Archive for December, 2007

2007 Bowing Out

In case you haven’t heard, Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated yesterday. Not having cable, I primarily receive my news from the internet. I first came across this woman’s name a few months ago when a big fanfare was made of her return to Pakistan after being granted a pardon and amnesty from the current president of Pakistan. Now, via the Associated Press, the assassination has been denounced by Pakistan as being carried out by al-Quaida. As with the death of Anna Politkovskaya, Bhutto’s turns my stomach.

This doesn’t bode well for 2008.


2 comments December 28, 2007

Free e-books at eHarlequin

Apparently, Harlequin is offering free ebooks until January 1, featuring a different set of books available each day. It’s a great idea, but I’m holding my reservations until I see some free Kimani Press novels bundled with this gift.

Speaking of Kimani Press, their January 2008 releases look so good! Ann Christopher’s newest, Sweeter Than Revenge; Robyn Amos’ Lilah’s List (which I’ve been waiting for since reading an excerpt in her last book); Dara Girard’s Taming Mariella; and Anita Bunkley’s Suite Embrace.

Edited to add: for people who would like to address the question of the inclusion of Kimani Romance titles in eHarlequin’s free ebook program, courtesy of Robin’s response at Karen Scott’s blog, here is an email to use:

Public Relations/Corporate Information
Katherine Orr, Vice President, Public Relations
public_relations@harlequin.ca


3 comments December 26, 2007

Want A Jail Sentence with that?

JENA, Louisiana - A white separatist group planning a Martin Luther King Jr. Day parade next month in Jena is suing the town, claiming officials are violating the Constitution by asking participants not to bring firearms, changing the parade route by one block and requiring the posting of a bond.

The Nationalist Movement filed the federal lawsuit Dec. 14 and is seeking a temporary restraining order to keep the town from interfering with the Learned, Miss.-based group’s “Jena Justice Day” rally. Group officials claim the town’s rules violate their 14th Amendment rights under the U.S. Constitution to due process.

The planned Jan. 21 march — on the holiday honoring the slain civil rights leader — is in response to the thousands who rallied on Sept. 20 in Jena in support of six black teens who have become known as the “Jena Six,” and against what they claimed was disproportionately harsh treatment of blacks by prosecutors.

The Jena High students were initially charged with attempted murder in connection with a Dec. 4, 2006, attack on a white student. All charges were later reduced to aggravated second-degree battery or second-degree battery.

“When a group of, say, minorities or homosexuals want to have a parade, they aren’t usually required to put up a bond or pay for police or pay for cleanup,” said Barry Hackney, a spokesman for the organization.

The ordinance, Mayor Murphy McMillin said, has been in place for “many, many years.” All seven of the organizations that participated in the September rally complied with all the guidelines, town officials said.

There were no reports of arrests or vandalism after more than 20,000 rallied in support of the Jena Six.

Hackney said the Nationalist Movement will not come to Jena if their concerns are not resolved by Jan. 21.

Walter Dorroh, attorney for Jena, said the community would follow the laws and let due process work.

Wants to revoke integration
The Nationalist Movement has among its missions revoking integration at the University of Mississippi, and has called on its football coach to de-integrate the team.

In an Oct. 15 letter to McMillin, Richard Barrett, an attorney for the Nationalists, asked the town for electricity for loudspeakers and electronic equipment, “adequate security,” restroom facilities, access to drinking water, “adequate and secure parking” and no noise from hecklers.

In McMillin’s Nov. 27 response to Barrett’s requests, he asked Barrett to fill out the permit application and provide proof, as is required in the ordinance, of a $10,000 bond. He also pointed out that the town does not have responsibility for and would not be providing restrooms, water, food, on-site emergency medical care or electricity.

McMillin said these services were provided by the parish for the September rally, and he encouraged Barrett to contact the LaSalle Parish Police Jury about those needs.

The Nationalists say Jena’s rules governing public demonstrations are invalid and unconstitutionally over-broad.

The Nationalist Movement successfully sued York, Penn., over fees the city tried to charge it for a rally the group held in 2003. That rally drew five members of the movement.

SMH. Sometimes I don’t understand the way racists think…


3 comments December 19, 2007

Modern-Day Ward McAllister

America’s First Black Social Registry to Pick 800 Richest Blacks

“The Our Kind of People 800 Register” Will Rank the 800 Richest & Most Socially Elite Blacks in America

Finally, a Directory Ranking the Members of the Black Upper Class with 800 Superior Black Families to be Handpicked in 46 Cities

Who’s In: Black Doctors, Lawyers, Bankers & Rich Socialites; Who’s Out: Baby Mamas, Basketballers & Ghetto Rap Stars

New York, NY (BlackNews.com) - Lawrence Otis Graham has done it again. This Harvard-educated black attorney impressed the nation a decade ago when he went undercover as a busboy to expose bigotry at an all-white country club, and then again six years ago with his New York Times-bestselling book, Our Kind of People: Inside America’s Black Upper Class. His newest project is even more captivating because it is the nation’s 1st black social register, THE OUR KIND OF PEOPLE 800 REGISTER, a directory ranking the 800 Richest and Most Socially Elite Black Families & People in America.

With Black family incomes reaching their highest levels, with the U.S. embracing its first major black Presidential candidate, and with three of America’s largest companies (Merrill Lynch, Time Warner, American Express) now being headed by blacks, a popular African American journalist has announced plans to create a black social register—a detailed listing of the 800 wealthiest, best-educated, and most socially prominent black families and individuals in America.

The Our Kind of People 800 Register will categorize and profile the best that black America has to offer. Going beyond his controversial book, Our Kind of People, and his new biography of the nation’s very first black dynasty, The Senator & The Socialite, New York Times bestselling author and attorney Lawrence Otis Graham is setting out to identify the 800 most elite families and individuals in black America’s upper-crust: city by city, family by family, credential by credential. This will be the first publication to ever rank America’s black community.

“Don’t expect to see rowdy basketball players or, rap stars who use the N-word on this list,” says Graham, a graduate of Princeton and Harvard Law School. “The Our Kind of People 800 Register will focus on ‘the talented tenth’—the kind of blacks that sociologist W.E.B. DuBois discussed 100 years ago—blacks with superior backgrounds: doctors, bankers, lawyers, educators and generous socialites.” Graham notes more than one million black Americans now have MBAs, PhDs, MDs and law degrees. “This is the social elite,” says Graham, “and they’ve always stood above the rest. This directory separates the wheat from the chaff. It’s my way of fighting the negative black images from insulting new TV shows like BET’s ‘Hot Ghetto Mess–We Gotta Do Better’ and ‘Flavor of Love’. We are the ‘good in’ black America taking on the worst.”

Next month, Graham starts a tour of 46 cities to collect names of elite people and families with ties to important groups, and to the black society-world of debutante cotillions, charities, prep schools, clubs, resorts and home life in the best zip codes. He will be touring while also promoting his new book about the nation’s very first black society family, the family of U.S. Senator Blanche Bruce, a black man who was elected in 1874, and who sent his offspring to Harvard in 1898. The Senator & The Socialite: America’s 1st Black Dynasty tells how the first black “power couple” used their wealth to befriend President Garfield and the Rockefellers.

Graham is collecting names from boards, college directories, Junior League committees, party guest lists and rosters of top groups like the Links, Jack & Jill, AKAs, Deltas, Alphas, Smart Set and other elite organizations that he first profiled in his bestselling book, Our Kind of People.

“Our nation may be on the verge of electing its 1st black President—a man with two Ivy League degrees. Blacks are reaching record levels in home ownership and income. Since 1887, there’s been a social register for WASP families,” explains Graham from his five-acre Chappaqua, New York estate, “so it’s logical to have a register for these superior black Americans.”

The Our Kind of People 800 Register will include Ivy League grads, as well as those who “summer” in Martha’s Vineyard and Sag Harbor, or who attended Howard, Spelman, Wellesley, Morehouse, Exeter and Palmer Memorial, a black prep school founded in 1902. He hopes to include the families of Reginald Lewis (Harvard Law ‘71, America’s black billionaire owner of Beatrice Foods and McCall Patterns), Merrill Lynch CEO Stan O’Neal, Memphis Congressman Harold Ford, Chicago banker John Rogers (Princeton ‘79, founded $5 billion Ariel Capital), Time Warner CEO Dick Parsons, Atlanta builder Herman Russell, billionaire philanthropist Oprah Winfrey, DC socialite Dr. Carlotta Buffy Miles (founder of Tuxedo Ball), Army Secretary Clifford Alexander (Yale Law ‘56), L.A. banker Paul Hudson, descendants of Madam CJ Walker (who, in 1900, became the 1st self-made woman millionaire), Miami lawyer Willie Gary, Park Avenue socialite Susan Fales-Hill (Harvard ‘84, produced Cosby’s “A Different World”), DC lawyer Billy Martin and Harold Doley (New Orleans socialite, 1st black on NY Stock Exchange).

For more info, call Noelle-Elaine Media, Inc. at 646-424-9750, or visit www.ourkindofpeople.com if you, or someone you know, should be in The Our Kind of People 800 Register.

This sort of thing is outmoded. What is its purpose? How will it uplift not just the black community, but America as a whole? I don’t see anything wrong with encouraging higher education, family and positive legacies, but this sort of thing is the descendant of brown paper bag parties and the Blue Vein Society. Things that don’t foster love and a sense of community. But then again, class is a tricky subject when it comes to black Americans.

Source


7 comments December 18, 2007

EEK!

I really enjoy Lydia Joyce’s novels but when I went onto amazon and saw the cover for her next release, I seriously went “wtf?”

Shadows of the Night

And the award for most awkward cover goes to…

Not only does it look like two different covers uncomfortably mashed together, it also looks like a bad photoshop job.

I’m crossing my fingers in hope that it looks better in person. :/


3 comments December 15, 2007

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