#8 (Cigar Smoke)
I puffed a cigar,
blew the heat from my insides.
My essence felt weightless
as the blood in my veins slowed.
“There go my dreams,” I sensed.
C. 2006 Vicky Therese Davis
Here in this special place, thanks to the technology of the internet and push-button publishing, let me show you the contents and color of my heart and mind…
#8 (Cigar Smoke)
I puffed a cigar,
blew the heat from my insides.
My essence felt weightless
as the blood in my veins slowed.
“There go my dreams,” I sensed.
Firefly
With the innocence of a child in summer,
Let me capture your light in a jar
So you can twinkle just for me.
I will not smother you,
But will answer your mating call with
My own fire.
Let us release ourselves to fly
Together in the balm of summer
Glowing for each other with the stars.
Wednesday, 04 August 2004
Tamara Dobson, star of Cleopatra Jones, dies
Tamara Dobson, the tall, stunning, model-turned-actress who portrayed a strong female role as Cleopatra Jones in two "blaxploitation" films, has died.
Dobson, 59, died Monday of complications from pneumonia and multiple sclerosis at the Keswick Multi-Care Center, where she had lived for the past two years, her publicist said.
At six foot two, Dobson was striking as the kung-fu fighting government agent Cleopatra Jones in 1973. She reprised the role in 1975's "Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold."
"She was not afraid to start a trend," said her brother, Peter Dobson, of Houston. "She designed a lot of the clothing that so many women emulated."
Dobson also appeared in "Come Back, Charleston Blue," "Norman, Is That You?" "Murder at the World Series" and "Chained Heat."
She had TV roles in the early 1980s in "Jason of Star Command" and "Buck Rogers in the 25th Century."
Dobson lived most of her adult life in New York, her family said. She was diagnosed six years ago with multiple sclerosis.
Last Updated (Thursday, 12 October 2006 )As you know all well know, I'm all about the upliftment of people in less fortunate circumstances than average. So when I came upon this email from Daily Candy, I couldn't help but spread the word of this new organization that offers interest-free loans to women in developing countries start their own businesses. What's a more "me" topic than that?!?!?
Nesting Instinct
As a child, your piggy bank held a meager 38 cents (counting the few pennies stuck in the mouth). As an adult, your savings still reside in a pink ceramic pig.
New rule: No more frivolous shopping.
Loophole: Nest, the new nonprofit shopping site.
Nest provides interest-free loans to women in developing countries (like India and Madagascar) who are trying to start their own businesses. A co-op of sorts, Nest sells clothes, housewares, and jewelry made by both loan recipients and up-and-coming designers. Portions of proceeds then recirculate into the Nest community.
And the rewards for your charity are downright pretty: The Benefactress wristlet, which was designed in Istanbul, has gathered retro fabric adorned with an aquamarine charm. The cheery red and white Kukka (“flower”) throw, made of ecofriendly materials, is created in Lithuania.
It’s all guilt free, so go ahead and shamelessly spend what’s left in your piggy bank.
You’ve always been a big advocate for change.
The Most Important Lesson I've Learned in my Life
By Maurine Davis
The most important lesson I’ve learned in my life is to love each and every day as if it was the last day I'd have on this earth.
So true. She was one of the busiest women I knew who never had enough hours in her day. My grandmother lived her life to the fullest and traveled the world; she was making travel plans before he died. Maurine Davis was truly an exemplary woman, and I can only dream to follow her lead.
When I first saw this headline, the tiny hairs on my arms automatically began to raise. Then I read further and calmed down slightly. I received this bulletin a while back from iZania about an African, now American, named Manny Otiko, who has written a satirical comic strip exposing the idiosyncrasies he's observed in the African and African-American communities. I am always for the pointing out the silly things in our society and trying to make light of them while at the same time bringing them to light. If we take a closer look at our actions (as a whole, of course), I think we will realize some the stupid things we do and hence, discontinue some of them and eventually all. Initially, we never like it when someone holds a mirror to our flaws, but ultimately, with an open mind, we begin to appreciate the gesture.
Manny Otiko, creator of the urban satire Ghetto Fabulous is a firm believer in the old adage truth is stranger than fiction. Otiko, who created the comic strip which runs in several newspapers across the nation, now offers his creation to the iZania audience. The cartoon will run in the iZania Newsletter and on the home page.
Apart from commenting on hip hop culture and current events, the comic strip also deals with edgy subjects such as "black names," tensions between African Americans and African immigrants, and racial profiling.
Otiko was raised in
Ghetto Fabulous is the brainchild of Manny and his brother Chris. They launched the strip about two years ago after conceiving the idea during a cross-country road trip to
"Ghetto Fabulous started out as a satire on life in urban
Below, we will introduce you to some of the characters:
1,000 Voltt: (famous rapper who survived electrocution) He has a lightening bolt tattooed below his left eye; Corporate America loves him.
Chief Adedas: hard working Nigerian immigrant who works as a telemarketer and cab driver (at the same time): drives cab in bad neighborhood wearing a bulletproof vest and helmet; also has African magical charms for double protection. He is called Adedas because of the three tribal marks on his cheeks; was a doctor in his country and has three wives, and several family members to support.
Latrell Jackson: Part-time drug dealer, dog breeder, security guard, big-screen TV owner, who lives in mom's basement and dreams of "making it big" in something; obsessed with Don Ravioli attire, and even has a gold tooth with the "DR" logo etched in it.
Trent Bagwell IV: a.k.a. T-Bag. White hip hop fan; yuppie by day, hip hopper by night.
Sharon (pronounced Sharone, not Sharon) Edwards: strong black woman. She is an over-worked public defender who's number one client is Latrell Jackson. Her husband looks like John Lennon/Jesus Christ with a head band, and is stuck in the 60s.
A Preacher ex-con who became born again in jail; still fighting the devils temptations: booze and women.
Lacreatia St. James: the single mom cashier who dreams of driving a Lexus. She has two kids, Shaqkobe and Klamideeya; grandma is from
Sports mad Dad (Jerome Jordan): wants his six-month old (Lyon
Below are excerpts from the press conference on August 30, 2006, ahead of the opening of Chicago Public Schools on September 5, 2006
For the second year, the funding for this national program is provided by a grant from the Schott Foundation on Public Education. Please see their work on high school graduation rates for Black male students in your packets.
For the first year of the Million Father March, we were in 25 cities, and we estimated about 35,000 to 40,000 men took their children to school across the country. Last year, the second year of the March, we were in 83 cities, including Auckland, New Zealand, and we estimated about 200,000 men took their children to school. This year to date, we are in 123 cities including London, England, and Tamale, Ghana, and we expect more than 350,000 men across the world, through this program, to take their children to school as we move towards the million father figure.
The honorary Chairmen for the March this year are Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley, Illinois Senate President Emil Jones, Jr., and Chicago Public Schools CEO Arne Duncan.
What if I told you that I knew of a proven way to get students to learn more, faster, and better? A way to help children get higher test scores, higher grade-point averages, better attendance, and a way to make them more likely to graduate from high school and to attend college? Many of you would say "What has Phillip been drinking before 12:00 noon? This sounds too good to be true."
And then if I went on to tell you that I know of a way to reduce discipline problems, suspensions and expulsion rates, to decrease dropout rates, to reduce violent behaviors in school and at home, to lessen the use of alcohol and illegal drugs by students, and to have fewer students engage in teen-age sex. You would want to know, wouldn't you?
Well I do have a solution. I do have an answer to these overwhelming problems in our schools and our society. It is simply getting men substantially involved in the educational and social developmental lives of their children.
And so today, we launch and celebrate the Million Father March 2006. Not men marching to
To this end, our volunteers and staff have gone door-to-door in the Dearborn and Ickes Public Housing Communities here in Chicago to remind fathers--and all parents -- to take their children to school on the first day, Tuesday, September 5, 2006. We have passed out flyers around the city at bus stops and train stops, at barber shops and beauty shops, and at grocery stores, night clubs, basketball courts, churches, and parks.
We have been on radio shows and television shows, and we have had great printed press on this event nationwide. In
On Tuesday, September 5, 2005, we are hoping for 100% attendance at every Chicago Public School and we want an army of strong positive men at every school because it will:
* jumpstart the academic learning for most
* generate much needed revenues for the schools
* connect men to children in a way that will improve our children's lives and make the world in which we live a better place.
So on the first day of school, we want men and women of all races, Asian, White, Latino, Native American, as well as African American, to be at a school on the first day and to take a child to school on the first day. Our motto for the Million Father March in
I especially want to thank the staff of The Black Star Project who manages the great programs of The Black Star Project such as the Toyota/Black Star Parent University, The Student Motivation Program, The Silas Purnell Destination College Program, and Men In Schools Program. They are Eleanor Perrone, Marques Williams, Briana Nichols, Catherine Jackson, Marcus Mundy, Abel Henry, Ivory Harris. And of course, I want to thank our fantastic Director of Operations who makes Black Star go, Kirsten Rokke.
Thank you for this time.
For more information about the Million Father March
or the programs of the Black Star Project, please call
312/842-3527, visit www.blackstarproject.org , or www.millionfathermarch.org
Knicks star Stephon Marbury is putting his name behind a pair of $15 basketball shoes that he's hoping will give underprivileged kids the chance to wear sneaks fit for the pros.
The black high tops drew rave reviews yesterday from the critics who matter most - young hoopsters.
"They're comfortable," said Mylique Owens, 13, a seventh-grader from midtown, after he tried on a pair of the sleek kicks at the famed basketball court on
Owens couldn't believe his ears when told the price of the lightweight sneakers.
"Fifteen? Not 5-0? 1-5?" he asked, incredulously. "This shoe could easily go for $70 to a $100."
The groundbreaking sneaker, the Starbury One, is Marbury's attempt at combating the trend toward astonishingly high-priced basketball shoes.
Air Jordans, the sneakers that revolutionized the industry, now go for as much as $180.
The Starbury Ones are far less expensive than even the second-tier
"I paid $130 for these Air Jordans that I bought four months ago," said Lenart Williams, a 20-year-old from
The sneakers, which will be sold only at Steve & Barry's sports apparel stores, will go on sale tomorrow.
Produced in
"[Marbury] had a vision. We had an expertise. And together it became a match made in heaven," Schacter said.
Marbury has vowed to wear the shoes he's hoping will enable disadvantaged kids to feel like stars.
The mercurial guard's benevolent intentions were not lost on the young players assembled at the W. Fourth St. court yesterday.
"I feel him for doing something like this," said Mamadou Harvey, 18, of the lower East Side. "Not everyone can afford $80 or $90 shoes."
View the article:New York Daily News
Sounds like a plan to me!
In Congress, members of the CBC and the civil rights community, including the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the National Urban League (NUL), led the effort in the passage of the VRA. The bill recently passed the U.S. House by a vote of 390 to 33 and the U.S. Senate by a margin of 98 to 0.
Amidst applause and a gathering of prominent Civil Rights leaders, President Bush signed the Voting Rights Act Reauthorization and Amendments Act of 2006 on July 27, 2006. This event passed quietly, like a private party, but has a tremendous importance and responsibility attached. Many young Black Americans were not born when this hard-fought victory was won. And many do not understand the significance of the renewal of certain provisions of this act, which were due to expire in 2007.
Why was the act renewed in 2006? It is a key mid-term election year. There are Governor’s races in
This is an opportunity focus on the national priorities of our Black congressional leaders.
SEPTEMBER 6 - 9, 2006
Changing Course, Confronting Crises, Continuing the
Our rights are only secure if you register and vote.
For more information, see:
CBC Foundation Annual Legislative Conference.