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Diana Ross Joins 'American Idol'; Lawmaker Urges 'Get Over Slavery'
Diana Ross to Join 'American
Idol' Diana Ross is supremely busy. So
busy that the legendary singer has not had time to see "Dreamgirls," the film
loosely based on her singing group, The Supremes. The
62-year-old singer told CBS "Late Show" host David Letterman on Tuesday that she
is going to be a mentor on FOX's "American Idol" and is planning a world tour in
March to promote her new album, "I Love You." When asked if she would go see
"Dreamgirls," Ross quipped: "I'm going to see it with my lawyers." Ross added
later: "I like to inspire the talent that it is out there today." Read
more. 'Get Over Slavery,'
Says Lawmaker What did Delegate Frank D.
Hargrove say? In opposition to a measure to apologize on
"When somebody tells
me that I should just get over slavery, I can only express my emotion by
suggesting that I am appalled," said Delegate Clinton Jones, chairman of the
Legislative Black Caucus. Read
more. Who Got 'A Little Too Personal'
With Condoleezza Rice? With U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice appearing before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., said, "Who pays the price?
I'm not going to pay a personal price. My kids are too old, and my grandchild is
too young" to serve. Boxer then told Rice, "You're not going to pay a price, as
I understand it, within immediate family. So who pays the price? The American
military and their families." Rice said that
the questioning might have gotten "a little too personal." Read
more. Immigration Raid
Aids Blacks—For a Time After federal immigration agents
conducted several raids seeking undocumented immigrants in Stillmore, Ga.,
Crider, a local chicken-processing company, lost 75 percent of its mostly
Latino, 900-member work force. Crider is the economic anchor of Stillmore and
was severely damaged by this. But for the local low-skilled population, the
dramatic appearance of federal agents presented an unexpected opportunity.
Crider suddenly raised pay at the plant—$7 to $9 an hour—more than a dollar
above what the company had paid many immigrant workers. The company began
offering free transportation from nearby towns and free rooms in a company-owned
dormitory near to the plant. For the first time in years, local officials say,
Crider aggressively sought workers from the area's state-funded employment
office, a key avenue for low-skilled workers to find jobs. Of 400 candidates
sent to Crider—most of them black—the plant hired about 200. Read
more. And for more on how communities come with and benefit from
immigration, read the April 2006 issue of DiversityInc
magazine. Gay Lawyer Sues Major Law Firm for
Bias Aaron B. Charney, 28, an associate
at Sullivan & Cromwell, one of the country's most prestigious law firms,
filed a state lawsuit in Manhattan Tuesday accusing the firm of a systematic
campaign of discrimination and retaliation against him because he is gay. In his
lawsuit, Charney accuses members of the firm of demanding he be terminated for
carrying on an "unnatural" gay relationship with another Sullivan & Cromwell
associate. Charney denies the relationship. The lawsuit also contends that after
he filed a formal internal complaint, members of the firm suggested that he move
to a foreign office and then fabricated reviews to accuse him of overbilling
clients, among other things. Read
more.
Leveraging
Diversity in the New Congress
The new
Congress boasts the largest number of African-American, Latino and Asian members
in the history of the United States. When we can elect people of color to
statewide offices and in districts where they do not represent the majority of
the population, all Americans can be justifiably proud. This progress, however,
also speaks to the challenges that lie ahead in the 110th Congress.
If the growing racial/ethnic diversity of Congress is remarked upon at all, it
draws press coverage because of the potential for tensions, particularly between
the Congressional Black Caucus and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. But this
misses the bigger picture of the opportunities that will unite the three
caucuses. Black,
Latino and Asian members of Congress can work together to leverage the power of
their greater numbers on issues that will advance a progressive opportunity
agenda for their communities. Read
more. For more on the lack of racial diversity in the U.S. Senate staff,
read the June 2006
issue of DiversityInc magazine. Also,
read about Barack Obama's
presidential aspirations. Goodyear Settles With Women for
$925,000 Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. has
agreed to pay $925,000 to hundreds of women who were denied tire-building jobs
at its Saluting Muhammad Ali on His
Birthday Muhammad Ali turns 65 on
Wednesday, and while great athletes have come since he was the king of the
boxing ring, none will ever exert the influence across the generations that Ali
has. Even today, according to the people who paid $50 million for the rights to
market Ali's name, no athlete has a higher profile around the world—or a more
positive one. Read more. Watch
an Ali video. Gay & Lesbian Group Celebrates
Social Success Five years after persuading
The New York
Times to open its Weddings/Celebrations pages to same-sex couples
and launching the Announcing Equality campaign, the Gay & Lesbian Alliance
Against Defamation (GLAAD) reported that 883 newspapers—nearly 60 percent of all
daily newspapers in the United States—now accept wedding and/or
commitment-ceremony announcements for gay and lesbian couples. That number has
increased nearly 584 percent since it was first measured in 2002, when only 129
newspapers said they would print such announcements. As a result, GLAAD
announced the re-launch and expansion of its Announcing Equality campaign. Read more. Independent schools must be
established for poor black children and not charter schools for poor black
families to take control of their children's education, says the president and
founder of Junior Academies Inc. (JAI), a nonprofit educational organization.
JAI was founded to establish equitable independent schools that develop and
initiate educational programs that promote academic excellence for at-risk and
economically disadvantaged children. In the fall, JAI will launch the
"We have waited too long to take
the responsibility of educating our children into our own hands," said Melodee
Ford, president and founder of JAI. "Parents have been dissatisfied and denied a
choice in where their children receive an equitable
education." Ford
adds that it is necessary for JAI to establish independent schools as opposed to
charter schools, because charter schools are still public schools under the
control, in most states, of the same board that governs the local public
schools. Read
more. Immigration Hardliner Tom Tancredo
Explores Presidential Bid On Tuesday, Rep. Tom Tancredo, 61,
R-Colo., a leading opponent of undocumented immigration, formed an exploratory
committee to raise money for what he termed an "arduous and undeniably uphill
battle" for the presidency that would advance his hard-line views on
immigration. Tancredo has been a leading voice in Congress against proposals for
guest-worker programs and in favor of stronger border security to block
undocumented immigrants from
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