atlanta daily world digital edition october 3, 2013

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ADW ATLANTA D AILY W ORLD Powered by Real Times Media www.adwnews.com Volume 86 • Issue 9 October 3 - 9, 2013 Capitol City Bank ‘s George G. Andrews takes on a new role, Page 4 Kerry Washington Emmy Award Nominee, Page 7 Tributes pour in for Evelyn Gibson Lowery, Page 5 Monica Pearson Inducted into Journalism Hall of Fame, Page 8 Because government jobs have been more available to Blacks than private sector employment over the years, espe- cially under de jure segregation, Blacks, who comprise 13.6 percent of the U.S. population, make up 17.7 percent of the federal workforce. Overall, people of color represent 34 percent of the federal workforce. Latinos are 8 percent of government workers, Asians are 5.8 percent, Native Americans are 2.1 percent and Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islanders are 0.40 percent of federal employees. People of color are 37 percent of the U.S. population, a figure projected to grow to 43.3 percent as soon as 2025 and 57 percent by 2060. Federal workers considered non-essential to the function- ing of government were instructed not to report for work as of Tuesday, Oct. 1, the first day of the new fiscal year, be- cause Congress failed to pass a permanent or interim budget in time to prevent a federal shutdown, the first in nearly two decades. e impasse came as a result of a Republican-controlled House determination to tie any budget measure to defund- ing the Affordable Care Act, the major provisions of which went into effect on Oct.1. On Monday, Sept. 30, President Obama warned about the consequences of a federal shutdown. “I want to be very clear about what would change. Office buildings would close. Paychecks would be delayed. Vital services that seniors and veterans, women and children, businesses and our economy depend on would be ham- strung. Business owners would see delays in raising capital, seeking infrastructure permits, or rebuilding aſter Hurricane Sandy. Veterans who’ve sacrificed for their country will find their support centers unstaffed. Tourists will find every one of America’s national parks and monuments, from Yosemite to the Smithsonian to the Statue of Liberty, immediately closed. And of course, the communities and small business- es that rely on these national treasures for their livelihoods Analysis Shows Government Shutdown Harder on Black Workers will be out of customers and out of luck. “And in keeping with the broad ramifications of a shut- down, I think it’s important that everybody understand the federal government is America’s largest employer. More than 2 million civilian workers and 1.4 million active-duty military serve in all 50 states and all around the world. In the event of a government shutdown, hundreds of thousands of these dedicated public servants who stay on the job will do so without pay — and several hundred thousand more will be immediately and indefinitely furloughed without pay.” e shutdown could have dire consequences for our national security, according to a report by the Congressional Research Service. According to the report, “Shutdown of the Federal Gov- ernment: Causes, Processes, and Effects,” published Sept. 23: “A federal government shutdown could have possible negative security implications as some entities wishing to take actions harmful to U.S. interests may see the nation as physically and politically vulnerable,” the report stated. ere is also concern that the shutdown will be another setback for the already shaky economy. Moody’s Analytics estimates that a three to four week shutdown could cost the economy about $55 billion, about equal the combined economic disruption caused by Hurri- cane Katrina and Superstorm Sandy. Speaking in the Rose Garden on Day 1 of the shut down, President Obama said: “I will not negotiate over Congress’s responsibility to pay bills it’s already racked up. I’m not going to allow anybody to drag the good name of the United States of America through the mud just to refight a settled election or extract ideological demands. Nobody gets to hurt our economy and millions of hardworking families over a law you don’t like.” To read this story in its entirety, please visit atlantadailyworld.com. By George E. Curry NNPA Editor-in-chief Civil rights pioneer Evelyn Lowery Remembered By M. Alexis Scott ADW Publisher Hundreds gathered at the King Chapel on the campus of Morehouse College Wednesday to pay their last respects to Ev- elyn Lowery, a pioneer in civil rights and women’s empower- ment and the wife of the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery. She died at home on Sept. 26 following a massive stroke a week earlier that leſt her with irreversible damage. She was 88 years old. A series of tributes filled the two-hour service that drew tears and laughter from those gathered. She was praised for her work as a leader in her own right as well as being a rock to her husband, who has been called the “dean” of the Civil Rights Movement. Xernona Clayton said she teased Mrs. Lowery about waiting on her husband “hand and foot.” ey were married for 67 years. She said they were devoted to each other. In ad- dition she established her own initiatives, including founding SCLC/WOMEN in 1979. Scarlet Pressley-Brown, interim-chair of SCLC/WOMEN, called her the mother of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, scheduled to open next year. In addition to SCLC/WOMEN, Mrs. Lowery founded the Drum Major for Justice awards to recognize people and organizations working for social justice. She also established the annual Heritage Tour in Alabama to retrace the steps of civil rights battles and to dedicate monuments to those who gave their lives in the struggle. e Rev. Al Sharpton, head of the National Action Net- work and host of Politics Nation on MSNBC, said “her work speaks for itself.” He added, “She stood shoulder to shoulder with one of the greatest civil rights leaders the world has ever known.” In addition to words of tribute calling her a “foot soldier” filled with “love, courage, grace, class, dignity, dedication and commitment,” the service included music that brought people to their feet, especially a performance by the three Lowery daughters, Yvonne, Karen and Cheryl. ey sang “Total Praise.” Jennifer Holliday of Broadway fame, stirred the crowd with “His Eye is on the Sparrow,” and Cassandra Davis, of “Tyler Perry’s House of Payne,” performed “God is Real,” repeating the ending at Rev. Lowery’s request. Other tributes came from letters from President and Mrs. Obama, President Clinton and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder. Others bringing tributes were Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, andDr. Carlton Brown, president of Clark Atlanta Uni- versity, where Mrs. Lowery graduated in 1946. Also, Christine King Farris, sister of Martin Luther King Jr.; Carolyn Young, wife of Andy Young, who worked alongside King, Lowery and others; Ruby Shinholster; and andi Luthuli Gcabashe, who met Mrs. Lowery when she lived in Atlanta in exhile for sever- al years during the fight against apartheid in South Africa. Bishop Woodie W. White, board chair of the Joseph E. Lowery Institute for Justice & Human Rightst at CAU, con- cluded the service by saying Mrs. Lowery is “not leaving, but going....Going transcends leaving….She’s alright… and that’s the rest of the story.” Evelyn Lowery

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ADWAtlAntA DAily WorlD

Powered by Real Times Media www.adwnews.com

Volume 86 • Issue 9 October 3 - 9, 2013

Capitol City Bank ‘s George G. Andrews takes on a new role, Page 4

Kerry WashingtonEmmy Award Nominee, Page 7

Tributes pour in for Evelyn Gibson Lowery, Page 5

Monica Pearson Inducted into Journalism Hall of Fame, Page 8

Because government jobs have been more available to Blacks than private sector employment over the years, espe-cially under de jure segregation, Blacks, who comprise 13.6 percent of the U.S. population, make up 17.7 percent of the federal workforce. Overall, people of color represent 34 percent of the federal workforce. Latinos are 8 percent of government workers, Asians are 5.8 percent, Native Americans are 2.1 percent and Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islanders are 0.40 percent of federal employees. People of color are 37 percent of the U.S. population, a figure projected to grow to 43.3 percent as soon as 2025 and 57 percent by 2060. Federal workers considered non-essential to the function-ing of government were instructed not to report for work as of Tuesday, Oct. 1, the first day of the new fiscal year, be-cause Congress failed to pass a permanent or interim budget in time to prevent a federal shutdown, the first in nearly two decades. The impasse came as a result of a Republican-controlled House determination to tie any budget measure to defund-ing the Affordable Care Act, the major provisions of which went into effect on Oct.1. On Monday, Sept. 30, President Obama warned about the consequences of a federal shutdown. “I want to be very clear about what would change. Office buildings would close. Paychecks would be delayed. Vital services that seniors and veterans, women and children, businesses and our economy depend on would be ham-strung. Business owners would see delays in raising capital, seeking infrastructure permits, or rebuilding after Hurricane Sandy. Veterans who’ve sacrificed for their country will find their support centers unstaffed. Tourists will find every one of America’s national parks and monuments, from Yosemite to the Smithsonian to the Statue of Liberty, immediately closed. And of course, the communities and small business- es that rely on these national treasures for their livelihoods

Analysis Shows Government Shutdown Harder on Black Workers

will be out of customers and out of luck. “And in keeping with the broad ramifications of a shut-down, I think it’s important that everybody understand the federal government is America’s largest employer. More than 2 million civilian workers and 1.4 million active-duty military serve in all 50 states and all around the world. In the event of a government shutdown, hundreds of thousands of these dedicated public servants who stay on the job will do so without pay — and several hundred thousand more will be immediately and indefinitely furloughed without pay.” The shutdown could have dire consequences for our national security, according to a report by the Congressional Research Service. According to the report, “Shutdown of the Federal Gov-ernment: Causes, Processes, and Effects,” published Sept. 23: “A federal government shutdown could have possible negative security implications as some entities wishing to take actions harmful to U.S. interests may see the nation as physically and politically vulnerable,” the report stated. There is also concern that the shutdown will be another setback for the already shaky economy. Moody’s Analytics estimates that a three to four week shutdown could cost the economy about $55 billion, about equal the combined economic disruption caused by Hurri-cane Katrina and Superstorm Sandy. Speaking in the Rose Garden on Day 1 of the shut down, President Obama said: “I will not negotiate over Congress’s responsibility to pay bills it’s already racked up. I’m not going to allow anybody to drag the good name of the United States of America through the mud just to refight a settled election or extract ideological demands. Nobody gets to hurt our economy and millions of hardworking families over a law you don’t like.”

To read this story in its entirety, please visit atlantadailyworld.com.

By George E. CurryNNPA Editor-in-chief

Civil rights pioneer Evelyn Lowery RememberedBy M. Alexis ScottADW Publisher Hundreds gathered at the King Chapel on the campus of Morehouse College Wednesday to pay their last respects to Ev-elyn Lowery, a pioneer in civil rights and women’s empower-ment and the wife of the Rev. Joseph E. Lowery. She died at home on Sept. 26 following a massive stroke a week earlier that left her with irreversible damage. She was 88 years old. A series of tributes filled the two-hour service that drew tears and laughter from those gathered. She was praised for her work as a leader in her own right as well as being a rock to her husband, who has been called the “dean” of the Civil Rights Movement. Xernona Clayton said she teased Mrs. Lowery about waiting on her husband “hand and foot.” They were married for 67 years. She said they were devoted to each other. In ad-dition she established her own initiatives, including founding SCLC/WOMEN in 1979. Scarlet Pressley-Brown, interim-chair of SCLC/WOMEN, called her the mother of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, scheduled to open next year. In addition to SCLC/WOMEN, Mrs. Lowery founded the Drum Major for Justice awards to recognize people and organizations working for social justice. She also established the annual Heritage Tour in Alabama to retrace the steps of civil rights battles and to dedicate monuments to those who gave their lives in the struggle. The Rev. Al Sharpton, head of the National Action Net-work and host of Politics Nation on MSNBC, said “her work speaks for itself.” He added, “She stood shoulder to shoulder with one of the greatest civil rights leaders the world has ever known.” In addition to words of tribute calling her a “foot soldier” filled with “love, courage, grace, class, dignity, dedication and commitment,” the service included music that brought people to their feet, especially a performance by the three Lowery daughters, Yvonne, Karen and Cheryl. They sang “Total Praise.” Jennifer Holliday of Broadway fame, stirred the crowd with “His Eye is on the Sparrow,” and Cassandra Davis, of “Tyler Perry’s House of Payne,” performed “God is Real,” repeating the ending at Rev. Lowery’s request. Other tributes came from letters from President and Mrs. Obama, President Clinton and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder. Others bringing tributes were Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed, andDr. Carlton Brown, president of Clark Atlanta Uni-versity, where Mrs. Lowery graduated in 1946. Also, Christine King Farris, sister of Martin Luther King Jr.; Carolyn Young, wife of Andy Young, who worked alongside King, Lowery and others; Ruby Shinholster; and Thandi Luthuli Gcabashe, who met Mrs. Lowery when she lived in Atlanta in exhile for sever-al years during the fight against apartheid in South Africa. Bishop Woodie W. White, board chair of the Joseph E. Lowery Institute for Justice & Human Rightst at CAU, con-cluded the service by saying Mrs. Lowery is “not leaving, but going....Going transcends leaving….She’s alright… and that’s the rest of the story.”

Evelyn Lowery

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H I G H

Illustration from The Lion and the M

ouse, Jerry Pinkney, 2009. © 2009 Jerry Pinkney Studio. All rights reserved.

The High honors the life and work of Jerry Pinkney, master watercolorist and award-winningchildren’s book illustrator, whose exquisite images celebrate life’s small but extraordinarymoments, the wonders of classic literature, and the wisdom of those who have gone before us.

Conversations with Contemporary Artists: Jerry Pinkney, 2 p.m., Saturday, October 12Book-signing to follow ($10 members, $15 non-members, $5 students)

Arts & Rec: Jerry Pinkney, 12 noon to 5 p.m., Sunday, October 13(Free with Museum admission)

SPONSORED BY Promotional Partner READING ROOM SPONSOR

Friends of Jerry Pinkney

ON VIEW: OCT. 12, 2013–JAN. 5, 2014TICKETS: HIGH.ORG OR 404-733-5000MEMBERS ALWAYS FREE!

This exhibition is organized by the Norman Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

HIGH MUSEUM OF ART ATLANTA

Witness: The Art of Jerry Pinkney

Emerald Cities Collab-orative Atlanta hosted the Green Apple Day of Service at two local elementary schools in Atlanta on Sept. 27 The Green Apple Day of Service, an international event of activities sponsored by the U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), was held at the Mari-etta Center for Advance Academ-ics (MCAA) in Marietta, Ga., and at Hightower Elementary School in Dekalb County. The global event provides parents, teachers, students, companies and local organizations the opportunity to transform all schools into healthy, safe and productive learning environments through local service projects and learning activities. At MCAA through a multi-faceted, fun and interactive academic program a group of third graders at the school experienced a broad set of topics, including how to conserve energy and water and ways to identify and imple-ment green and sustainability best practices at school and at home. The event included presentations, games, team competitions, poster making, hands-on displays and demonstrations from indus-try specialists and experts, which included

Students Experience ‘Green Apple Day’ Special to ADW

South Face Energy Institute, Trane Inc., U.S. Navy, Southern Polytechnic

State University, AFL-CIO, Cen-ter for Sustainable Communi-ties, Energy Services Coalition, Emerald Cities Collaborative, Fulton County Action Author-ity, City of Atlanta Watershed Management and USGBC

Georgia Chapter and Real Times Media.

At Hightower Elementary School, activities were initiated to

design and implement a green roof for the school. Special thanks to MCAA and Hightower administration, faculty and staff for helping to host and make this a very special event for the youth. Marietta Center for Advance Academics, an ECA partner school, was recently se-lected as a National Blue Ribbon School by Secretary Arne Duncan and will be honored in a White House ceremony next month. Hightower Elementary School, an ECA partner school, was recently selected as a finalist by the Technical Association of Georgia for its annual STEM Award being held this week in Savannah, Ga. Both MCAA and Hightower are STEM certified schools.

The Central Intelligence Agency Analytic Simulation Team at Clark Atlanta University Bests AUC Institutions

The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Analytic Simulation Team at Clark Atlanta University (CAU) celebrates its Sept. 19 win in the 2014 CIA Analytic Simulation, a day-long competition against fellow Atlanta University Consortium (AUC) schools Morehouse College and Spelman College. The exercise was originally conceived by the CIA to offer prospective analysts a sense of what duties at the agency entail. During the simulations, college students engage in role-play throughout which hypothetical world crises unfold. Teams must quickly digest mock intel-ligence and, using their expertise and judgment to make decisions, prepare briefings for CIA analysts, who role-play as U.S. government policymakers. CAU’s winning team members this year included students from CAU’s schools of Business and Arts and Sciences. Pictured are CAU President Carlton E. Brown (from left); Abril Brown, marketing; team advisor Charles Richardson, Ph.D., assistant professor of marketing; Tateira Surles, political science; Ashley Wilson, marketing; and Jameel Pierre, marketing. (Not pictured: Tytiana Reeves-Payne.)

Photo by Curtis McDowell

The problems in Greater Atlanta cannot be solved by traditional solutions alone. These issues require thinking outside the box and daring to develop and implement new answers for challenges in education, income, health and homelessness. United Way of Greater Atlanta anounced Oct. 1 its $3 million Dare to Forget the Box! prizes that will support organizations in their efforts to solve these problems with fresh ideas. The goal of United Way’s Dare to Forget the Box! prizes is to help organizations and partners address the systemic issues in their communities. All submissions for the prize require three to five organizations to collab-orate in solving an issue. To express your interest in submitting a proposal and to learn more about the Dare to Forget the Box! prizes, visit www.united-wayatlanta.org/ftb. The deadline to indicate interest is Oct. 9. Completed proposals are due Nov. 15. According to Milton J. Little Jr., president and CEO of United Way of Greater Atlanta, “Our expectation is that the $3 million will generate creative approaches to developing and implementing sustainable efforts to drive community change.”

United Way announces $3 Million Dare to Forget the Box! PrizesSpecial to ADW

He added, “Repeatedly, studies have shown that where you live can impact your quality of life. We are committed to bridging the disparities gap in economic stability, ac-cess to health care and education outcomes that exist between the various zip codes, because your zip code may determine where you live and how you live, but it shouldn’t determine how long you live.” The Dare to Forget the Box! prizes are available at three different levels: one at $500,000; one at $300,000 and two at $100,000 each over the next three years. United Way will fund integrated and boldly innovative programs that bring community organizations, businesses and the public/private sectors together to create community-level changes that address issues caused and exacerbated by poverty. United Way of Greater Atlanta invests in more than 200 programs in 13 counties through the Community Impact Fund and works with them to help children succeed in school, improve financial stability of fami-lies, provide affordable and accessible health care and end homelessness. For more information, visit unitedwayat-lanta.org.

The Parade of Excellence, pre-sented by KIA Motors, is one of the annual events in Atlanta that entertains hundreds of thousands during the Atlanta Football Clas-sic weekend. This year’s game kicks off at the Georgia Dome on Satur-day, Oct. 5, at 3:30 p.m. The Parade of Excellence is where all the excitement begins. Starting at 10 a.m. from the intersection of Peachtree and Baker streets, the route follows Peachtree, taking a right onto Marietta St. and ending at Phillips Arena. Historically this unique parade has featured youth who participate with live per-formances, ride on floats and cars or march proudly representing their schools in bands, drill teams and other youth organizations. “This is our 14th year spotlighting Atlanta area youth, as well as young people, cor-porations and organizations from across the U.S.,” stated John T. Grant Jr., CEO, 100 Black Men of Atlanta Inc. The 2013 Parade of Excellence, presented by KIA Motors will feature the following: BEST Academy Army Jr. ROTC Colorguard; BEST Academy, Army ROTC Batallion; Junior Scholars -- Project Success; Henry Kelly, president, 100 Black Men of Atlanta, Inc.; Curley M. Dossman Jr., 100 Black Men of America Inc.; Nathaniel R. Goldston, III, founder, 100 Black Men of Atlanta Inc.; Erroll B. Davis, Jr., superintendent, Atlan-ta Public Schools; Harold L. Martin Sr., chancellor, N.C. A&T University; Thomas J. Elzey, president, South Carolina State University.

Parade of Excellence Presented by KIA Motors Set to Showcase Atlanta StudentsSpecial to ADW

The following companies and organizations also support the parade with floats or live perfor-mances: Georgia Power, Atlanta Ballet, The Coca-Cola Company,

McDonalds, KIA Soul, Cross Keys Tribe of Funk, Roy-al Elites, Georgia National

Guard, Delta Air Lines, Dance Time, Georgia World Congress Center

Authority, Lady Rose Buds, Hephzibah Big Red Marching Band, Touch of Class Twirlers, Digi Camo Hummer H-3, The Art of Confidence Performing Arts Alliance, Soldiers & Future Soldiers, and the HBCU Alumni Alliance. Students from the following colleges and universities will participate to represent scholastic achievement and academic excel-lence: North Carolina A&T State University, South Carolina State University, and Talla-dega College. In addition, the following high schools are scheduled to participate: B.E. Mays, Grady, Carver Early College, Weno-nah, Tri-Cities, Southwest, North Atlanta, North Springs, Riverdale, Banneker, Bear Creek, Coretta Scott King Academy, Forest Park, Booker T. Washington, Carver, Shiloh and Pearl-Cohn. In addition to spectators along the route, the parade will be viewed by millions as it is once again being televised by WSB-TV, Channel 2. Fred Blankenship and Linda Stouffer will host the live broadcast from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., Saturday, Oct. 5. For a list of all events and game details, visit www.atlantafootballclassic.com.

www.ADWnews.com October 3 - 9, 2013BUSINESS www.ADWnews.com October 3 - 9, 2013TRIBUTE

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Call for Nominations: HOSEA WILLIAMS AWARD FOR COMMUNITY ACTIVISM

The award will be presented as a part of the 31st Annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Convocation

January 2014

Nominations are open for individuals and organizations who serve and foster community awareness and betterment through leadership, courage, civic engagement, or grass-roots activism.

Deadline for Submission:Monday, October 21, 2013

Criteria: • All nominators must complete a nomination form for their nominee • Two letters of recommendation highlighting the character and accomplishments of the person or organization being nominated• A résumé must be submitted for individuals and a fact sheet for organizations• A color photograph of the individual or logo of the organization (jpg) via email• Organizations must be 501(c)3 to be eligible and submit proof of their 501(c)3 status• Additional materials supporting the nominee’s accomplishments are suggested• Nomination packets limited to 15 pages

The nomination applications are available in the Office of Student Activities, Suite 330, Student Center,or can be downloaded online: intercultural.gsu.edu.

All materials are due in person by Monday, October 21, 2013 to Student Activities, Suite 330, Student Center, or submitted via email to [email protected].

For additional information:Tonya CookIntercultural Relations404-413-1584Suite 330, Student [email protected]

Find us on Facebook:facebook.com/GSUInterculturalRelations

Follow us on Twitter :twitter @IR_GSU

Supported by Student Activity Fees

George G. Andrews

In a move typical of its bold business legacy, the Board of Directors of Capitol City Bank & Trust Company announced recently that founder and former CEO George G. Andrews has taken on the new task of aggressively marketing the Atlanta-based financial institution in a climate of economic challenges facing Georgia community banks. The board also

announced the appointment of John L. Turner, chief

operating officer and a member of the bank’s senior management team to assume the day-to-day opera-tions of the bank as president and chief executive officer.

“I am optimistic about the future of this institution,” says Andrews. “We are moving in exactly the most strategic direction to accomplish our priority goal.”

Capitol City Bank & Trust Company Board Shifts Focus to Growth, Creates Marketing Initiative to be Led by Founder George G. Andrews

He added, “I am proud to be able to lead this initiative and pleased to have the support of our management team as we embark upon this new venture.” “George is the man for this job,” says Capitol City’s Board Chair C.T. Vivian. “We are confident that this is in the best interest of the bank. As the head of Capital Formation and Strategic Initiatives, he will focus on what we need to move forward – partnerships that can help secure the financial stability of this revered institution. George has strong ties to the community, which have helped the bank succeed with both our account holders and investors. He also has the expert business acumen to realize this vision of growth for the bank, so we are encouraged that he has agreed to assume this new role.” Capitol City Bank & Trust Company, which opened in October 1994 as a state banking institution chartered under the laws of the State of Georgia, was organized to serve inner city Atlanta’s primarily African-American community. Today, the bank has branches in eight locations in metro Atlanta, Albany, Savannah and Augusta. Capitol City Bank & Trust Company operates a full-ser-vice banking business and engages in a broad range of commercial banking activities, including demand and time deposits; individual, commercial and installment loans; money transfers; safe deposit box services; and investments in U.S. government and municipal services. For additional information, visit www.capitolcitybank-atl.com.

Tributes Pour in for Evelyn Gibson LoweryEditor’s Note: Civil rights, political and other community leaders issued statements of tribute and condolence on the passing of Evelyn Gibson Lowery. Selected highlights follow:

“She was a dedicated and energetic leader in her own right. As founder and chair of SCLC/Women, Mrs. Lowery provided tireless leadership to empower women, protect and educate children and nurture families. She further led the way to making a difference in the world by establishing the Drum Major for Justice Awards Dinner, the Evelyn G. Lowery Civil Rights Heritage Tour, and the Bridging the Gap –Girls to Women Mentoring Program.” -- Bernice A. King, CEO of The King Center. ------- “In many ways she was ahead of her time. She recog-nized the scourge of HIV as a moral issue long before the Black church embraced it. She insisted on honoring the history of the civil rights rebellion when few under-stood its significance. … She achieved something many women find elusive -- a successful marriage and the freedom to chart her own course and speak with her own voice. She is a role model for my generation and for the ages.” -- Janice Mathis, vice president and South-east Regional Director, Rainbow PUSH------ “She developed and implemented several solutions for issues negatively impacting the African-American commu-nity -- whether it was Pampering for Peace for women of do-mestic violence, HIV/AIDS awareness, or a computer tech-nology training center for girls…. We pledge to honor her legacy by continuing these programs to uplift and empower the community.” -- Helen Butler, SCLC/W.O.M.E.N. Inc. Advisory Board and executive director, The Peoples Agenda------ “SCLC Women across the nation grieve the loss of our leader and Shero…. She erected monuments to unsung civil rights heroes throughout Alabama and made certain that youth learned this history on the annual Evelyn G. Lowery Heritage Tour commemorating Bloody Sunday. Mrs. Lowery personally touched the lives of thousands of youth with her mentoring program; seniors with her annual Christmas din-ner; and recognized the contributions of other leaders with her prestigious Drum Major for Justice Awards.” -- Felicia M. Davis, director, Building Green Initiative at Clark Atlanta University------ “Her dedication and determination was so solid, so firmly fixed, that her every action spoke to her nurturing spirit to uphold the tenets of the Civil Rights Movement, but also to lift women’s rights within the movement. She was respon-sible for honoring civil rights activist Viola Liuzzo, with a monument along the Freedom Trail. She was a foot soldier whose shoes will take many of us to fill. We will miss her dearly.” -- Clayola Brown, SCLC/W.O.M.E.N. Inc. board member and president, A. Philip Randolph Institute------ “Mrs. Lowery was a quiet warrior who fought for equality with strength, perseverance, dignity and class. She will be missed, but her legacy will live on as SCLC/W.O.M.E.N. Inc. footsoldiers continue her work.” -- Edrea Davis, SCLC/W.O.M.E.N., Inc. Advisory Board and vice president, Jazzmyne PR ------ “We will ‘never forget to remember’ Mrs. Evelyn Gibson Lowery’s legacy by continuing to do the work every day fighting for the empowerment of women and girls to achieve equal rights economically, educationally and politically now and for future generations.” -- Melanie L. Campbell, convener, Black Women’s Roundtable and President & CEO, National Coalition on Black Civic Participation

“Evelyn Lowery’s leadership was essential to the longevity and power behind the movement for equality. Mrs. Lowery was a drum major for justice in her own right. Her spirit lives on in the initiatives she founded and in the activists she men-tored across the nation.” -- Roslyn M. Brock, chairman of the NAACP Board of Directors ------ “Mrs. Lowery’s foresight and leadership pushed the en-velope of what organizations like the SCLC and the NAACP could do for women and families. Her legacy lives on in the coalitions she built and the strong foundation she laid. She was a hero and will be truly missed.” -- Benjamin Todd Jeal-ous, president & CEO of the NAACP----- “We remember Mrs. Evelyn Lowery, a remarkable woman in her own right, who dedicated her life to promoting equal-ity, liberty and justice for all people. We are all a direct ben-eficiary of her sacrifice, service and work as a champion for human rights. Her legacy will continue to encourage many individuals, like me, to live with integrity, pride, courage and faith.” – Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed------ “When you think of Mrs. Lowery, the quote that says ‘behind every successful man, there is a strong, wise and hardworking woman’ comes to mind. While her husband, Rev. Joseph Lowery is a civil rights icon in his own right, Mrs. Lowery was right there by his side in the fight for racial equality as founder of SCLC/W.O.M.E.N.” -- Fulton County Chairman John H. Eaves------ “Evelyn Lowery’s leadership was essential to the longevity and power behind the movement for equality. Mrs. Lowery was a drum major for justice in her own right. Her spirit lives on in the initiatives she founded and in the activists she men-tored across the nation.” -- Roslyn M. Brock, chairman of the NAACP Board of Directors

“She stood tall at this influential man’s side, ever in sup-port of his public persona.” -- Sam Massell, former Mayor of Atlanta and current president of Buckhead Coalition.------ “When I heard that Mrs. Evelyn Lowery had passed, I was actually chairing a Whip meeting for the Democratic Caucus in the U.S. Capitol. I asked all the members to stop for a moment of silence in her honor. Mrs. Lowery was a pillar of our community, a valuable participant in the struggle for civil rights, and an admired role model to the young people she mentored.” – U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., 5th District, and civil rights icon.

------ “Mrs. Lowery was a devoted mother, wife and friend who exemplified the strength of purpose that has marked the life that she and Dr. Lowery built and shared throughout their more than 65 years of marriage. Her

life’s work fighting AIDS, preserving history, protecting the health and welfare of our communities and her tireless efforts strengthening Black families is her legacy. -- U.S.

Rep. Hank Johnson, D-Ga., 4th District. ------ Atlanta City Council President Ceasar C. Mitchell and members of the Atlanta City Council also issued statements. Selected highlights follow:

“She was a powerful force in the civil and human rights movement, giving voice to disenfranchised women, children and families.

She was also a devoted mother, and wife to Rev. Joseph Lowery. Through their collective service, they have positively impacted the lives of many people and serve as a wonderful example of a couple dedicated to both service and each other. – Atlanta City Council President Ceasar C. Mitchell------ “Mrs. Lowery was a lady of quality, class and distinction. Her work in the promotion of racial and economic justice, women’s rights, and religious freedom has left an indeli-ble mark upon the social, political, educational and moral conscious of our community, our state and our nation. Her level of intelligence, grace and compassion will be difficult to surpass. Atlanta, the nation and the world are a better place by her being in our midst.” – Atlanta City Councilmember Felicia A. Moore, District 9 ------ “I am eternally grateful to Mrs. Lowery for her brave and passionate commitment to achieving equality for all women and men of color. My generation, and those to come, have been forever changed because of her willingness to sacrifice so much of herself, and of her family.” – Atlanta City Coun-cilmember Keisha Lance Bottoms, District 11------ “Mrs. Lowery was a civil rights leader, a courageous wom-an, community activist and a humanitarian. We know that God knows best and she is now at rest. But while on this earth, she paid her dues to society and built sustainable programs.” – Atlanta City Councilmember C.T. Martin, District 10------ “I was honored to join Mrs. Evelyn G. Lowery and the Women of SCLC Women Inc. and my After 5 program students for the Evelyn Gibson Lowery Civil Rights Heritage Tour this past March 2nd and 3rd. The two-day tour from Atlanta to Alabama to see Historic Landmarks and meet the people of the movement was a once-in-a-lifetime event.” – Atlanta City Councilmember Joyce M. Sheperd, District 12

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October 3 - 9, 2013

The Black Mecca 50 Years Later: Did Black Atlanta Get to the Promised Land?By Kenya King

A one-way ticket to anywhere in the U.S. after Hurricane Katrina brought a vast number of displaced New Orleanians to the hotbed of the South – Atlanta – where Black political power precipitates African-American entrepreneurship, and where a cultural melting pot begets the crux of artistic expression from Mozart to hip-hop. Even since the 1970s, and still today, Atlanta has been Christened as the Black Mecca and for many and is a city where African Americans are believed to have the best opportunities for prosperity or for reinventing themselves. Fifty years after of the March on Washington and the “I Have a Dream” speech, what has Black Atlanta achieved, and is it still a place for African Americans to thrive? “It’s no doubt about it,” said Herman J. Rus-sell, chairman and founder of H.J. Russell and Company, which is a 50-year-old construction and real estate empire based in Atlanta. Russell started his construction business at 16 years old and is one of the living icons of Black business. “Atlanta is still the anchor for Black entrepre-neurs,” said Russell. “Just for all phases of Black leadership. To be in education, to be in contract business, or to just be a doctor – whatever you may [want to] be. Atlanta is one of the greatest cities in the world to have your enterprise.” For decades, educational and employment opportunities have historically drawn African Americans to the Bible Belt South. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the percentage of African Americans in the Southern region increased by 18 percent from 2000 to 2010, bringing in an additional 3 million, and in 2010, the State of Georgia ranked fourth for the highest number of African Americans in the United States. President of Clark Atlanta University Carlton Brown agrees that education con-tinues to play a key role in luring people to Atlanta. He also stated that Clark Atlanta, the only independent graduate institution in the entire Historically Black College and University network, fre-quently has Fortune 500 companies from all over the world visiting the institution looking for employees with a firm mind-set toward diversity. “We have them com-ing all the time,” he stated. “The range of talent that arrives here is very, very strong. Of course [Atlanta has] 100,000 college students in the city -- that’s never a bad thing -- and the proportion of them that are African Americans is increasing, particularly with the focus of the Atlanta University Center with Clark Atlanta, Spelman and Morehouse.”

Untouchable – Business Opportunities for African Americans

Businessman and entrepreneur Tommy Dortch, who is CEO of TWD Inc. and founder of the Black College Alumni Hall of Fame, said that in spite of Atlanta’s challenges, it is still one of the best a places for African Americans to reach success. “I’ve traveled to every state in the U.S. except for two and I’ve been in all of the urban centers and I have worked with so many different people. It’s a city where people work together. There are many people who

have a difference of opinion. Once you leave Atlanta, you know the difference. When you look at [Washing-ton] D.C., when you look at New York, when you look at Chicago – they don’t have the kind of cohesive coming together that we have,” he stated. Dortch also stated that based on the track record of entrepreneurial success among African Americans in Atlanta, one has to admit that Atlanta is likely the number one “Black Mecca” in the nation, not only in the South. In addition, Atlanta has had an African-American mayor for nearly 40 years, starting with Maynard Holbrook Jackson in 1974. “When you look at the legacy that Maynard Jackson left us, there is not another city in this nation that has a commitment to diversity and inclu-sion. For African Americans in this city to gain almost 38 to 40 percent

of all the procurement opportunities in this city, there is not another place in this nation.

When you consider this point, we’ve done almost $6 billion in the expansion of Hartsfield-Jackson [airport]. One billion [dollars] of that $6 [billion] has gone to African Ameri-can-owned businesses. There is not another city that can touch that,” said Dortch. Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed’s view parallels Dortch’s premise. “Atlanta has an undeniable legacy and long-stand-ing tradition of supporting urban entrepreneurs. Many of the world’s greatest business ideas and ventures started here in Atlanta, which was named by Forbes magazine as the No. 1 city in the United States for minority entrepreneurs,” said Reed. “That’s a sign that opportunities for emerging urban entrepreneurs and women and minority-owned businesses in Atlanta remain unparalleled. I don’t believe there is any place better than the city of Atlanta to help develop and nurture talented and innovative African-American business owners, and minority and women-owned businesses.” James Bronner of the world-renown Bronner Brothers, who helps run the International Bronner Brothers Hair Show, recalls how his friends who moved to other places continue to view Atlanta as a great place for opportunities. “It’s still true, but you still have to work hard and be excel-lent at what you do in order to make it in Atlanta,” he said. “It’s not just a shoe-in. You still have to be innovative and push the envelope to succeed because of the economy. No matter what city you’re in now, you really have to be doing something extraordinary to be at the level you used to be.” In 2012, Bronner Brothers celebrated its 65th anniversary in business with the second generation of Bronner brothers in charge. Dortch contends that while people “love to hate” Atlanta and that at times, it’s a “tale of two cities,” when looking at the top five places for African Americans in the U.S., Atlanta far exceeds the others, especially when considering the level of generational success. “You look at the leaders like a Herman Russell, whose family now is a second generation, really almost a third generation,” said Dortch. “You look at the Bronner Brothers, you go down the line, and you look at what happens in this city. There’s nothing like it.”

Atlanta, the bedrock of the Civil Rights Movement and birthplace of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., also attracts African Americas who want to stay con-nected to the “Black experience.” Elder Bernice A. King, daughter of Martin Luther King Jr. and CEO of The King Center, which serves thousands of visitors each year, con-curs that Atlanta’s unique history of African-American life and culture,

especially related to civil rights, is a magnet for people color. “I think when people come here they find progressive-minded people,” said King. “They find a hodgepodge of creative and gifted individuals who are doing substantial stuff. I think because I think it has a lot to do with the history and the spirit that emerged from Au-burn Avenue in the ‘20s, ‘30s, ‘40s and

‘50s, and I believe it’s a carryover from all of that and the fact that there are a number of African Americans in important places in leadership, although we still have a great deal of work to do in

terms of power, leveraging true power in Atlanta.” None the less, more than 40 years after Dr. King made strides to improve the social, political and economic conditions for the poor in America, Atlanta seems to have experienced a seesaw effect in its seat among progressive cities as people moseyed in and out of the city when the recession came in its purview. In 1996, the Olympic Games brought Atlanta unarguably its highest level of visibility on an international scale, and Atlanta was the place to be regardless of race. During this time and the years fol-lowing, Atlanta’s business sector reached a solid financial footing and the Metro Atlanta Chamber of Commerce report-ed that the Olympics made a $5 billion impact on the city.

Herman J. Russell

Dale Bronner

Mayor Kasim Reed’

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www.ADWnews.com ENTERTAINMENT October 3 - 9, 2013

Jay-Z and Beyoncé: Super Rich

In May 2003, Columbia Records released a single by Beyoncé titled “Crazy in Love.” It was a huge hit and was, in fact, the hottest song of that summer. One would assume that she had her husband, Jay-Z, at least partially in mind. Well, the super couple is also “crazy in wealth,” as was expressed in Forbes, the biweekly magazine that publishes widely-read stories on finance, industry, investing and marketing, and is the premier source for these subjects. How rich are Beyoncé Knowles Carter and Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter? According to Forbes, the megastars made a combined $95 million in the period from June 2012 to June 2013. Consider, for example, that Beyoncé’s Mrs. Carter world tour grossed an average of $2 million per night, while Jay-Z’s Watch the Throne tour grossed $1.4 million per night. It comes as no surprise that Jay-Z and Beyoncé are also known for being shrewd business people. Assuming that their 2-year-old daughter, Blue Ivy, might want to join the family business ventures, the Carters have trademarked her name for use on such items as baby clothes and toys.

By Steve Holsey No one would have ever expected that the legendary Ron Isley and contemporary R&B artsist Kem would one day record as a duo, but they have. The result of their collabora-tion, “My Favorite Thing,” featured on Isley’s This Song Is For You album, was also written and coproduced by Kem. “This was one of the greatest moments of my life, let alone my career, to have Ron Isley singing my words,” said Kem. “I’ve fashioned a few of my songs with Mr. Isley in mind, so when he asked me for a song and said he’d love to do something together, I thought it would be a beautiful thing. This has truly been an honor for me to work with him.

The Isley-Kem ProjectBy Steve Holsey

“Sometimes I have to stop and be in the moment and recognize that I’m working with a legend.” Kem added that he hopes to have the longevity of Ron Isley who, starting with the Isley Brothers in the late 1950s, has been a consistent major attraction. Isley also had great praise for Kem. “Working with Kem was just like working with Marvin Gaye and like Luther Van-dross,” he said, “because of the way he cares about the music and producing the record. I put everything in his hands, and everything turned out fantastic. This was special. He is a real artist.”

When the 2013 Primetime Emmy Awards nominees were announced, hopes were high that an African-American actress — in this case, Kerry Washington, star of the red-hot series “Scandal” — would take home the coveted trophy. It had never happened before, and it didn’t happen that night, Sunday, Sept. 22, at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles. The category in question is Lead Actress in a Drama Series. The first Black actress to ever be nominated in that category was Debbie Allen, one of the stars of the ‘80s series “Fame.” Allen was, in fact, nominated four years in a row, 1982, 1983, 1984 and 1985. Next up was Alfre Woodard (“St. Elsewhere”), followed by Regina Taylor (two consecutive nominations for “I’ll Fly Away”), Cicely Tyson (“Sweet Justice”) and then Washington.

The Emmy Eludes Black Actresses in Leading RolesBy Steve Holsey

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FEATURES

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www.ADWnews.com SPORTS July 18 - 24, 2013

The Georgia United basketball team recently captured the 2013 AAU 7th Grade National Championship in Memphis, Tenn. The two-time defending State AAU champions went 8-0 to win the week-long competition featuring 87 Division I teams. Pictured are (bottom row, from left) Travis Anderson II, Mandarius Dickerson; Chase Fiddler, Rodney Lewis Jr., Myles Beleyu, Kennedy Minx-Rogers, Malik McClain, Realus George Jr., Corderius Hastings, Eric Ross II, James Lewis, Daviyon Dennis, Rapheal Rogers, Gavin Lewis, and coaches Tee Cofer, Rodney Lewis, Scott Beleyu and Eric Ross.

Alabama to Face Virginia Tech in Sold-Out Georgia DomeSpecial to ADW

The highly-anticipat-ed college football rematch between reigning nation-al champion Alabama and Virginia Tech is now a sellout. Chick-fil-A Bowl offi-cials announced the game and both teams have completely sold through their allotment of tickets for the Georgia Dome showdown. “The Georgia Dome is always an exciting place to play and a sold-out Georgia Dome is going to be very special,” said Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer. Despite ticket allotments being sold out, fans looking to get to the game still have great ticket package options available through PrimeSport, the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game’s Official Ticket Exchange and VIP Hospitality provider. “This is a nationally compelling match-up with two legendary coaches, passionate fan bases and perennial top-10 teams in the country,” said Chick-fil-A Bowl President and CEO Gary Stokan. “For Alabama this is a chance to start another championship run, to make history and go for the three-peat. For Virginia Tech, you can’t make much big-ger of a statement than knocking off number one.” The teams, who last met in 2009 when the #5 Crimson Tide defeated the #7 Hokies 34-24 in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game, will face off again at 5:30 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 31 to open the 2013 college football season. Since the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game began in 2008, the two matchups between Alabamaand Virginia Tech (2009 and 2013) represent

the two fastest sellouts in the

game’s his-tory. The teams will be

compet-ing for the

game’s coveted Old Leather Helmet

Trophy. “We are looking forward to another great game and we have a lot of respect for Coach Beamer and Virginia Tech,” said Nick Saban, Alabama head coach. “We’ve had the opportunity to open the season twice before in Atlanta, and the experience has been extremely positive for our team and our fans. The Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game in the Georgia Dome is a great venue for college football. It has a bowl game feel, and the staff has done an outstanding job of making it a first-class event.” “Playing in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game creates a very exciting environment for the fans and players of both teams,” said Jim Weaver, Virginia Tech athletics director. “We look forward to opening the season with the defending National Champions in a sold-out Georgia Dome.” In its third Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game appearance, Alabama will look not only to increase its record to 3-0, but will also look to secure a victory that could prove to be im-perative in appearing in its third consecutive national championship game. For Virginia Tech, a victory against top-ranked Alabama would immediately thrust the Hokies into the national spotlight and set them up for a championship run of their own.

Georgia United Wins AAU Title For Third Consecutive Year

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www.ADWnews.com SPORTS July 18 - 24, 2013

The Georgia United basketball team recently captured the 2013 AAU 7th Grade National Championship in Memphis, Tenn. The two-time defending State AAU champions went 8-0 to win the week-long competition featuring 87 Division I teams. Pictured are (bottom row, from left) Travis Anderson II, Mandarius Dickerson; Chase Fiddler, Rodney Lewis Jr., Myles Beleyu, Kennedy Minx-Rogers, Malik McClain, Realus George Jr., Corderius Hastings, Eric Ross II, James Lewis, Daviyon Dennis, Rapheal Rogers, Gavin Lewis, and coaches Tee Cofer, Rodney Lewis, Scott Beleyu and Eric Ross.

Alabama to Face Virginia Tech in Sold-Out Georgia DomeSpecial to ADW

The highly-anticipat-ed college football rematch between reigning nation-al champion Alabama and Virginia Tech is now a sellout. Chick-fil-A Bowl offi-cials announced the game and both teams have completely sold through their allotment of tickets for the Georgia Dome showdown. “The Georgia Dome is always an exciting place to play and a sold-out Georgia Dome is going to be very special,” said Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer. Despite ticket allotments being sold out, fans looking to get to the game still have great ticket package options available through PrimeSport, the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game’s Official Ticket Exchange and VIP Hospitality provider. “This is a nationally compelling match-up with two legendary coaches, passionate fan bases and perennial top-10 teams in the country,” said Chick-fil-A Bowl President and CEO Gary Stokan. “For Alabama this is a chance to start another championship run, to make history and go for the three-peat. For Virginia Tech, you can’t make much big-ger of a statement than knocking off number one.” The teams, who last met in 2009 when the #5 Crimson Tide defeated the #7 Hokies 34-24 in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game, will face off again at 5:30 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 31 to open the 2013 college football season. Since the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game began in 2008, the two matchups between Alabamaand Virginia Tech (2009 and 2013) represent

the two fastest sellouts in the

game’s his-tory. The teams will be

compet-ing for the

game’s coveted Old Leather Helmet

Trophy. “We are looking forward to another great game and we have a lot of respect for Coach Beamer and Virginia Tech,” said Nick Saban, Alabama head coach. “We’ve had the opportunity to open the season twice before in Atlanta, and the experience has been extremely positive for our team and our fans. The Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game in the Georgia Dome is a great venue for college football. It has a bowl game feel, and the staff has done an outstanding job of making it a first-class event.” “Playing in the Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game creates a very exciting environment for the fans and players of both teams,” said Jim Weaver, Virginia Tech athletics director. “We look forward to opening the season with the defending National Champions in a sold-out Georgia Dome.” In its third Chick-fil-A Kickoff Game appearance, Alabama will look not only to increase its record to 3-0, but will also look to secure a victory that could prove to be im-perative in appearing in its third consecutive national championship game. For Virginia Tech, a victory against top-ranked Alabama would immediately thrust the Hokies into the national spotlight and set them up for a championship run of their own.

Georgia United Wins AAU Title For Third Consecutive Year

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Michelle Obama calls Harlem a Cultural GemBy Meghan BarrAssociated Press

Extolling the virtues of Harlem’s rich cultural history, Michelle Obama hosted a luncheon for the spouses of foreign digni-taries Tuesday in the historic New York City neighborhood she described as “quintessen-tially American.’’ The first lady spoke to about 50 spouses of chiefs of state and heads of government, who are attending the U.N. General Assem-bly. The group toured The Studio Museum in Harlem, which was founded in 1968 by artists and civic and community leaders to provide space for modern and contemporary Black art. “There’s a reason why I wanted to bring you all to Harlem today,’’ said Obama, who was wearing a blue and white dress by Carolina Herrera. “And that is because this community ... is infused with a kind of energy and passion that is quintessentially American, but that has also touched so many people around the world.’’ Obama discussed Harlem’s place in the early 20th century as the heart of Black cul-ture in the U.S., pointing to famous writers and musicians like Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston and Louis Armstrong. “Many of these men and women left the South just a couple of generations after the end of slavery, and they were desperate to find a place where they could explore their talents and express their ideas freely,’’ she said. “This moment in history came to be known as the Harlem Renaissance.’’ The first lady also encouraged the group to share ideas about how they are improving the lives of girls and women in their own countries. “Everywhere I go in the world, I meet so many wonderful young girls -- girls with so much promise, girls eager and desperate to learn, girls who just blossom when they get that one chance to go to school and to start scratching at the fulfillment of their potential,’’ Obama said. “And when they get that chance -- when both boys and girls have an equal opportunity to learn -- we all know

that’s not just good for our children, it’s also good for their families and it’s good for their countries as well.’’ They dined in the main gallery surround-ed by life-sized paintings of African-Ameri-can women created by Houston-based artist Robert Pruitt. Made from crayon and char-coal on butcher paper, the paintings depict Black women in his Texas neighborhood and incorporate elements of science fiction and hip-hop culture. The lunch was provided by Red Rooster, a well-known soul food restaurant in Harlem, and included shrimp and rice and a salad with cornbread croutons. The visiting first ladies from other nations will go home with a gift basket that includes a jar of honey butter produced from fresh honey from the White House beehive and lemon verbena grown in the White House herb garden. They were serenaded by Broadway star Audra McDonald, whom the first lady described as a “dear friend,’’ and members of the chamber music class at LaGuardia Arts High School. There was also a performance by company members from the Dance The-atre of Harlem. The group also toured the museum, which houses about 2,000 works from about 450 artists, the earliest work from 1804 and the most recent from 2013. The museum was founded in a loft farther north in Harlem and moved to its cur-rent space, a former bank, in the 1980s. It currently has three emerging artists-in-res-idence of African or Latino descent occupying its studios.

Photo by Meghan Barr

The U.S. Postal Service is planning to add a world-famous musician and Georgia native to its “Music Icons Forever’’ stamp series. Postal officials say the agency is releasing a stamp featuring Ray Charles, of Albany, on Monday, along with one of the artist’s previously unre-leased songs. Charles was a singer and songwriter who pioneered the soul and rhythm and blues genres. He died in 2004. Events are being planned in Atlanta and Los Angeles to celebrate Charles’ induction into the series. R&B singer Ashanti and the Morehouse Glee Club are scheduled to perform at the school’s Ray Charles Performing Arts Center, and Chaka Khan is headlining an event at the Grammy Museum at L.A. Live. The U.S. Postal Service honors music legends annually by featuring them on limited-edi-tion stamps.

USPS honors Ray Charles with Limited-Edition Stamp

Monica Pearson, Legendary Anchor, Inducted into Journalism Hall of Fame Monica Pearson, Atlanta’s first minori-ty and the city’s first female to anchor the evening news at WSB-TV, will be one of the five local media legends inducted into the Atlanta Press Club Hall of Fame on Tuesday, Oct. 8. The ceremony will take place during a dinner beginning at 7 p.m. (reception at 6 p.m.) at the InterContinental Hotel in Atlan-ta’s Buckhead neighborhood. In addition to Pearson, the 2013 Hall of Fame inductees are Ed Baker, Margaret Mitchell, Dale Russell and Bill Shipp. “The Atlanta Press Club Hall of Fame rec-ognizes journalists for their lifetime achieve-ments and those whose careers represent the highest standards of journalistic integrity and ethics,” notes Lauri Strauss, executive director of the Atlanta Press Club. “Our honorees have made outstanding contribu-tions either to journalism in Georgia, and/or advancing the mission of the Atlanta Press Club. They often courageously overcame obstacles to pursue and find the truth that the public needed to know.” A trailblazer, Pearson was the first African-American woman evening news anchor in Atlanta. During her 37-year career at WSB Channel 2 Action News, she won 30 Local and Southern Regional Emmy Awards, among many other dis-tinctions and honors.

Her long-time colleague and 2011 Hall of Fame inductee, John Pruitt, will introduce her. Tickets are $75 for Atlanta Press Club members and $100 for non-members. Spon-sorships and full tables also are available. For more information and to register, go to http://atlantapressclub.org/2013halloffame/.

Atlanta Falcons Select South Site For New Stadium

The Atlanta Falcons notified the City of Atlanta recently that the team has chosen the south site, at the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Drive and Northside Drive, as the final site for construction of the new stadium. “This decision today by the Falcons will have a positive impact on our great city for many years to come,” Mayor Kasim Reed said. “I’m proud of the hard work we invested in the south site as the best location for the new stadium. It took a little more work to get us to this place, but the long-term sustainability of the stadium and the surrounding neighborhoods were important priorities for me.” Reed’s administration has been instru-mental in negotiations surrounding the south site as the final location, given its con-nectivity to MARTA and the Georgia World Congress Center complex. Reed continued: “The investment in, and around, the new stadium will result in

much-needed improvements and redevelop-ment opportunities for nearby communities. Of equal importance, Friendship Baptist Church and Mt. Vernon Baptist Church were treated respectfully and will have an opportunity to continue their ministries and community outreach for many more years.” Falcons’ owner and Chairman Arthur Blank praised the work of many parties, including the City of Atlanta, the State of Georgia, the Georgia World Congress Center Authority and the two churches on the site, for the efforts required to reach an agree-ment. “As the preferred site, the south site serves the best interests of many important part-ners, including the surrounding communi-ties. We are grateful for the ongoing support of everyone involved in this project, and we look forward to sharing further details regarding the new stadium design in the coming weeks.”

Atlanta Dream Set to Open WNBA Finals at Minnesota

to omit any of its premier events like ‘Disney On Ice,’ which is scheduled to open next week,” said Brad

Gust, Atlanta Dream media relations manag-

er. “I don’t pretend to know all the ends and outs, but I do know

some of the other WNBA teams from time to time have had to schedule events some-place other than their normal home venues as well. “It’s not an ideal situation, but maybe we can expose some new fans in Gwinnett to the Atlanta Dream. It’s just the hand we’re dealt,” Gust continued. “Philips Arena is the home of the Atlanta Dream, and we couldn’t be happier for theirsuccess in the playoffs,” stated Trey Feazell, senior vice president and general manager of Philips Arena. “Due to an engagement that occurs each October and was scheduled nearly a year in advance, we will not be able to host the 2013 WNBA Finals.” In 2009, the first year the Dream qualified for post-season play, the team had to change venues to make room for “Elmo’s Green Thumb: Sesame Street Live” at Philips. This year’s Finals, featuring Atlanta’s Angel McCoughtry, the league’s leading scorer for two consecutive seasons, and Georgia-native and 2011 WNBA champion Maya Moore, promises to be a good matchup. In fact, the battle will be a rematch of the 2011 Finals, which was won by Minnesota in a three-game sweep, although all three games were decided by just six points. Minnesota also reached the Finals in 2012, but lost to the Indiana Fever in four games. Atlanta and Minnesota split the regu-lar-season series, with each team winning on its home court. The Lynx finished the regular season with the league’s best record at 26-8 and swept both Seattle and Phoenix to advance to the Finals.

Once again, the most consistently suc-cessful professional team in Atlanta, after qualifying for the playoffs in each of the past five seasons, will have to move its home finals playoff games to anoth-er venue after being bumped from Philips Arena for the second time since 2009. But it’s not about winning records as much as it is about dollars and cents. The Atlanta Dream, three-time Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA) Eastern Conference Champion, will be mak-ing its third appearance in the WNBA Finals in four seasons. But the team must play Game 3 and possibly Game 4, if necessary, of the upcoming best-of-five series of the WNBA Finals against the Minnesota Lynx at The Arena at Gwinnett Center. Philips Arena’s “Disney On Ice” is scheduled to open next week, coinciding with the impending playoff series. Atlanta will open Game 1 of the Finals against the Lynx on Sunday, Oct. 6, at 8:30 p.m. at the Target Center in Minnesota. Game 2 will also be played in Minnesota on Oct. 8 at 8 p.m. The Dream will then host Game 3 of the Finals on Thursday, Oct. 10 at 8:30 p.m., and if the series runs through to Game 4, the team will host that game on Sunday, Oct. 13 at 8 p.m. Both games will be played at The Arena located in Duluth. If necessary, Game 5 would be played in Minnesota on Wednes-day, Oct. 16 at 8 p.m. All games will be na-tionally televised by either ESPN or ESPN2. But for the Dream, the move jeopardizes any type of home-court advantage. According to the Atlanta Dream, the team is not the only WNBA squad to have made the move from their usual home court because of scheduling issues. “As far as the finals is concerned, during their scheduling, Philips Arena didn’t want

By Deitra P. Johnson

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TIBCO Software Inc. has an opening in Atlanta, GA for a Principal Consultant (Software Engineer) to deliver system architecture &

hardware/software specification consulting project activities. Must have unrestricted U.S. work authorization. Mail resumes to Att: D. Dzapo,

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Internal Medicine/Family Practice PhysicianExcellent opportunity to work in a developing multi-speciality medical practice located in the city’s expanding medical and research community. The successful candidate will be joining an organization that is supported by one of the most outstanding clinical sub-speciality groups in America. This position is a part-time contract position for physi-cian services for an out-patient clinic, no hospital coverage, no on-call, no weekends, no

site rotation, no evenings and no holidays. Must have M.D. or D.O., completion of U.S. Residency Program and Board

Certified or Board eligible. Three years practicing medicine preferred. If interested, e-mail resume to [email protected] and include on the subject line, “Physician Resume”.

Notice is given that Articles of Incorporation which will incorporate “DENIM GARAGE, Incorporated, INCORPORATED,” will be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing in accordance with the Georgia Nonprofit Corporation Code (O.C.G.A. $14-3-202).

The initial registered office of the corporation will be located at 2916 Brookfield Lane SW, Atlanta, Georgia 30331 and its initial reigstered agent at such address is

JOSHUA C. LEWIS

NOTICE OF INCOrPOrATION

Apt for Rent Southwest near Marta. 1 Bdrm; 1 1/2 Baths; Den; furnished

Kitchen and Sunroom. $450 @ month + deposit. Call 404-691-5656

PrOPErTY FOr SALEProperty For Sale – 1921 Cummings Dr. S.W., Atlanta 30311

Contact trustee 404-353-6222. Best Offer/Highest BidderContact: Barbara Cullings

P.O. Box 5043 • Atlanta, GA 30302(404) 353-6222

FOr rENT

RFP/Part-time Grants AdministratorGo to www.afcra.com

Furnished Room 404-758-6902

RFQ - Program Management Services for Atlanta BeltLine Trans-portation Program and Atlanta Sreetcar Extensions Environmental

Assessments/Design EngineeringAtlanta BeltLine, Inc. Request for Qualifications (RFQ) of experienced

Program Management firm to provide staff resources to comprehen-sively manage, coordinate, and control work efforts of consultant teams

associated with the Atlanta BeltLine Transportation Program.The FULL text of the RFQ is found at:

http://beltline.org/about/work-with-us/rfps-and-rfgs/Inquiries should be directed to:

Kwadwo A. AttaSenior Transit Project Manager

Atlanta BeltLine, Inc.86 Pryor Street SW, Suite 300Atlanta, GA 30303

E-Mail: [email protected]: 404/477-3606

Avis Budget GroupShift your career into high gear at Avis Budget Group!

We’re currently seeking friendly, energetic and passionate pro-fessionals to work with us in Atlanta.

Visit our website to learn more about our current openings for:

Preferred Service Representatives assist all customers throughout the Avis Budget Group Rental Experience while maintaining the Avis Budget Group quality and customer service standards.Rental Sales Associates are on the front lines and work to ensure a positive customer experience, while promoting our additional products and services.Operations Manager Trainees are the heart and soul of our airport operations. They influence customer satisfaction and ensure operational efficiency and quality that ultimately contributes to financial profitability.PT Concierge assist with greeting customers, processing car exchanges, walking customers to vehicles, and any other duties as necessary while maintaining the Avis quality assurance standards.Vehicle Service Attendants impact customer satisfaction by maintaining the cleanliness of our rental fleet.Vehicle Return Associates assist in the conclusion of the rental process of our valued customers.In exchange for your talents, we provide a flexible schedule for PT opportunities, competitive compensation with benefits, a fun family-friendly culture and the training and opportunities to maximize your full potential.

Ready to make a move toward a rewarding career?GO: www.avisbudget.greatjob.net | Media Code: AXZ | Job Code: GAZW

Clerical Personnel needed to help reduce my work load. Computer skills neededand should be well organized and will be well paid. Interested person(s) Should

please contact: [email protected] for more info and wages.

EMPLOYMENT

Senior Java Developer (Atlanta, GA): Participate in formal development lifecy-cle and release control process. Interpret written application requirements and apply sound programming practices to develop applications for large volume online services. Develop robust and secure web-based tools, products, pro-

cesses, and web services. Develop Java core applications on UNIX operating systems with LDAP & Relational Database connectivity. Bachelor’s degree or equivalent in Computer Engineering and 5 years of experience required. Must be proficient in Java, UNIX operating systems and relational databases (Ora-cle, MySQL), Spring framework, JSP or JSF Servlets, Java applications on a

Glassfish or WebLogic platform, Eclipse or Netbeans IDE, Selenium suite, and XML markup and data structures. Must have detailed understanding of SDLC.

Mail resume to: Cedar Document Technologies, Inc., Attn: HR, 1 Ravinia Drive, Suite 200, Atlanta, GA 30346

Notice is given that article of incorporation, which incorporates Martinez Contrac-tors, Inc. has been delivered to the Secretary of State for filiing in accordance with

the Georgia Business Corporation Code. The initial regisered agent at said address is Maximo Martinez.

For rent 4-room duplex. NW Atlanta.Nr. MARTA/school Call 404-344-5884

BIDS AND PrOPOSALS

LEGAL NOTICES

Request for Proposal from Experienced Qualified Firms to construct “The Gateway” project for ABI

The FULL text of the RFP is found at: http://beltline.org/about/work-with-us/rfps-and-rfqs-2/

Inquiries should be directed to: Kevin W. Burke, Sr. Project Manager

Atlanta BeltLine, Inc.86 Pryor Street SW, Suite 300 • Atlanta, GA 30303

E-Mail: [email protected] • Facsimile: 404/477-3604

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALGICC-101813-PBR

ADVERTISEMENT for PARKING BOOTH REPLACEMENT at GEORGIA INTERNA-TIONAL CONVENTION CENTER

The City of College Park is accepting Sealed Proposals from qualified vendors for PARK-ING BOOTH REPLACEMENT at GEORGIA INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION CENTER. Sealed proposals will be received no later than 10:00am EST, October 18, 2013 . at the City of College Park Purchasing Department, 3667 Main Street, College Park Georgia, 30337 at which time they will be opened and publicly read aloud. Bids received after the above date and time, or in any other location other than the Purchasing Department will

not be considered.A bid packet may be obtained from the City of College Park Purchasing Department, 3667

Main Street, College Park, Georgia 30337, or from www.collegeparkga.com.A Mandatory Pre-Bid Meeting will be held at 10:00am EST, Friday, September 27, 2013 at the Georgia International Convention Center, 2000 Convention Center Concourse, College Park, GA 30337, ITALIAN SUITES. After the Mandatory Pre-Bid Meeting, ques-tions arising will be accepted via email ONLY to [email protected] until COB, Friday, October 4, 2013. An Addendum listing all Q&A, clarifications, etc. will be posted at www.collegeparkga.com on or about COB Friday, October 11, 2013. It is always the

vendor’s responsibility to check the City’s website for any/all addenda.A Bid Bond of ten percent (10%) is required with submitted proposal. Successful ven-dor will be required to provide Performance and Payment Bond for one hundred percent

(100%) of full contract amount before execution of contract.The City of College Park reserves the right to reject any or all bids based on past perfor-mance and to waive technicalities and informalities and re-advertise. All Minority, Woman and Small Businesses are strongly encouraged to apply. Only responsive proposals that are determined to meet the requirements and criteria set forth by the City of College Park

will be considered.

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA ) ) IN THE FAMILY COURT FOR

COUNTY OF SUMTER ) THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT 2013-DR-43-994 South Carolina Department of ) Social Services ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) ) Adrian Parker ) Tronnie Rhodes ) Defendants. ) ) In the Interests of: ) ) Javion Demarcus Boykin [DOB: 01/28/1999] ) ) Minor(s) under the age of 18. ) __________________________________________) TO: ADRIAN PARKER and TRONNIE RHODES DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED:

SUMMONS

YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereby served upon you, and to serve a copy of your Answer upon Plaintiff’s attorney at the address below, within thirty (30) days following the date of service on you, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time stated, Plaintiff will proceed to seek termination of your parental rights to the above-captioned child. NOTICE OF FILING

YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the original Summons and Complaint in the above entitled action were filed in the Office of the Clerk of Court for Sumter County, South Carolina on August 12, 2013, the object and prayer of which is an action for termination of parental rights and such other relief as set forth in the Complaint. NOTICE OF RIGHT TO LEGAL COUNSEL

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that you have the right to request that an attorney be appointed to represent you if you cannot afford one. If you cannot afford one, you must apply IMMEDIATELY for one at the Sumter County Clerk of the Family Court, located at 215 N. Harvin Street, Sumter, South Carolina.

NOTICE OF HEARING

YOU WILL PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that pursuant to South Carolina Code of Laws, Section 63-7-2570 (2012), a termination of parental rights hearing and permanency planning hearing in this matter has been scheduled to be held on November 21, 2013 at 9:30 AM. You are hereby notified to be present in the Sumter County Family Court, Sumter County Judicial Center - 2nd Floor, 215 N. Harvin Street, Sumter, South Carolina at this time.

DEBORAH TRUETT NIELSEN ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF Post Office Box 68 Sumter, SC 29151 (803) 773-5531 ext 214 Sumter, South Carolina Filed September 13, 2013

STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA ) IN THE FAMILY COURT OF THE ) FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITCOUNTY OF GEORGETOWN ) CASE NO.: 2013-DR-22-271

John Roe and Mary Roe, ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) vs. ) )John Doe, Jane Doe and Marcus Thompson,) ) SUMMONS Defendants. ) )In the Interest of: )Kelis Nicole Herroitt, a minor under the age )of eighteen (18) years )_________________________________________ )

TO THE DEFENDANTS ABOVE NAMED:

YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED and required to answer the Complaint in this action, which was filed in Georgetown County Family Court (401 Cleland Street, Georgetown, SC 29440), on May 22, 2013, a copy of which can be obtained therefrom, and to serve a copy of your Answer to the said Complaint on the Plaintiff or their attorney, Louis Morant, at his office, 1022 Prince Street, P.O. Drawer 437, Georgetown, South Carolina 29442 within thirty (30) days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the Complaint within the time aforesaid, Judgment by Default will be rendered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint. Dated at Georgetown, South Carolina, on the 14th day of June 2013.

NOTICE OF ADOPTION

TO: THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTSYOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED pursuant to the provisions of S.C. Code Ann. Section 20-7-1734(E) (Cum. Supp. 1991), that the minor child, Kelis Nicole Herroitt has been placed for adoption.YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that an adoption action is pending in the Family Court for Georgetown County, South Carolina.YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that within thirty (30) days of receiving this notice, you should respond in writing by filing with the Family Court for Georgetown County, South Carolina, notice and reasons to contest, intervene or otherwise respond in the pending adoption action.YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that the court must be informed of your current address and of any changes in address during the adoption proceedings.YOU ARE FURTHER NOTIFIED that failure to file a response within thirty (30) days of receiving Notice consti-tutes consent to adoption of the child and forfeiture of all rights and obligations with respect to the child.SO BE NOTIFIED.

By: ________________________ Louis Morant

Attorney for Plaintiffs

Georgetown, South CarolinaJune 14, 2013

Mechanical Engineer in Duluth, GA is needed to design & optimize mechanical components for automotive powertrain systems including shafts, couplings,

flanges, housings; to read & interpret blueprints, technical drawings, schematics & computer-generated reports; to analyze the mechanical systems, including finite element analysis of structural, fatigue, thermal & vibration. Proficiency in Pro-En-gineer, AutoCAD and GD& T. Req. BS deg. or foreign equivalent in Mechanical

Engineering w/ 5 yrs of progressive experience in job offered or Design Engineer. 40hr/wk, 9-5. Send resume to Soft Source, Inc., 3883 Rogers Bridge Rd., Ste.

404B, Duluth, GA 30097.

Seeking for a very kindly and honest House Keeper Nice and clean person that can take care of kids. Work for only 4 Days and Drive my kids to school.

Salary per week $ 539 email: [email protected] Assistant needed to organize and help. Basic computer skills needed good with organization. We are ready to pay $618 per week interested person for

more info contact: [email protected] Operations Manager

Responsible for data entry, accounts payable, payroll, grant report entry, managing the organizations HR, helping and creating organizational and program budgets in collaboration with the ED and Program Direct, and

other misc. tasks.Reporting to the ED and serving as a member of the Management Team

along with the ED, Program Director and Development Director, this position’s primary responsibility is ensuring organizational effectiveness by providing leadership for the organization’s financial functions. Send

Resume to :([email protected])

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WHAT THE AFFoRDABLE CARE ACT MEAnS To YoU

SPECIAL COMMENTARYby Edna Kane-Williams

We’ve heard about it in bits and pieces over the past three years – the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and how it will benefit all Americans. But, the specific details can be confusing -- even over-whelming. At AARP, we are here to untangle the jargon and empower you with the answers and information you are seeking for yourself and for your family.

Beginning Jan. 1, 2014, the ACA will provide 6.8 million uninsured African Americans an op-portunity to get affordable health insurance cov-erage. The bottom line is if you are not insured, low cost or free plans will soon be available. If you already have insurance, you may be able to find an even more affordable plan.

Here is what has already happened through the ACA:

• 3.1 million young adults have gained coverage through their parents’ health insurance plans. This includes more than 500,000 young Afri-can-American adults between ages 19 and 25, according to the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).• 6.3 million seniors are paying less for pre-scription drugs. And if you have Medicare Part D, and you reach the coverage gap or “dough-nut hole” in 2013, you will get more than a 50 percent discount on brand name prescription drugs and more than a 20 percent discount on generic drugs while in the coverage gap. The discounts will continue until 2020 when the gap will end.• 105 million Americans are paying less for preventative care and no longer face limits on lifetime coverage, according to HHS. The 4.5 million elderly and disabled African Americans who receive health coverage from Medicare also have access to many preventive services with no cost-sharing, including annual wellness visits with personalized prevention plans, diabetes and colorectal cancer screening, bone mass measurement and mammograms, accord-ing to HHS.• 17 million children with pre-existing condi-tions are no longer denied coverage or charged extra. The issue of pre-existing conditions has been a consistent barrier to obtaining insur-ance. Under the ACA, beginning in 2014, insurance companies can no longer deny you coverage, even if you have a pre-existing condi-tion like asthma, diabetes, high-blood pressure or even cancer. And if you or a family member

gets sick or injured, insurance companies can’t cut off your coverage or cancel your plan.• Because African Americans suffer from diseases such as obesity, heart disease, and diabetes at higher levels than America’s general population, the ACA will not only provide greater access to affordable quality health care, but will also “invest in prevention and wellness, and give individuals and families more control over their care,” according to HHS.

The obvious question is how do you get started with the benefits? On Oct. 1, a recently-created website, HeathCare.gov, will present what is called the Health Insurance Marketplace. The website will present competing insurance agencies and help guide health care seekers – individuals, fam-ilies and small businesses -- to the best decisions on which plan to choose or switch over to.

For more information about the Affordable Care Act and how the law applies to you, visit AARP’s HealthLawAnswers.org.

Our goal is to make it plain.

Edna Kane-Williams is vice-president of Multicul-tural Engagement at AARP.

WE nEED JoBS

Atlanta has a well-honed reputation as a city too busy to hate, but sadly, we live in a commu-nity where people still try to disguise their preju-dices as well-intentioned behavior. I refer to the controversy surrounding proposed commercial re-development of a parcel in Atlanta’s District One, a community of historical significance to the inner city’s longtime African-American residents. There is a nasty spat underway there that appears to be about protecting the Beltline project’s environmental aesthetic – green spaces, pedestrian traffic, etc. The truth is this is just an-other attempt by the haves to limit the economic empowerment of the have-nots. And, unfortu-nately, minorities are again on the losing end of the proposition. All around Atlanta, other traditional neigh-borhoods already have been transitioned by the gentrification of folks who moved here from somewhere else to live closer in and near their career, academic and leisure time amenities our great city has to offer. These are fortunate people with great jobs, thriving businesses or just family money. They have bought homes, raised property taxes that increased the burden on seniors still living there, and methodically displaced families who always resided inside the city limits in large numbers -- without regard for their fates. Mean-while, the flight of large-scale commercial retail development to the suburbs may have made room in the city for more upscale housing and small businesses, but it also took away the availability of ordinary, median-income jobs near the homes of indigenous residents. Now comes an opportunity for the creation of jobs through this proposed development and a few are railing against it – not because it’s a bad plan, but because it’s what their new constituents in a majority Black district oppose. But who are they, really? And what do they know about eco-nomic depression? Soon a meeting of the City’s Board of Zoning Adjustment will address the is-sues related to allowing this already city-approved progressive development to take place. The opposition factors are well-organized behind their “good intentions” but they are so tragically misin-formed about what this opportunity can mean to their neighbors and the urban communities. New Atlantans will be the first to boast of the diversity that makes intown living so special. Yet, they may find themselves in an economically ho-mogenous society once their neighbors are unable to bear the cost of having to travel far to find em-

ployment. Perhaps they are unaware that bringing business back to the city is one way to empower their less well-off neighbors. The bucolic benefits of the Beltline’s plan may need to be re-exam-ined closely for signs of discrimination against anyone who cannot afford the lifestyle it supports. Fortunately, some elected officials understand how creating jobs inside the perimeter portends positive outcomes for the entire metro area. Our nation’s financial woes are local, not na-tional. They begin with communities like District One, where self-centered individuals are turning their backs on their neighbors. Their attitudes impact political decision-making that keeps pros-perity at bay for ordinary folks who just want an opportunity for and access to a job. An economic development is on the table that can make this happen, and I support it wholeheartedly. At the end of the day, this development can help improve the economic condition of hundreds of people at a time when jobs are scarce, particularly for African Americans. This cause needs a champion, not self-centered opposition.

Joe Beasley is director, Southeast Region of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition and CEO& founder of the JOE BEAS-LEY FOUNDATION.

GUEST COMMENTARYby Joe Beasley

www.ADWnews.com October 3 - 9, 2013AROUNd TOwN

Love To Shop Here. Love To Save Here.

For a list of current Buy One Get One Free deals, weekly specials, and coupons, visit publix.com/save. To view deals on

your smartphone, scan the code.

Love To Shop Here. Love To Save Here.

Favorite meal, music, and fl owers: Check. A little planning goes a long way when it comes to

preparing dinner for that special someone. The same can be said for enjoying great savings

at Publix. There are Buy One Get One Free deals and weekly specials on the items you

love throughout the store. Bring in your coupons and save even more. With all the ways

Publix helps you save, you can cross something else off your list. Leftover money: Check.

Nothing says romance like leftover Savings.

Willie Clemons of the Morehouse School of Medicine welcomes Peter McMahon, along with Curley Dossman, vice president of Georgia-Pacific and national chairman of the 100 Black Men of America.

Peter McMahon, general manager of the Hyatt Regency Atlanta, is flanked by Denise Hales Harrod, vice president of Atlanticus(left), and Xernona Clayton, founder of The Trum-pet Awards, at a “meet and greet” that Clayton hosted Sept. 23 for the new GM.

Susanne Shaffer (from left), president and CEO of St. Jude’s Recovery Center, celebrates her group’s annual luncheon with honoree Carol B. Tome, CFO and vice president at The Home Depot, Atlanta History Center CEO Sheffield Hale and Audrey Jacobs of the Community Foundation of Greater Atlanta.

Comedian Ritch Shydner (from left) shared his story of recov-ery. WXIA-TV anchor Brenda Wood was emcee and St. Jude’s Board Chair John Dryman thanked supporters.

ADW Publisher M. Alexis Scott stands with Atlanta’s new British Consul-General Jeremy Pilmore-Bedford, Victoria Christian and Brian McKissick at a Sept. 25 reception at his home after introducing Victoria and the Clive Christian luxury furniture to his guests. (Photo By Morgan McCutchin)

Atlanta City Councilwoman Cleta Winslow (from left), Vonn Creations owner Yvonne Wiltz and Cynthia Williams, imme-diate past president of the Atlanta Chapter of the National Coalition of 100 Black Women, were among the guests meeting McMahon.

Photos by M. Alexis Scott