2011/ Vol. 31, No.9<br />

___________________________________________________________________________________<br />

$3 <str<strong>on</strong>g>milli<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>gift</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> a <str<strong>on</strong>g>center</str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong><br />

<strong>race</strong> <strong>at</strong> <strong>Columbia</strong> J-<strong>School</strong><br />

Garland scholarship to resume in fall, J-officials told alumni<br />

By T<strong>on</strong>i Randolph<br />

PHILADELPHIA – <strong>Columbia</strong> University J-<strong>School</strong> has received a $3 <str<strong>on</strong>g>milli<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>gift</str<strong>on</strong>g> to cre<strong>at</strong>e a chair <strong>on</strong> <strong>race</strong> and<br />

ethnicity. Associ<strong>at</strong>e Dean Arlene Morgan announced the <str<strong>on</strong>g>gift</str<strong>on</strong>g> Aug. 6 <strong>at</strong> the annual J-<strong>School</strong> alumni breakfast during<br />

the NABJ c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> in Philadelphia. Morgan said a <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>mal announcement will be coming in the fall.<br />

Morgan said the <str<strong>on</strong>g>gift</str<strong>on</strong>g> came from Ira A. Lipman, founder of the security firm Guardsmark, LLC. Lipman also<br />

provided a <str<strong>on</strong>g>gift</str<strong>on</strong>g> to the J-<strong>School</strong> to support the John Chancellor<br />

Award, which was established in the mid-1990s.<br />

The school wants to establish an Intern<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>al Center <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> Race and<br />

Ethnicity, Morgan said. “Wh<strong>at</strong> we‟re looking <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> is a<br />

comprehensive <str<strong>on</strong>g>center</str<strong>on</strong>g>. We want to do this <strong>at</strong> an intern<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>al level.<br />

Race is not just a problem here,” she said. Morgan said <strong>Columbia</strong><br />

needs about $10 <str<strong>on</strong>g>milli<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g> to launch such a <str<strong>on</strong>g>center</str<strong>on</strong>g> - and th<strong>at</strong> the <str<strong>on</strong>g>gift</str<strong>on</strong>g><br />

from Lipman “will give me the calling card to raise more m<strong>on</strong>ey.”<br />

She said school officials hope to select a chair by 2015.<br />

Now th<strong>at</strong> the Phyllis Garland Scholarship Fund is permanently<br />

endowed, Wayne Dawkins, ‟80, said the J-<strong>School</strong> is <strong>on</strong> track to<br />

award scholarships during the next school year. <strong>School</strong> officials<br />

briefed him be<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>e the breakfast. The J-<strong>School</strong> collected $104,800 in c<strong>on</strong>tributi<strong>on</strong>s – and exceeded the goal by more<br />

than $4,000 - during a drive to endow the fund last year . Dawkins recognized the ef<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>ts by J-<strong>School</strong> trustee and<br />

alumna A'Lelia Bundles, ‟76 in exceeding the goal <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> the scholarship fund.<br />

Admissi<strong>on</strong>s official Le<strong>on</strong> Braswell said the Class of 2012 includes 23 black students, including Tracy Jarrett,<br />

granddaughter of the l<strong>at</strong>e NABJ founder and president Vern<strong>on</strong> Jarrett. Braswell says black students will comprise<br />

about 8 percent of next year‟s class.<br />

He also said annual tuiti<strong>on</strong> and fees <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> the Masters program total more than $50,000.<br />

Alumni <strong>at</strong> the breakfast talked a bit about a successi<strong>on</strong> plan <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> the BA Newsletter, now in its 31 st year. Dawkins,<br />

the founding editor, said he‟d raised the m<strong>at</strong>ter about 15 years ago, but added th<strong>at</strong> Reginald Stuart, ‟71, tabled the<br />

idea. Stuart again suggested tabling the discussi<strong>on</strong> until next year.<br />

C<strong>on</strong>tinued <strong>on</strong> page 2


Black Alumni Network September 2010 Page 2<br />

Garland scholarship to resume/C<strong>on</strong>tinued<br />

The newsletter has come a l<strong>on</strong>g way in its 31 years. “We started <strong>on</strong> an Olivetti typewriter,” Dawkins said. [He still<br />

owns th<strong>at</strong> low-tech relic.] These days, he mails copies of the newsletter to <strong>on</strong>ly a few of its 600 subscribers – and<br />

electr<strong>on</strong>ically delivers the other 95 percent.<br />

Dawkins also said the newsletter has a wider reach because of the Internet. Since 2002 the J-<strong>School</strong>‟s website has<br />

published the newsletter; th<strong>at</strong> makes it available to 10,000 alumni around the world. “We cre<strong>at</strong>ed something th<strong>at</strong>‟s a<br />

brand. It has value,” he said.<br />

Seventeen J-<strong>School</strong> alumni <strong>at</strong>tended the annual breakfast: Lawrence A. Aar<strong>on</strong>, ‟70, Reginald Stuart, ‟71, Karen<br />

Gray Houst<strong>on</strong>, ‟73, Gayle Pollard-Terry, ‟73, Doug Ly<strong>on</strong>s, ‟74, Doxie A. McCoy, ‟78, Betty Baye, ‟80, Wayne<br />

Dawkins, ‟80, Cheryl Devall, ‟82, Melanie Eversley, ‟88, T<strong>on</strong>i Randolph, ‟88, Deborah Skinner, ‟97, Wendell<br />

Edwards, ‟97, Claire Serant, ‟98, Stacey Samuel, ‟06, Sabrina Ford, ‟07, and Sia Nyorkor, ‟09.<br />

The writer, a 1988 <strong>Columbia</strong> journalism gradu<strong>at</strong>e, is editor <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> new audiences <strong>at</strong> Minnesota Public Radio.<br />

J-<strong>School</strong> movers and shakers <strong>at</strong> NABJ-Philadelphia<br />

Allis<strong>on</strong> Bourne Vaneck, ‟00, w<strong>on</strong> a Salute to Excellence Award <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> “Nevin Phillips: PGA merchandiser of the<br />

year,” in the televisi<strong>on</strong> sports market 16 and below c<strong>at</strong>egory. Vaneck is with WMNS CBS TV2, U.S. Virgin Islands.<br />

“Meet the women who helped keep Hugo Boss in town,” by Olivera Perkins, ‟87, and Deborah Adams Simm<strong>on</strong>s of<br />

the Cleveland Plain Dealer w<strong>on</strong> the Salute to Excellence award in the news/business over 150,000 circul<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong><br />

c<strong>at</strong>egory.<br />

“Black Girls <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> Sale” by Essence magazine‟s Rosemarie Robotham, ‟80, Angela Burt Murray and Jeannie Amber<br />

w<strong>on</strong> in the investig<strong>at</strong>ive award <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g><br />

magazines over 1 <str<strong>on</strong>g>milli<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g> circul<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong><br />

c<strong>at</strong>egory.<br />

Brotherly Love & Sisterly Affecti<strong>on</strong>: Cheryl Devall, ’82 (wearing a typewriter<br />

key necklace), and Betty Baye, ’80, smile <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> the camera. Photo by Michael Fields<br />

When Kimberly Martin accepted the<br />

Salute to Excellence Emerging Journalist<br />

of the Year, the young sports writer<br />

praised mentors Lawrence Aar<strong>on</strong>, ‟70,<br />

who guided her when she was an intern <strong>at</strong><br />

the Bergen Record, and Zachary Dowdy,<br />

‟92, also with Newsday. Martin is a be<strong>at</strong><br />

writer covering the Yankees and the Jets.<br />

Lisa Cox, ‟92, was elected NABJ<br />

secretary. She also helped produce the<br />

awards gala. Doug Ly<strong>on</strong>s, ‟74, was the<br />

unflappable coordin<strong>at</strong>or of the Authors<br />

Showcase. Melanie Eversley, ‟88, was a<br />

major player in the NABJ Digital Task<br />

Force.


Black Alumni Network September 2010 Page 3<br />

A challenge to be in New Orleans;<br />

BBC scolded over riot coverage<br />

By Wayne Dawkins<br />

PHILADELPHIA – Just be<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>e Arianna Huffingt<strong>on</strong>, owner of the Huffingt<strong>on</strong> Post/Black Voices addressed NABJ<br />

<strong>on</strong> Aug. 4, Paula Madis<strong>on</strong> emph<strong>at</strong>ically announced th<strong>at</strong> she and her husband would c<strong>on</strong>tribute $100,000 toward<br />

next year‟s c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> in New Orleans. If members had to make a choice between <strong>at</strong>tending the NABJ and the<br />

Unity meetings, said Madis<strong>on</strong>, she urged “wavering” audience members to be in New Orleans in June 2012.<br />

Last spring NABJ withdrew from the Unity coaliti<strong>on</strong> of Hispanic, Asian and N<strong>at</strong>ive American journalists‟<br />

associ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>s because a financial dispute. Unity 2012, the fifth c<strong>on</strong>fab since 1994, will be in Las Vegas.<br />

Be<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>e becoming a majority owner of the Africa Channel and the WNBA Los Angeles Sparks, Madis<strong>on</strong> was<br />

NBC‟s chief of diversity and an executive vice president.<br />

Climbing as others slide<br />

About 175 people packed the room <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> the Aug. 5 business meeting.<br />

President K<strong>at</strong>hy Y. Times told them th<strong>at</strong> membership<br />

had dipped below 2,900 during her administr<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong><br />

amid the Gre<strong>at</strong> Recessi<strong>on</strong> – but she added th<strong>at</strong> now<br />

the numbers approach 4,000 members.<br />

“We had tough times,” she said, “and th<strong>at</strong> in part was<br />

wh<strong>at</strong> the Unity vote was all about.”<br />

burst into applause.<br />

Michael Brown offered the treasurer‟s report and said<br />

2009 revenues of $1.7 <str<strong>on</strong>g>milli<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g> rebounded to $2.4<br />

<str<strong>on</strong>g>milli<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g> in 2010. NABJ leadership reduced liabilities<br />

and built up a $500,000 increase in net assets.<br />

“Today,” said Brown, “you‟re in the black.”<br />

The room filled with founders, <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>mer presidents<br />

and board members and mostly l<strong>on</strong>gtime members<br />

Treasurer Gregory Lee said NABJ saved $169,000 this year <strong>on</strong> hotels compared to the c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong>‟s housing costs<br />

in five Tampa hotels in 2009. 25 media companies particip<strong>at</strong>ed this year compared to 14 in 2010 and 36 n<strong>on</strong>-media<br />

companies particip<strong>at</strong>ed this year, slightly up from 35 in<br />

2010.<br />

Maurice Foster gave his executive director report: NABJ<br />

netted $80,000 during the January Hall of Fame gala in<br />

Washingt<strong>on</strong>. During th<strong>at</strong> time of year, associ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong><br />

revenues are lowest. Foster tracked membership as<br />

follows: 3,200 [end of 2009], 2,900 [2010], 3,400<br />

[June], 3,293 [August]. Foster said 1,960 plus 50 who<br />

were not counted in the computer tally pre-registered <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g><br />

the c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong>. Foster said th<strong>at</strong> the previous night he‟d<br />

ordered more supplies to accommod<strong>at</strong>e the <strong>on</strong>-site


Black Alumni Network September 2010 Page 4<br />

registr<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>s streaming in. Last year, 94 companies reserved job fair booths; this year, 159 companies did.<br />

“While other journalism groups are sliding, we‟re <strong>on</strong> a growth p<strong>at</strong>h,” said Foster.<br />

Mavericks who handled the he<strong>at</strong><br />

At the Aug. 6 awards gala, Times said she‟d c<strong>on</strong>centr<strong>at</strong>ed in the first 18 m<strong>on</strong>ths of her 2-year term <strong>on</strong> sustaining the<br />

associ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>. The FAMU alumna and Miami He<strong>at</strong> fan compared NABJ this year to the underdog-turned-champi<strong>on</strong><br />

Dallas Mavericks: “Steady, didn‟t choke under pressure and stayed focused. We‟re in the black<br />

and we w<strong>on</strong>.”<br />

Hail to the [new] chief<br />

Event emcee T.J. Holmes of CNN called Times “steely,” and praised NABJ leaders <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> finding<br />

ways to get laid-off members to recent c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong>s. Observers also noted th<strong>at</strong> President Times<br />

knows first-hand about losing a job. She was let go from her reporter/co-anchor positi<strong>on</strong> <strong>at</strong> the<br />

Jacks<strong>on</strong>, Miss. Fox st<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>. These days, Times and husband are cre<strong>at</strong>ing media c<strong>on</strong>tent as a small<br />

business owners.<br />

Gregory Lee was elected the 19 th president of NABJ easily outpacing rivals Deirdre Childress and Charles Robins<strong>on</strong><br />

with 57 percent of all votes cast, 294-168-50. Lee, senior assistant sports editor <strong>at</strong> the Bost<strong>on</strong> Globe, is the youngest<br />

president in associ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> history, but l<strong>on</strong>gtime treasurer<br />

brings the experience of service with four past presidents.<br />

Days after the electi<strong>on</strong>, Lee spoke <strong>on</strong> behalf of NABJ<br />

during an intern<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>al crisis. He chided the BBC <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> wh<strong>at</strong><br />

he called inflamm<strong>at</strong>ory analysis and poor judgment during<br />

its coverage of riots and looting in England after police<br />

there killed an unarmed young man. David Starkey, a<br />

historian and comment<strong>at</strong>or <strong>on</strong> BBC, said without<br />

challenge th<strong>at</strong> rioting “whites had become the blacks.”<br />

“We are struggling to understand this stunning lack of sensitivity because the BBC has a l<strong>on</strong>gstanding reput<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong><br />

of integrity, accuracy and impartiality with very clear editorial guidelines,” said the NABJ st<strong>at</strong>ement. A BBC<br />

spokesman issued an apology and said the network‟s choice of vocabulary “could have been clearer.”<br />

Closer to home, Lee will follow up a three-way c<strong>on</strong>test <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> NABJ president and a c<strong>on</strong>tested vice-president/print <strong>race</strong><br />

by appointing several people to unfilled regi<strong>on</strong>al director se<strong>at</strong>s.<br />

Photos: Gregory Lee/bjasc.org; K<strong>at</strong>hy Times/file; Suzanne Malveaux, ’91, of CNN, Jay Harris of ESPN,<br />

unidentified/fr<strong>on</strong>trow.espn.go.com; an anim<strong>at</strong>ed Cornel West, right, <strong>at</strong> DuBois <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>um/Eric Burse, NABJ M<strong>on</strong>itor<br />

NABJ-Philly ’11 highlights: Double special h<strong>on</strong>ors winner Acel Moore<br />

Founder Acel Moore became the sec<strong>on</strong>d pers<strong>on</strong> to earn NABJ‟s two highest awards, Lifetime Achievement, which<br />

he w<strong>on</strong> last m<strong>on</strong>th, and Journalist of the Year, which Moore accepted in 1979 after he‟d w<strong>on</strong> a Pulitzer Prize<br />

[Bernard Shaw was the first double recipient, in 1989 and 2007]. Moore, who uses a wheelchair now because of<br />

multiple surgeries, began his newspaper career in 1962 as a copy boy <strong>at</strong> the Philadelphia Inquirer. Over decades he<br />

rose through the ranks to associ<strong>at</strong>e editor of the newspaper. Moore is married to Linda Wright Moore, ‟73, a<br />

Philadelphia TV journalist, columnist and mayoral press secretary. … The Rev. Al Sharpt<strong>on</strong> withdrew from a<br />

scheduled Aug. 5 DuBois <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>um appearance with Cornel West of Princet<strong>on</strong> University. Sharpt<strong>on</strong> told the <strong>on</strong>line site<br />

loop21 th<strong>at</strong> he would have been a “distracti<strong>on</strong>.” Be<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>e the c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> NABJ rank- and file- members criticized his<br />

c<strong>on</strong>sider<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> over trained journalists <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> an MSNBC news/talk host job … A repe<strong>at</strong>ed theme during the c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong><br />

was whether racial diversity had become casualty in an era of ec<strong>on</strong>omically stressed newsrooms and shrinking<br />

staffs. NABJ released its fourth annual diversity census: an examin<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> of televisi<strong>on</strong> newsroom management.


Black Alumni Network September 2010 Page 5<br />

Newsroom to Classroom: Syllabus exchange /digital instructi<strong>on</strong><br />

W<br />

hy was a mass media instructor in the audience blowing kisses toward four panelists?<br />

The woman from a Mid-Atlantic university explained th<strong>at</strong> it was the first time she heard clear<br />

and useful advice in order to prepare course syllabi.<br />

On Aug. 5, presenters B<strong>on</strong>nie<br />

Newman Davis [Virginia<br />

Comm<strong>on</strong>wealth], Wayne Dawkins<br />

[Hampt<strong>on</strong>], Herbert Lowe<br />

[Marquette] and Yolanda<br />

McCutchen [Claflin] offered a<br />

unified message: Be sure th<strong>at</strong><br />

syllabi spell out the learning<br />

expect<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>s <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> the courses and<br />

the rules <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> appropri<strong>at</strong>e<br />

classroom c<strong>on</strong>duct.<br />

Lowe, a <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>mer NABJ president<br />

[2003-2005], said there are two<br />

kinds of students, “those who want<br />

a grade and those who want a<br />

career.” He has learned to serve both c<strong>on</strong>stituencies. During the sec<strong>on</strong>d half of the 90-minute sessi<strong>on</strong>, presenters<br />

shared examples of the way they oper<strong>at</strong>e digital classrooms, whether it was the classroom management site<br />

Blackboard.com, news sites such as NPR.org and NYTimes.com, or the Poynter Institute‟s News University.<br />

The 20 people in the audience included journalism educ<strong>at</strong>ors, news industry professi<strong>on</strong>als c<strong>on</strong>sidering transiti<strong>on</strong>s to<br />

academia and news professi<strong>on</strong>als who were about to teach courses as adjuncts. Presenter Newman Davis is this<br />

year‟s NABJ Journalism Educ<strong>at</strong>or of the Year. – Dawkins<br />

Photo: From left, B<strong>on</strong>nie N. Davis, Yolanda McCutchen, Herb Lowe.<br />

Author’s Showcase: Self-publishing, an altern<strong>at</strong>ive<br />

Angela Dods<strong>on</strong>, <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>mer editor of Black Issues Book Review, distributed to about 50 audience members handouts<br />

th<strong>at</strong> named 10 reas<strong>on</strong>s authors d<strong>on</strong>‟t need editors <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> their manuscripts.<br />

OK, she was kidding. Of course writers need rigorous editing – line, copy, then proofreading – be<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>e publishers<br />

bind manuscripts into books. Dods<strong>on</strong> is an independent book editor, writer and c<strong>on</strong>sultant.<br />

Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said he self-published “K<strong>at</strong>rina‟s Secrets: Storms after the Storm”<br />

because he was c<strong>on</strong>vinced trade publishers who‟d offered him c<strong>on</strong>tracts would dram<strong>at</strong>ically alter his narr<strong>at</strong>ive voice.<br />

S. Renee Smith urged the audience to take advantage of publishing in the e-book <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>m<strong>at</strong> because th<strong>at</strong> new<br />

pl<strong>at</strong><str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>m – available <strong>on</strong> Kindle and Nook tablets, or Apple iPads – is increasing its book business market share<br />

<strong>at</strong> a r<strong>at</strong>e of 3 percent a year.<br />

L<strong>on</strong>gtime self-publishers Karen E. Quin<strong>on</strong>es Miller [Oshun Publishing] and Wayne Dawkins [August Press] <strong>on</strong><br />

Aug. 6 shared guerilla marketing tips and also gave point-by-point less<strong>on</strong>s in publishing fundamentals,<br />

the financial and administr<strong>at</strong>ive realities of the business.<br />

L<strong>at</strong>e additi<strong>on</strong> Brenda Blackm<strong>on</strong>, a New Jersey anchorwoman, acknowledged th<strong>at</strong> she broke nearly all the<br />

c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong>al rules of self-publishing, yet published a “A Mom‟s Story,” children‟s book about her daughter‟s<br />

b<strong>at</strong>tle with lupus. Blackm<strong>on</strong>‟s crusade has raised awareness about the rare, debilit<strong>at</strong>ing and sometimes deadly<br />

afflicti<strong>on</strong> th<strong>at</strong> disproporti<strong>on</strong><strong>at</strong>ely affects African-Americans.


Black Alumni Network September 2010 Page 6<br />

Learning Breakfasts: Building wealth, educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong><br />

By Wayne Dawkins<br />

PHILADELPHIA – The “Building Wealth in Tough Times” Aug. 5 breakfast posed a c<strong>on</strong>undrum<br />

<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> African-Americans. The panel of financial journalists and other experts essentially recommended<br />

th<strong>at</strong> investors trust the venal financiers who ruined them during the Gre<strong>at</strong> Recessi<strong>on</strong> of 2007-2009.<br />

How badly did th<strong>at</strong> event screw <str<strong>on</strong>g>milli<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g>s of black households? Be<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>e the Gre<strong>at</strong> Recessi<strong>on</strong>, said a new Pew Research<br />

Center report, the white-black wealth gap was 6-1. After the Gre<strong>at</strong> Recessi<strong>on</strong>, the disparity widened to 20-1.<br />

Th<strong>at</strong> said, I asked the experts how many years would it take <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> Black America to return to a 6-1 wealth disparity.<br />

Financial pundit Kelvin Bost<strong>on</strong> initially danced around my questi<strong>on</strong> with bromides about the need <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> blacks to<br />

cre<strong>at</strong>e their own businesses. When I pressed, he said three to five years. The Rev. DeForest B. “Buster” Soaries Jr.,<br />

a New Jersey pastor and pi<strong>on</strong>eer in faith-based ec<strong>on</strong>omic development, didn‟t blink: It will take <strong>at</strong> least a gener<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>,<br />

he said, <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> African-Americans to recover from the financial wreckage.<br />

The panel, which included moder<strong>at</strong>or Shar<strong>on</strong> Eppers<strong>on</strong> of CNBC and Michelle Singletary of the Washingt<strong>on</strong> Post<br />

advised the audience to diversify their assets with a mix of stocks, b<strong>on</strong>ds, and yes, real est<strong>at</strong>e. Why? The tragedy of<br />

the Gre<strong>at</strong> Recessi<strong>on</strong> was th<strong>at</strong> many black first-time homebuyers had most of their wealth tied up in their houses and<br />

many of those houses lost so much value they ended up “under w<strong>at</strong>er,” worth less than the purchase price.<br />

The “tough times” part of the panel title was prescient: Six hours l<strong>at</strong>er th<strong>at</strong> day, Standard & Poor‟s downgraded U.S.<br />

credit from AAA to AA+ and the unprecedented move sparked chaos in the intern<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>al markets and bloodletting<br />

<strong>on</strong> Wall Street <strong>on</strong> M<strong>on</strong>day Aug. 8, the next business day.<br />

Still left behind – Educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> achievement gap<br />

Russlynn Ali, assistant secretary of Civil Rights <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> the U.S. Department of Educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> said “Absolutely, educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong><br />

is a civil rights issue.” Her department, which was virtually dormant be<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>e the Obama administr<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> arrived,<br />

is active now, she said. It employs more than 600 <strong>at</strong>torneys - including new hires – to aggressively pursue Title VI<br />

viol<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>s. Previously, 70 percent of civil rights work in educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> dealt with disability cases, said Ali.<br />

About 60 people <strong>at</strong>tended the Aug. 4 W.K. Kellogg Found<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>-sp<strong>on</strong>sored-breakfast. Some panelists‟ st<strong>at</strong>ements<br />

caused indigesti<strong>on</strong>:<br />

The st<strong>at</strong>e of educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> journalism is abysmal [No, spotty or inc<strong>on</strong>sistent depending the <strong>on</strong> the regi<strong>on</strong> is more<br />

accur<strong>at</strong>e. My hometown Daily Press in Hampt<strong>on</strong> Roads, Va. probably covers educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> with more purpose than<br />

many metropolitan-size newspapers. Some metros rise to the occasi<strong>on</strong>: the Los Angeles Times‟ evalu<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> of<br />

school district teachers, <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> example, hit like an earthquake].<br />

D<strong>on</strong>‟t call high-achieving predominantly black and brown schools “miracle schools.” [OK, we should<br />

avoid stereotyping, but there are schools th<strong>at</strong> per<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>m despite the obstacles of intransigent bureaucracy and<br />

indifferent “educ<strong>at</strong>ors.”]<br />

“Waiting <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> Superman,” the 2010 documentary th<strong>at</strong> resounded like a primal scream <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> re<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>m was<br />

dismissed by Amy Wilkins of The Educ<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> Trust as “a carto<strong>on</strong> th<strong>at</strong> left teachers raw.” When I followed up with<br />

th<strong>at</strong> panelist after the sessi<strong>on</strong>, she c<strong>on</strong>ceded th<strong>at</strong> it‟s ficti<strong>on</strong> th<strong>at</strong> all teachers are equally competent, and as fellow<br />

panelist Alandra Washingt<strong>on</strong> of the W.K. Kellogg Found<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> quipped, teachers uni<strong>on</strong>s do not represent the<br />

interests of children; they represent teacher‟s interests.<br />

Let the church say amen to panelists who said th<strong>at</strong> improved parent engagement in struggling urban schools<br />

should help close the achievement gap. R<strong>on</strong> Allen of NBC News moder<strong>at</strong>ed the panel in place of Rehema Ellis,<br />

J-‟77, who was nursing a foot injury.


Black Alumni Network September 2010 Page 7<br />

‘The Help’ crackled with emoti<strong>on</strong> <strong>at</strong> film fest<br />

By Melanie Eversley<br />

PHILADELPHIA – Two films about under-explored facets of African-American life were the subject of<br />

this year's NABJ Film Festival during the annual c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> in Philadelphia, and both present<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>s filled<br />

a 600-se<strong>at</strong> auditorium <strong>at</strong> the Pennsylvania C<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> Center to capacity <strong>on</strong> Aug. 6.<br />

“The Help,” a drama about the lives of African-American maids in the segreg<strong>at</strong>ed Jacks<strong>on</strong>, Miss., of the 1960s, has<br />

gener<strong>at</strong>ed some c<strong>on</strong>troversy because it is based <strong>on</strong> a book by K<strong>at</strong>heryn Stockett, a white author. Reacti<strong>on</strong> has ranged<br />

from support and praise of the movie starring Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer, Sissy Spacek and Cicely Tys<strong>on</strong> to<br />

criticisms of thin, inaccur<strong>at</strong>e portrayals of its African-American characters.<br />

After the screening, NABJ members questi<strong>on</strong>ed a panel<br />

hosted by NBC's Tamr<strong>on</strong> Hall th<strong>at</strong> included Stockett,<br />

Davis, Spencer and director/screenwriter T<strong>at</strong>e Taylor.<br />

“I found th<strong>at</strong> as an audience, the NABJ members really<br />

did enjoy the film, but it did also incite questi<strong>on</strong>s th<strong>at</strong><br />

people had about the voice of the author,” said P<strong>at</strong>rick<br />

Riley, chairman of NABJ‟s Arts and Entertainment Task<br />

Force and a freelance journalist. “I think it made <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> a<br />

very spirited deb<strong>at</strong>e am<strong>on</strong>g members and panelists.”<br />

The Task Force coordin<strong>at</strong>ed the film festival.<br />

Davis, who plays maid Aibileen in the film, defended her role during the discussi<strong>on</strong>. She said African-Americans<br />

should welcome the opportunity to expose the public to all levels of their experiences. “The biggest and gre<strong>at</strong>est<br />

message th<strong>at</strong> we can show the world is th<strong>at</strong> we are just as complic<strong>at</strong>ed, just as beautiful, just as rich as any<strong>on</strong>e else,”<br />

she said, gener<strong>at</strong>ing applause.<br />

Photo: From left Taylor, Stockett, Spencer, Davis and Hall/ Eversley<br />

Wh<strong>at</strong>ever the view, the film does seem to have elicited emoti<strong>on</strong> from the people who made it and the people who've<br />

w<strong>at</strong>ched it. Reacti<strong>on</strong> from <strong>Columbia</strong> J-school alumni <strong>at</strong> the c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> reflected the range of filmgoers‟ resp<strong>on</strong>ses.<br />

“D<strong>on</strong>'t expect some seriously eye-opening profound sort of experience, as far as I‟m c<strong>on</strong>cerned, because I think it<br />

leaves out the real story of real people who are here in the South and some particularly tumultuous stories,”<br />

said Serbino Sandifer-Walker, J-„89, a multimedia journalism professor <strong>at</strong> Texas Southern University who is<br />

working <strong>on</strong> a book about Houst<strong>on</strong>'s civil rights movement.<br />

Sandifer-Walker, who grew up in Texas, says domestic workers in her family shared horror stories of their<br />

tre<strong>at</strong>ment. She said she does not feel “The Help” portrayed the depth of th<strong>at</strong> horror.<br />

“I d<strong>on</strong>'t think it reflected the authenticity of wh<strong>at</strong> these women went through and wh<strong>at</strong> they are still going through<br />

and wh<strong>at</strong> it did to their families and how it affected them emoti<strong>on</strong>ally and psychologically,” Sandifer-Walker said.<br />

“Being tre<strong>at</strong>ed like you were property or you‟re going to work <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> some<strong>on</strong>e who was an alcoholic and they haul<br />

off and hit you, and you have to stand there and take this abuse” is <strong>on</strong>e example of how her rel<strong>at</strong>ives were tre<strong>at</strong>ed,<br />

she said.<br />

The reacti<strong>on</strong> from Dexter Mullins, a 2011 J-school gradu<strong>at</strong>e, reflected the other end of the spectrum. Mullins, a<br />

desk assistant with “NBC Nightly News,” believes the film is “most definitely” worth seeing.<br />

C<strong>on</strong>tinued <strong>on</strong> page 8


Black Alumni Network September 2010 Page 8<br />

“I think it's a gre<strong>at</strong> story of overcoming obstacles,” he<br />

said. “It's also a gre<strong>at</strong> way <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> people to learn about a<br />

part of black history th<strong>at</strong> we d<strong>on</strong>'t like to talk about.”<br />

Mullins said he has benefited from c<strong>on</strong>vers<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>s<br />

about the movie with author Stockett, who he met <strong>at</strong><br />

the NABJ c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> and who emphasized th<strong>at</strong> she‟d<br />

cre<strong>at</strong>ed a work of ficti<strong>on</strong>, and with Spencer, who he<br />

met while helping with camera setup <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> her<br />

interview with TheGrio.com. Mullins recalled his<br />

favorite scene in the movie: when Minnie, the maid<br />

portrayed by Spencer, serves up a pie with a harmful<br />

mystery ingredient to her <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>mer employer, an<br />

avowed racist and trouble stirrer around Jacks<strong>on</strong>.<br />

“It was gre<strong>at</strong> to see Minnie stand up <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> herself,”<br />

Mullins said. “Even though she knew the<br />

c<strong>on</strong>sequences of her acti<strong>on</strong>s, she had to make herself<br />

equal.” Mullins said he believes th<strong>at</strong> African-<br />

Americans, sometimes, look <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> a target <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> their<br />

complaints when a n<strong>on</strong>-African-American tries to<br />

portray their experience. “I d<strong>on</strong>'t think there should<br />

be any complaints because nobody black did it<br />

be<str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g>e,” Mullins said. “I think th<strong>at</strong> I would encourage<br />

every<strong>on</strong>e … to go and see it and also to read the book<br />

and also read critically, and understand it is a novel.”<br />

Doxie McCoy, J-78, said she saw the film <strong>at</strong> the<br />

c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> and again with friends <strong>on</strong>ce she returned<br />

home to the Washingt<strong>on</strong> area. “It was even better the<br />

sec<strong>on</strong>d time around," said McCoy, D.C. Mayor<br />

Vincent Gray's director of communic<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>s. "Gre<strong>at</strong><br />

acting, particularly Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer<br />

... I found the movie much better than the book.”<br />

The discussi<strong>on</strong>s have gener<strong>at</strong>ed so much energy th<strong>at</strong><br />

author A‟Lelia Bundles, J-„76, cre<strong>at</strong>ed a Facebook<br />

page titled “Helping Ourselves” th<strong>at</strong> offers an<br />

opportunity <str<strong>on</strong>g>for</str<strong>on</strong>g> “writers, readers and movie buffs to<br />

share books, movies and plays about the real „Help.‟”<br />

The page offers example after example of books and<br />

producti<strong>on</strong>s th<strong>at</strong> portray African-American domestic<br />

workers through history.<br />

NABJ c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> goers also viewed a preview trailer<br />

and PowerPoint present<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> about “Red Tails,” a<br />

film exploring the lives of the Tuskegee Airmen to be<br />

released in January. NABJ had an opportunity to<br />

offer the present<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong> because Paul Brock, NABJ‟s<br />

founding executive director, is a l<strong>on</strong>gstanding friend<br />

of a producer <strong>at</strong> George Lucas Films, Riley said.<br />

Afterward, c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong> goers heard a discussi<strong>on</strong> of<br />

the film with actors Terrence Howard and Cuba<br />

Gooding Jr. and producer Charles Floyd Johns<strong>on</strong>. “I<br />

think the folks who s<strong>at</strong> in <strong>on</strong> [the] “Red Tails”<br />

[present<strong>at</strong>i<strong>on</strong>] are really ready to support it via<br />

social networking,” Riley said.<br />

Regarding the fact th<strong>at</strong> both films explore the<br />

African-American experience but have, in the case of<br />

“The Help,” a white author and, in the case of “Red<br />

Tails,” a white-owned producti<strong>on</strong> company, Riley<br />

said there are many ways to tell African-American<br />

stories: “We d<strong>on</strong>'t aim to have the NABJ film festival<br />

strictly about the black voice, but it is primarily going<br />

to be something th<strong>at</strong> is of black interest."<br />

The writer, a 1988 <strong>Columbia</strong> journalism gradu<strong>at</strong>e, is<br />

a reporter <strong>at</strong> USA Today and a c<strong>on</strong>tributor to<br />

TheGrio.com<br />

The Black Alumni Network of <strong>Columbia</strong> University Gradu<strong>at</strong>e <strong>School</strong> of Journalism was founded in May 1980 and<br />

since the group has published m<strong>on</strong>thly. Log <strong>on</strong> to our Web site <strong>at</strong> www.journalism.columbia.edu Alumni & Friends<br />

page. Wayne J. Dawkins – editor, Betty Winst<strong>on</strong> Baye, Kissette Bundy, Angela Ch<strong>at</strong>man, Cheryl Devall,<br />

Dan Holly, Kip Branch, c<strong>on</strong>tributing editors E-mail tips, comments, suggesti<strong>on</strong>s to wdawk69643@aol.com<br />

Black<br />

Alumni<br />

Network<br />

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P.O. Box 6693<br />

Newport News, VA 23606<br />

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