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Hampton Pirates 48 Howard Bison 32
STATE FAIR CLASSIC
By Cheryl Smith PUBLISHER
Global pandemic has shown how crucial nurses are to healthcare sector
It’s about to go down! That’s right. We are about to hear from politicians and wanna be politicians as we prepare for the midterm elections. News flash: If you didn’t know, the midterm elections are just as important as the presidential election every four years. Some might even say that a voter nullifies the impact of their previous vote if they don’t follow through by continuing to be an active participant in the electoral process. This is a message for elected officials too. I applaud the elected officials who campaign even when they aren’t on the ballot and I say “shame on you" to those who only campaign when they are on the ballot. There are so many issues impacting our communities and it is imperative that all hands are on deck, all the time, participating in any attempts to right so many wrongs. Which brings me to my truth. Too often people sit on the sidelines; failing to take a stand, unless they are personally involved. Surely you’ve heard of the “hit dog holler syndrome?” Well, noted psychologist Dr. Na’m Akbar summed it up in so many words when he talked about the people who point a finger and shake their heads, while turning up their noses at the young men/boys they see in the street. The disdain is apparent. The good doctor asks, “Then what do you do when one of those men/boys shows up at See MY TRUTH, page 11
Prairie View Athletic Dir. Dr. Donald Reed, Coach Eric Dooley, Grambling Coach Broderick Fobbs and Athletic Dir. Dr. Trayvean Scott Credit: Cheryl Smith/TMN
By Cheryl Smith Finally, after 23 months, fairgoers and football fans are gearing up for a big weekend with the opening of the Texas State Fair and the kickoff at the historic State Fair Classic featuring HBCU powerhouses, Grambling State and Prairie View A&M Universities. The State Fair Classic has a rich history with some of the best players and coaches in col-
Grambling State and Prairie View A&M battle for bragging rights lege football taking to the Cotton Bowl’s gridiron annually since 1925 Saturday the Grambling Tigers and the Prairie View Panthers will once again battle for the trophy that currently resides in Texas, for the third year running, on the campus of the Panthers.
Interestingly, both coaches have worn the Grambling uniform and had the privilege of being coach by college’s winningest coach, the legendary Eddie Robinson. Grambling head coach Coach Broderick Fobbs, whose father, Lee, also played for and coached See STATE FAIR CLASSIC, page 7
PBS…Smart Television!
able on-screen, and you can purchase the DVD as well. The titles alone are titillating. "Ali the Man, Ali on The World Stage, Ali Race and Religion, Ali Activism and the Modern Athlete" speak for themselves. Each episode sounds like a compelling adventure into America's most prominent sports icon. Even the official description begs Ali fans and foes to tune in and learn.
Nurses made up 30% of hospital employment in 2019. Though they are critical to our healthcare system, nurses are still undervalued by society. People tend to look at them as just doctors’ helpers or assistants rather than independent professionals who work as hard as other healthcare workers to provide support to patients. But as the largest healthcare profession, they're on the frontlines when a health crisis occurs — a job description that was tested to its limits by the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Muhammad Ali brings to life one of the best-known and most indelible figures of the 20th century, a three-time heavyweight boxing champion who captivated millions of fans throughout the world with his mesmerizing combination of speed, grace, and power in the ring, and charm and playful boasting outside of it. Ali inSee SMART TELEVISION , page 12
See GLOBAL PANDEMIC, page 11
By Vincent L. Hall
Muhammad Ali
Texas Metro News
NURSES: FRONTLINE HEROES OF THE PANDEMIC In 2021, much of the world is still reeling from the long-lasting effects of the pandemic. Though it has one of the most advanced healthcare infrastructures globally, America was unprepared for the sudden surge of COVID-19 cases last year. This put everyone immediately at risk of the virus — especially nurses who work closely with patients. They provide direct care to patients showing mild to severe symptoms of the coronavirus, assessing their needs and interventions. But being a nurse has become an extremely dangerous job during the pandemic because of their exposure to the virus. They also face problems such as a lack of PPE, causing them to reuse single-use face masks and even treat patients with little to no pro-
QUIT PLAYIN’ The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), or as we refer to it in our house, “IntelliVision,” regularly broadcasts "must-see-TV." When contrasted to the ignorance, violence, and incessant robbing of innocence that goes on on major television and cable hubs, PBS is a smart option. So it did not surprise me or catch me off guard when PBS announced their latest coup. "Muhammad Ali," a film by Ken Burns, his daughter Sarah Burns, and her husband David McMahon, premiers this month, and it's worth watching. This four-part series will be avail-
By Jennifer Riggs
Credit: PBS
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Vista Bank appoints Mahomes EVP, General Counsel
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Publisher : Cheryl Smith Editor: editor@myimessenger.com Address: 320 S.R.L. Thornton Freeway Suite 100 Dallas, Tx 75203 Website: www.texasmetronews.com Phone: 214-941-0110
CREDO OF THE BLACK PRESS The Black Press believes that America can best lead the world away from racial and national antagonisms when it accords to every person, regardless of race, color or creed, full human and legal rights. Hating no person, fearing no person, the Black Press strives to help every person in the firm belief that all are hurt as long as anyone is held back.
WASH HANDS WEAR MASK
Vista Bank and its parent company Vista Bancshares today announced the appointment of Bill Mahomes to Executive Vice President and General Counsel, effective immediately. Mr. Mahomes will report to Chief of Staff and Director of Corporate Development, Jared Craighead. As General Counsel, Mahomes will oversee all legal and contractual operations and matters of the Company, working closely with the CEO and Board of Directors to plan and achieve strategic enterprise initiatives. "Bill is a highly respected, seasoned attorney with experience in multiple financial verticals," noted Vista Bank President and CEO John Steinmetz. "But what attracted us to Bill was his character, intellect and integrity. Bill will have an immediate positive impact on our organization." Formerly a partner at Bracewell LLP, Mr. Mahomes brings over four decades of regional, national, and international legal, regulatory, risk,
Bill Mahomes
and compliance experience to the executive team. "What attracted me to join the incredible team at Vista Bank is its people and the incredible customer service that they offer clients," added General Counsel Bill Mahomes. "The healthy organic growth of the Bank and resulting opportunity is evident, but it was John and the team who won me over. To be around them is to know that People First is not just a motto, but a way of life here, which allows us to focus on what we do best, fueling entrepreneurs across our great state." Mr. Mahomes brings over 40 years of legal experience to the Vista Bank executive team. Prior to being
at Bracewell, he was a senior partner for a Dallas-based national law firm, a partner for an international law firm, a senior vice-president and general counsel for a mid-sized local corporation, and was counsel for the Federal National Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae"). Additionally, he was a Captain in the United States Army Reserves, where he served as a company commander and was assigned to the JAG Corps. With a rich history of prior board experience, Mahomes currently serves on the board of the Dallas-based Today Foundation and the Advisory Board of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas. Appointed to the Texas A&M University Board of Regents by Governor Greg Abbott in 2015, Mr. Mahomes was reappointed in 2021 and elected Vice-Chairman on June 7, 2021. He received his bachelor's degree from Texas A&M University and his Juris Doctorate from The University of Texas School of Law.
Hollins launches campaign for District Clerk Amye Thompson Hollins is running for Dallas County District Clerk in 2022 and held her official kickoff last week in Dallas. A native of Dallas, lifelong Democrat, and product of Dallas ISD schools; Hollins holds a BS in Kinesiology (Sports Management emphasis) from Texas A&M University in College Station, and an MBA in Human Resources (HR) from the University of Dallas in Irving, TX. Hollins is an HR professional with more than 20 years of experience. Her past positions include serving as HR Manager at the Dallas County District Clerk’s Office; Labor Advocate and Human Resources Officer at Transport Workers Union Local 555 (the largest union at Southwest Airlines) where she represented more than 10,000 ground operations agents across the
Amye Thompson Hollins
U.S.; and 1st line Supervisor and Resource Management Leader at Verizon Communications. Active in the Dallas community, Hollins worked with organizations throughout the state of Texas on the 2020 Census and Redistricting efforts to ensure individuals were counted and represented. For more information on the Campaign to Elect Amye Thompson Hollins, visit www. amyefordistrictclerk.com.
Meet & Greet with Jane Hope Hamilton Brief and Photo By Marva Sneed
Political strategist and businesswoman Jane Hope Hamilton was joined by members of an exploratory committee as a Meet & Greet was held in support of the possibility of a congressional run during the midterm election in 2022. The Meet & Greet was hosted by the Exploratory Committee chair Rev. Dr. Frederick D. Haynes, III. The special guests were former State Rep. Lorraine Birabil, Councilwoman Shirley Daniels, Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price and former Dallas County District Atty. Craig Watkins.
Jane Hope Hamilton is with the Divine 9 at Dot’s Hop House & Cocktail Courtyard
Councilwoman asks for support
Councilwoman Shaunte L. Allen and Starfire MCDC Dance Group
Councilwoman Shaunte L. Allen held a re-election fundraiser recently in preparation for the midterm election on November 2, 2022. Councilwoman Allen has served on the Glenn Heights City Council Place 5 since 2018. Allen said, “In 2018, I won my race with your support and captured 62% of the votes. That was 1,930 ballots cast, the highest number of votes in the history of Glenn Heights. It is my belief that the great people of Glenn Heights should determine what type of city we can all thrive in. Keeping citizens informed and engaged, creating new tax revenues from quality businesses, and fighting for policies that best represent YOU is my promise!”
Longtime resident seeks JP seat Bernetta Jo Young launched her campaign for Dallas County Justice of the Peace, Precinct 4, Place 2 (JP 4-2) surrounded by family, friends and supporters at a fundraising reception hosted at Gilley’s Dallas. During the event, Young shared why she decided to run for JP, citing the need to have more proactive programs in place for citizens prior to facing eviction, as well as alternative solutions for plaintiffs and defendants involved in small claims, traffic and other legal matters. Young, a Dallas native and 16year employee of the City of Dallas, currently serves as Manager of Training, Development and Community Outreach. She also previously served as Manager of Court Support
for the City of Dallas Municipal Court where she was responsible for Magistrate Court, the Teen Court Program, staffing for Civil Court, managing courtroom clerks, handling the jury pool poll, scheduling court dates, payment window operations, and data entry staffing for citations. Bernetta Jo Young also previously served as District Director for U.S. Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee (TX-18th District).
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AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM DALLAS FALL 2021 LINEUP Three exhibitions opened Sept. 22, and coming in December is a photography exhibition depicting the politics, protest and Black progress in Dallas in the 1980s plus holiday concerts and more An array of thought-provoking exhibitions at the African American Museum, Dallas, exploring everything from the role that Prairie View A&M played in Black high school sports in Texas during segregation, to a nostalgic look back at a national magazine with Fort Worth roots celebrating African American’s achievements. Also on tap are the “lost” biblical and religious images of a beloved Texas folk-art painter and educator. The fall season also includes a Christmas music “under the dome” concert and marketplace along with a Dallas photographer’s portfolio of powerful images depicting politics, protest and Black progress during the 1980s.
130 year old man
Aretha Franklin
Also scheduled for later this year are the following activities and exhibitions: EXHIBITION: Politics, Protest and Black Progress in Dallas in the 1980s: The Photographs of George Fuller. Dec. 1, 2021, to Feb. 15, 2022. An exhibition of the photographs by Dallas photographer George Fuller that capture the fight for 14-1, the protests against police brutality and progressive Black politics in Dallas in the 1980s FREE ADMISSION LECTURE: LG FOSTER LECTURE. Saturday, Nov. 6, 2021, at 2 p.m. This annual fall lecture presents a scholar in African American history and culture. The lecture is named for founding board member L.G. Foster, Jr., who was very instrumental in securing funding for the new facility in Fair Park and to underwrite an art educator. The lecture will be virtual. FREE ADMISSION CONCERT/EVENT: CHRISTMAS MUSIC UNDER THE DOME AND CHRISTMAS MARKETPLACE. Saturday, Dec. 11, 2021, from noon-4 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 12, 2021, from 3-5 p.m. The South Dallas Children’s Choir (SDCC) Annual Christmas Concert will be held on Saturday at 2 p.m. along with local hand bell choirs and youth string musicians. Local artists and craftspeople will sell their works at the marketplace both days. FREE ADMISSION HOURS. The African American Museum is open Tuesdays through Saturdays from 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Opened Sept. 22 - the following exhibitions: • Sepia: Past. Pride. Power. Until Feb. 15, 2022 An exhibition of African American politicians, community leaders, and entertainers from the Sepia Magazine Collection of the African American Museum FREE ADMISSION This exhibition features cover shots and photos from Sepia, a photojournalistic magazine styled like Look and occasionally described as the “poor man’s Ebony.” The magazine was founded in 1946 as Negro Achievements by Horace J. Blackwell, an African-American clothing merchant of Fort Worth. Following the death of Blackwell in 1949, George Levitan, a Jewish-American man Ruth Mae McCrane self portrait who was a plumbing merchant sion-era East Texas and Lounance over athletic, academic, in Fort Worth, bought the magisiana. Working on canvas, and music competitions for azines and Good Publishing paper and plywood, her vivthe state’s black high schools Company (aka Sepia Publishidly colored paintings depictduring segregation. The PVIL ing) in 1950. He changed the ed various aspects of African was organized in 1920 by Prainame to Sepia, and the magAmerican secular and religious rie View officials and existed azine continued publishing activities, including schooluntil 1970 when its merger beyond Levithan’s death until children, family gatherings, with the University Interscho1983. In 1991, the vast colleccotton and melon picking, rolastic League was completed. tion of Sepia photos was dodeos, juke joints and more. The exhibit includes vintage nated to the African American The works in the Lost Books of images, trophies, news clips, Museum, Dallas, and is now the Bible exhibition are influuniforms and equipment. Depart of its permanent collection. enced by her life growing up spite being woefully underThe Sepia exhibition includes as the daughter of a pastor and funded and lacking other basic some of the biggest names from her numerous memories visitresources, PVIL schools feathe past century in entertaining other churches. Her artistured passionate rivalries, legment, politics and culture, intic style has been described as endary coaches and dozens of cluding Aretha Franklin, Huey “naïve,” making her a favorite college All-Americans – most Newton, Ray Charles, Althea with folk art collectors. through historically black colGibson, Cicely Tyson, James • The History of the Prairie leges such as Prairie View and Earl Jones and many more. View Interscholastic League: Texas Southern University. • Ruth Mae McCrane: Scenes Black High School Sports The UIL opened in 1910 at the from the Lost Book of the Bible in Texas in the Era of SegreUniversity of Texas to govern and Other Religious Subjects gation. Until Feb. 15, 2022. competitions for “any white (1929-2002). Until Nov. 27, 2021. An exhibition of the players, public school” in the state. An exhibition of the religious teams and the impact and It would be another 10 years paintings of Houston-based dominance of Black high school before African American stuartist and educator Ruth Mae sports in Texas when racial segdents in Texas would have the McCrane regation forced African Amersame guidance afforded them FREE ADMISSION icans to create their own interby the Texas Interscholastic Ruth Mae McCrane (1929scholastic sports league. League of Colored Schools, 2002) was born and raised FREE ADMISSION which would mirror the UIL’s in Texas, and, for 33 years, This exhibition features memoperations and produce some the lifelong educator taught orabilia courtesy of the Prairie of the finest football talent in art, history and language in View Interscholastic League the nation. Houston public schools – and (PVIL) Coaches Association, painted in her spare time. which works to preserve and For more information, go to Upon retirement, Dr. McCrane commemorate the history aamdallas.org or call 214-565devoted her life to painting, of the League and its gover9026. chronicling life in Depres-
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The Texas Taliban Wing of the Republican Party OUR VOICES By Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, Jr. American papers are filled with pundits speculating about the horrors the Taliban may inflict on the people of Afghanistan, particularly its women. Less attention has been paid to the horrors Texas Republicans – the Taliban wing of the Republican Party – are inflicting on the State of Texas. In total control of the state, Republicans have a free hand that they’ve used to enforce extremism. Dubbing them the Texas Taliban isn’t just name-calling. The parallels are chilling. The Taliban scorn democracy. They see their opponents as heretics and heathens. The Taliban are bigots, rejecting people of other religions. The Taliban enforce a religious zealotry with suppression of women a central tenet. The Taliban invoke religious law to supplant the civil law. The Taliban reject modernity, scorn science, and seek return to a fundamentalist society that never was. Now consider the Republicans in Texas. They too are afraid of democracy. From Sen. Ted Cruz to Attorney General Ken Paxton, they sought to overturn the presidential election, while the party leaders echo Donald Trump’s Big Lie that the election was stolen.
Worried that Republicans are in danger of becoming a minority in the state, Gov. Greg Abbott and the Republican state legislature just pushed through election suppression measures to make it harder for workers, minorities, seniors, young people and the disabled to vote, harder for civic groups to assist people in voting, easier for partisans to intimidate voters, and opened the way for the partisan legislature to overturn election results they don’t like. Republicans too prey on racial and religious prejudices. Their party chairman, Allen West, is a former Florida congressman who described Barack Obama as “Islamist,” charging that he was “purposefully enabling the Islamist cause.” When the Supreme Court tossed Trump’s baseless challenge to the election, West suggested that the South should rise again and secede: “that law-abiding states should bound together and form a union of states that will abide by the constitution.” The party markets the slogan “We are the storm,” an echo of anti-Semitic, white nationalist slogans that date back to Hitler’s stormtroopers. The Republicans also target women in their zealotry. The governor just signed a law effectively banning abortion in Texas, by outlawing any abortion after six weeks (most women don’t even know they are pregnant in that period of time).
Worse, the law turns citizens into bounty hunters, offering cash rewards for turning in anyone who assists someone seeking an abortion. This law, if it survives challenge, will lead to deaths – from illicit abortions, from suicide, from pregnancies that take the mother’s life. An effort to stay the enforcement of this vicious law – a clear violation of the Supreme Court’s constitutional precedents – was just denied by the Supreme Court’s right-wing justices acting without issuing an opinion. The Republicans also turn their backs on science. Texas has suffered record-breaking floods, droughts and winter storms over the last decade. Yet, with the state a leader in fossil fuel production, its politicians have been in denial about climate change. They were unprepared when Hurricane Harvey hit the state in 2017. Then extreme weather caused a
major snowstorm that froze an unprotected energy grid. Gov. Abbot laughably blamed the deadly energy failure on solar and wind energy. Now Abbott and Texas Republicans are trying to ban local authorities and school districts from enforcing mask mandates. Pandering to the Trump-aroused zealots in their own party, they are prepared to put children and teachers at risk, even as Texas hospitals and ICUs are filling up with the surge of new cases from the Delta variant. The Taliban, of course, patrol the streets of Kabul armed with AK-47s, terrorizing those who might cross them. The Texas Taliban hasn’t gone that far, but they did just force through a law allowing its citizens to carry handguns without a permit. In an era when we’ve witnessed armed gangs marching on the
Michigan legislature and the sacking of the U.S. Capitol, one can only shudder to think what would happen in Texas if Republicans were to lose political control. Unlike the Taliban, Texas Republicans still have to face the voters. Big oil money can help insulate them. Voter suppression laws can hold down turnout. The Big Lie can rouse their base. In the end, however, Texans will decide whether they will bring an end to this misrule or continue to support a party that is ever more unhinged. The last two weeks the Taliban honored an agreement to help the U.S. military get 123,000 Afghans and Americans out of the country and promised to do more as they seek to work with other nations. In that same period, the Texas legislature and Gov. Abbott sought to restrict voting and take away a woman’s right to self-determination. Who are we to not trust a newly emerging Taliban as it seeks its place in the family of nations while being asked to trust a Republican Government of Texas that attacks democracy and the rights of women? It’s the old tried-and-true Confederate State of Texas, the last state to inform its slaves they were free, for which we now celebrate Juneteenth. The Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, Sr. is president and CEO of the Rainbow/ PUSH Coalition.
NATIONAL ACTION NETWORK: WOMEN LEADERS SUPPORT JOY-ANN REID OUR VOICES By Rev. AI Sharpton Black women can have discussions on vaccinations, but to call Joy-Ann Reid names–who has stood for and symbolized Black excellence–is unfair and unwarranted. Joy-Ann has done superior journalism and advocacy with integrity and should be protected and supported. Though we respect Nicki Minaj as an artist and a woman of color breaking barriers in en-
tertainment and leading in her field, we would hope that she would seek dialogue with Joy-Ann rather than denigrate her. We need her art and we critically need Joy-Ann’s continued journalism and her platform to amplify the conscious voice of Black women and push the issues to keep them relevant and vocal in prime time media. The COVID-19 pandemic is disproportionately impacting Black and Brown communities worldwide and vaccine education is crucial to saving lives. In the wake of a week where information was reduced to memes and false information perpetuated by a popular female rapper
Joy-Ann Reid and the GOP, there needs to be a reality check on the information superhighway. In fact, according to scientists there is no credible evidence demonstrating that any of the COVID-19 vaccines available in the U.S. negatively
impact male fertility. Furthermore, according to Dr. Anthony Fauci, there is no established link between COVID-19 vaccines and lower sperm counts. According to research as of late July 2021, Black and Hispanic people remain less likely than their White counterparts to have received a vaccine, leaving them at increased risk, particularly as the variant spreads. Therefore, it’s imperative that credible information resonates and we not validate false narratives spread by uninformed individuals in the name of click bait. Let us be reminded the Tuskegee experiments often cited
as a reason for not taking the vaccine is a historically twisted narrative. Those who were experimented on and forced to suffer didn’t get sick because of a vaccine but due to a lack of treatment. We must dispel misinformation to keep moving forward. Wear your masks, wash your hands, and spread factual vaccine information so Americans are properly informed when making the choice to get vaccinated. National Action Network has been diligently working in communities across the country to spread vaccine awareness. Visit www.nationalactionnetwork. net for more information
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Tit for Tat Ain’t Where It’s At FAITHFUL UTTERANCES By Dr. Froswa Booker-Drew Life is filled with conflict. There are times that you will find yourself in opposition with someone. We don’t always agree and sometimes relationships are severed because of our differences. It’s particularly difficult when it is a close friendship or intimate relationship. What starts out as friendly and loving can result in anger, disappointment, and pain. I remember when they met. ‘Sharlene’ was so in love with ‘Trey’. Every other sentence was a reference to something he said or did. They were inseparable and after years of marriage, things began to change. Unresolved issues became obstacles to healing. Three kids and two dogs later, arguments became their regular mode of communication. It wasn’t working. Getting even became the norm. Their friends became divided, taking sides. Love relationships are not the only relationships free from conflict. Friendships, too, have problems. Kingsley and Barbara became fast friends. Their friendship was rooted in their dreams to conquer the world. They came up with ideas to implement and soon, Kingsley saw that Barbara wasn’t as committed to the project and didn’t invest as much as he did. He felt used and that she wasn’t who she said she was. Their friendship and business relationship ended on terrible terms. There was a lot of anger, pain, and resentment. Revengeful acts became common with the two including sabotage and even reputation destroying gossip. Two very different scenarios that have similar circumstances: Relationships that changed fueled by intense emotions. Lives disrupted and altered. Collateral damage impacting anyone who was remotely involved. In both scenarios, I witnessed their emotions become weapons of mass destruction. We’ve all heard that there is a thin line between love and hate. They are both very powerful emotions. As Christians, I think we get it twisted in believing that we won’t experience anger or the desire to get back at
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those who hurt us. Although those feelings are real, we have the power to determine how we deal with them and those who hurt us. If we are not careful, our anger can cause us to do things that are hurtful and harmful. Before we say and do things that can create damage to ourselves and others, we need to pause, reflect, and find a resolution. “If a fellow believer hurts you, go and tell him—work it out between the two of you. If he listens, you’ve made a friend. If he won’t listen, take one or two others along so that the presence of witnesses will keep things honest, and try again.” (Matthew 18:15-17, MSG) Allowing anger to fester doesn’t solve anything but creates resentment and even hatred. “My dear brothers and sisters, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, because human anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires. (James 1:19-20 ) If we are not careful, unchecked anger can result in actions such as acts of revenge. The Bible is very clear on the dangers of revenge. ‘Do not seek revenge or bear a grudge against anyone among your people, but love your neighbor as yourself. I am the Lord. (Leviticus 19:18) Sometimes loving someone means that the relationship is not healthy and that it’s time to walk away amicably. Holding grudges gives your power to the other person instead of letting the pain go and giving it to God. “Do not repay evil with evil or insult with insult. On the contrary, repay evil with blessing, because to this you were called so that you may inherit a blessing.” (1 Peter 3:9) When we take matters into our own hands to get others back, we are demonstrating that we do not trust God to take care of the situation. By taking matters into our hands, we believe that we can do it better. Letting go, forgiving others isn’t easy. It’s recognizing that the battle is God’s. It’s knowing that by remaining angry or committing acts of revenge, we give our power away instead of knowing that God has all power and will handle the situation. Dr. Froswa’ Booker-Drew is the host of the Tapestry Podcast and the author of three books for women. She is also the Vice President of Community Affairs for the State Fair of Texas. To learn more, visit drfroswa.com.
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Skipping Out on The Second Dose Adds to The “Pandemic of The Unvaccinated” By Josephine Reid The second wave of COVID-19 has been filled uncertainty and unpredictability of the virus itself. However, we’ve had plenty of opportunities to avoid preventable downfalls. The two-dose mRNA vaccines have been confirmed to be highly effective at preventing infection, illness, and hospitalization, even from the now prevalent Delta variant according to vaccine health officials pointing to emerging research. Despite the apparent importance of being fully vaccinated, there has been in a lag in persons in the United States who are receiving the vaccine to receive their second and get the full protection both shots offer. 15 million people in the United States have missed their second shot according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In a recent town hall hosted by the Black Coalition Against Covid, guest speaker Dr. Simira L. Brown said, “The level of protection you’re able to get to is significantly different with one shot versus two, and that’s exactly the reason why you need two shots if you’re getting the Pfizer which is the vaccine that’s approved down to 12 [years old].” She added, “So if you’re going to get into that over 90 percent protection which is incredibly good, and protects against every single variant that we have seen here in the U.S., you have to get both to be able to get to that level.” Public health and vaccine experts have long emphasized the importance of following the course of full vaccination. But a newly published study by Stanford Medicine quantifies how important a second dose of
an mRNA vaccine is when it comes to fighting off COVID-19. Experts also say that by getting a second dose of the mRNA vaccine, your immune cells will remember their previous encounter with that very same vaccine. The second shot is recommended three weeks after the first Pfizer-BioNTech shot or four weeks after the first Moderna shot. Second doses were considered missed if more than 42 days had passed since the initial shot. "Getting you to come in and get tested is one step, getting you to get vaccinated is another. Getting you to get your second dose has become its own barrier,” said Nic Lee with the Rafiki Coalition for Health & Wellness More than 15 million people in the U.S. still haven’t gotten a second dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. A misconception persists that one dose provides ample protection from the virus. Additionally, there’s a fear of that a second dose will lead to side effects – which are reportedly more severe than after the first dose for some people. Challenges of getting an appointment and finding the time to get a second dose are among the other reasons people have given for not getting fully vaccinated to fight COVID-19. Dr. Nerissa Price of WakeMed Health in Raleigh, NC stresses that getting two do-
ses of a COVID-19 vaccine will equip more Black Americans with good protection from the virus. “It’s really not until after that second shot that you get full protection,” Dr. Price said. And full protection we need to clarify as well does not mean 100 percent protection,” she added. “It still means that people need to be careful in certain settings where there’s a high number of unvaccinated individuals. I have the simple math. The first shot gets you half the way. The second shot gets you all the way. Even still, we need to be mindful of the new variants and the new information that gets released every day.” Regardless of whether you’re busy or want to avoid feeling under the weather, experts say getting fully vaccinated is vital, especially with the highly transmissible Delta variant continuing to spread throughout the country. Banding together with your doctor and doing your part by becoming fully vaccinated can protect our lives, the lives of our loved ones and the lives of those in our Black communities. For more information about vaccination sites in your area, please go to https://www.vaccines.gov. Josephine Reid is a member of the Public Relations Team at Creative Marketing Resources, a strategic marketing agency in Milwaukee and a partner of the BCAC.
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We all want Connections WHAT’S ON MILES’ MIND By Miles Jaye Life is about connections-human connections, family, friends, neighbors, co-workers, and church-mates. The human condition renders us resistant to isolation. We become lonely, sad, and depressed. Isolation as punishment dates back to medieval dungeons, but in spite of the controversy surrounding modern Solitary Confinement, the practice continues today. According to an article,Solitary Confinement and Mental Illness in U.S. Prisons: A Challenge for Medical Ethics in the Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law (March 2010), isolation can be as damaging as physical torture. According to Genesis 2:18 God didn’t want Adam to be alone, lonely, so He provided a companion. Adam needed a connection. Some connections are transactional. You’ve heard the saying, “Politics makes strange bedfellows.” It means, you may not share beliefs and common social mores with another person or party, however, it may be politically expedient to hold your nose and support or partner with them to satisfy your agenda. Frank Sinatra resented rumors that he was connected to the mob. Modern artists are accused of blood oaths and connections with the Illuminati. The assumption is that a higher, power, influence or authority is responsible for their success. It’s not what you know, it’s who you know! In thinking about connections, I compiled a list of as many groups and organizations as I could think of which seem to satisfy the need and desire for the human connection. Alphas, AKAs, Asians, Baptists, Blacks, Bloods, Buddhists, COGIC, Catho-
lics, Christians, Crips, Deltas, Democrats, Episcopalians, Hebrews, Hispanics, Independents, Iotas, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Kappas, the Klan, Lutherans, Masons, Methodists, Mormons, Muslims, Seventh Day Adventists, Pentecostals, policemen, Polynesians, Proud Boys, Republicans, Sigmas, Skull & Bones, soldiers, LGBTQs, Qs, and Whites. I make no distinction between gangs and religions, fraternities and sororities, professional organizations, racial supremacy and civil rights groups. They each provide opportunities for the membership connection-- to be part of something. Perhaps even more interesting, from a historical perspective, are the cultural connections between ancient peoples whose religious customs and beliefs, laws, language and lifestyles, combine to form the world we know today. Through war and trade, empires have cross-pollenated the world beyond their borders of origin for better or worse, with every aspect of human life from the foods we eat to how and to whom we pray. The Africans, (Alkebulan— Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burundi, Cameroon, Chad, Comoros, Cape Verde, C’ote Ivoire, Rep. of Congo, Dahomey, Egypt, Ethiopia, Eswatini, Eritrea, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Gold Coast, Guinea, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Mali, Mayotte, Madagascar, Mauritius, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Uganda, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Senegal, Sudan, Somalia, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Togo, Zambia, Zimbabwe). The Arabs (Arabia, North Africa, UAE, Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, Jordan, Oman, Syria, Kuwait, Qatar), Aboriginal (Australia, Tasmania), Anglo-Saxons (German, English), Aztecs (Mexico), Bosnians, Czechs, Chinese, Dutch, French, Germans, Goths (Scandinavia, Germany) Incans (Peru, Chile, Ecuador), Indians (Indus Valley-- Afghanistan, Pakistan) Japanese, Korean, Romans
(Europe and North Africa), Phoenicians (Greece-- Italy, North Africa), Spaniards (Iberian Peninsula), Persians (Iran), Ottomans (Turkey), Moors (North Africa, Spain), Mongolians, Malaysians, Thai, Negritos (Philippines), Mayans (Mexico, Central America), Mesopotamians (Iraq, Syria, Turkey), Slavs (Indo-European), Russians (Eastern Europe, Northern Asia) Poles, Serbs (Balkans), Tibetans (Tibet, China), Ukrainians, Vandals (Germans—Iberian Peninsula, North Africa) Visigoths (Germanic, Western Europe) and the Vikings (Denmark, Sweden, Norway) to name some. Native American tribes, Apache, Blackfoot, Cherokee, Chippewa, Choctaw, Creek, Chickasaw, Dakota, Eskimo (Inuit), Iroquois, Lumbee, Muscogee, Mohawk, Mohegan, Navajo, Olmec, Omaha, Ottawa, Puebloans, Seneca, Sioux, Ute, Yuma, to name a few, deserve special mention, as do the great African civilizations of Ashanti, Axum, Benin, Carthage, Kush, Mali, Nok, Punt, Songhai, Timbuktu, Zulu, and the Kingdoms of Dahomey and Ghana. Humans have mixed, matched and integrated throughout the millennia, making the modern, mixedup world as we know it. It’s enough to render racism and xenophobia irrational, indefensible and unconscionable. There is no supremacy, only the connection of humanity and the planet we share. The popularity of ancestry platforms, (i.e. Ancestry, MyHeritage, and Findmypast), are proof of an increased interest in genealogy and the human connection. It seems we all want to belong to something greater than ourselves. We want to believe in something greater than ourselves. Apparently, we want what God wants for us-CONNECTION! That’s what’s on my mind! Website: www.milesjaye.net Podcast: https://bit.ly/2zkhSRv Email: milesjaye360@gmail.com
BIG MAMA SAID:
DON’T LET THE DEVIL GET IN YOUR HEAD! BLACK CARD By Terry Allen I love the playbook Lucille “Big Mama” Allen left for us. As a survivor of the Jim Crow era and many other barriers in her community, Big Mama knew exactly how the forces of the enemy are determined to get in our heads to make us feel helpless,overwhelmed, and incapable of making a difference. She had me ask myself on many occasions this very question: Are your thoughts holding you captive?
Big Mama shared trials and tribulation stories of her and others life-changing events. Big Mama told me if I failed to achieve anything it is because the devil won over your dreams and hijacked my success. What did I learn from her is: “It starts in your head.” But she reminded me that if the devil can get in your head to make you think things like,” I’ll never be good enough. Other people have better lives than I do. God couldn’t really love me,” the truth can take it back. Big Mama said from there, the possibilities are endless for the truth to win over and take control of your thoughts! She reminded me that God will allow us to win over bad information and bad thoughts. Her message was. “God protects us not only in the physical world that we can see, but also in the spiritual space against forces we can’t see.” She reminded me with biblical scripture. She said in the Bible it says, “For though we live in the world, we do not wage war as the world does. The
weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds” (2 Corinthians 10:3-4). We are now in a climate of disinformation. Disinformation is not just affecting politics at the national level. It is damaging our public trust in our medical experts and institutions. The 2020 election was not stolen, yet disinformation continues over it is still prevalent, and the man who started the Big Lie is still stirring up the pot to get supporters to believe lies. At the same time they are losing their lives to myths, conspiracies and erroneous data. Big Mama would say the devil has got in too many heads. It is almost
like a spiritual battle is raging around our relationships as the “devil” attempts to kill, steal and destroy. (John 10:10) Some people would love to keep the drama going, but the truth will prevail. What I learned from Big Mama is these two lessons: (1) disinformation rapidly spreads across the information channels as the public leaders promote it, and (2) media coverage and social media content moderation can influence how disinformation is squashed and destroyed. So Big Mama, the devil will not be in my head. Can you join me in the wave to end disinformation? Email me at terryallenpr@gmail. com next week my column will be dedicated to “Say My Name” and the Superb Women in the community. Terry Allen is an award-winning media professional, journalist, and entrepreneur. He is also the founder of City Men Cook and 1016 Media. Reach him at terryalllenpr@gmail.com
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State Fair Classic alongside “Coach Rob,” played from 1992-96 and became head coach in December 2013. A former offensive coordinator/wide receivers coach at Grambling, Prairie View Coach Eric Dooley played at Grambling 1985-88 and was named PV head coach in December 2017. The two expressed mutual respect as they talked about the significance of the game. With it being the first conference game for Grambling, the Tigers bring a 1-2 record onto the field, while PV boasts an overall 2-1 record with one win against Conference giant, Texas Southern University.
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According to Coach Dooley, who considers Coach Fobb to be a mentor who he has learned a lot from, the game is going to be challenging. “We’re going to face a wellcoached football team,” he said. “It’s a big game because it’s the next game.” The excitement leading up to this year’s event is great according to Dallas City Councilwoman Carolyn King Arnold, who spoke at the annual press conference on Monday, prior to the game. “It’s an honor to have the Game,” she said, adding that the magnitude of the energy generated for the game, as well as
the commitment of the City of Dallas was important, as well as the “economic stimulus for the community and the game creates jobs.” Admitting it has been hard because of COVID and the pandemic, Mitchell Glieber, president of the State Fair of Texas said he was appreciative of the opportunity to bring the game back along with the Fair. “We plan to show you folks a great time, during opening weekend,” he said as he shared information about several activities. In addition to boxing great Erroll Spence, who will be appearing as the honorary referee for the game; Black College Hall of Famer Everson Walls will be in attendance at the game and
• September 23 - 29, 2021
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Everson “Cubby” Walls with Prairie View A&M Athletic Director Dr. Donald Reed at Annual Press Conference. Credit: Cheryl Smith/TMN
he appeared at the press conference stressing the importance of HBCUs. Although he also played at Grambling, the Dallas native said he never played in the historic contest at the Cotton Bowl, but he realizes the game is good for the community and Black colleges. “All HBCUs are under the same umbrella, placing education before sports,” he said, adding that he was looking forward to “Grambling kicking that booty!” In preparation for the contest this weekend, Promoter Al Wash said he is optimistic about the attendance and thinks this week’s classic will be in the Top three in attendance for all HBCU Classics this year. “We’re pacing with more ticket sales than in 2019,” he said. “I think we’ll have big numbers.” Tickets for the game are $30 and includes admission into the State Fair. Ticket locations
include any Williams Chicken Restaurant. In addition to the game, which has long been called “an experience,” there will be a Battle of the Bands, a scholarship banquets, numerous social gatherings and concerts, and the annual parade will take place on the Fair grounds, where Big Tex has said: “Wear a face covering. Plan to bring a mask for yourself and everyone in your party with you to attend the 2021 State Fair of Texas. Wear a mask in the following settings if you are older than age 2 and medically able to wear one: Indoors, for both vaccinated and unvaccinated people.” Still, however you can expect to see several organizations, businesses and gathered along the Boulevard (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd) Saturday, prior to the game. There will be cookouts, music playing and more! As the advertisements proclaim, the State Fair Classic is more than a game!
Dallas City Councilmember Carolyn King Arnold
Credit: Cheryl Smith/TMN
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HBCU Homecomings 2021: Schedule, top games and more
HBCU homecomings are the most important dates on the football schedules because of what happens off the field as well as on it. HBCU HOMECOMING 2021: WHO WILL HAVE THE LARGEST ATTENDANCE.
By Lut Williams HBCU Game Day
HBCU homecomings are often the most important date on the football schedule. When fans inquire about the upcoming football season, their first question is often, when is homecoming? The question is not, when do we play our rivals, though that usually follows right behind. But when is homecoming? That takes precedence. That’s because HBCU homecomings are special and unique to the Black experience. Homecoming is a time to celebrate the institution that birthed and nurtured you into adulthood. It is an opportunity to recognize a place that helped make you the person you are today, helped you recognize and pursue your possibilities. The school helped you set priorities and goals and put in the work to achieve them. Homecoming is a way to say, “thank you.” PERSONAL EXPERIENCE I had the good fortune, I would say, of going to all-black schools as I was growing up in Danville, Virginia. John M. Langston was my high school. The experience attending that school was unbelievable. The teachers and administrators – all HBCU graduates, every one of them – nurtured our growth and development. They sincerely set you on course to make a difference in the world. They instilled pride and confidence that you could tackle anything, overcome all odds, in a world (America) where the odds were stacked against you. It didn’t matter. “Proudly we sing of halls where our swift feet have trod. Singing to bring to life the wondrous gifts of God.
Homecoming at Winston-Salem State
Where in thy chambers we have sought success to gain. Langston, dear Langston may the spirit ever reign.” That was our alma mater. Every two years we have a reunion that nearly 1,000 people attend. Graduates dating back to the first graduating classes from the 1950s are in attendance though they are increasingly fewer. Even more flood back to attend the James. B. Dudley High School reunion in Greensboro, N. C. where I now live, that has a similar history. They come back to thank the teachers and administrators, to recognize the important role the institution played in their young lives.
Perhaps for others, high schools and colleges don’t carry the same weight. There are a plethora of institutions, outside the educational environment, that facilitate their matriculation into society. It is perhaps part of that thing that is often called ‘privilege’ (def., n. – a special right, advantage, or immunity granted or available only to a particular person or group of people.) Not so for us. We cherish the institutions and their spirit. In fact, in many ways, attending an HBCU is a spiritual (def., adj. – relating to or affecting the human spirit or soul as opposed to material or physical things) experience.
HBCU HOMECOMINGS: A CONTINUATION
HBCU HOMECOMING ATMOSPHERE
In the past and even today, HBCUs and their homecomings represent the next rung of that development and next level of celebration. Interestingly, no such celebration takes place at the high school (or college for that matter) which exists or existed on the other side of town, if you know what I mean.
HBCU homecomings are like a family reunion, sometimes with and many times without, the family. Or with a different family. This is the one time of the year where former friends and classmates get to see each other, reminisce about the old times and talk about where they are in their lives. It’s a time to further cement
the bonds of brotherhood, sisterhood and loyalty to the school that follows them throughout their lives. Particularly for those who have to travel significant distances to attend games, homecomings are the one date they circle to make sure they are present. Thus, for the school, it’s a great time for fundraising. Alumni associations from all over the country meet to turn in money, explore best practices and chart their futures. Other than fierce backyard rivalries (like Clark Atlanta vs. Morehouse, NC A&T vs. NC Central, Southern vs. Grambling, etc.), homecoming is the best-attended game of the season, most times a guaranteed sellout for the home team, perhaps the only one of the season. The week-long activities surrounding homecomings, both before and after the game, are numerous. There are parades, coronations of the homecoming courts, sorority and fraternity step shows and meet-ups, comedy shows, gospel concerts, new and old skool concerts, day and night parties, fanfests, class reunions, breakfast meetings and See HBCU Homecomings, page 9
In 2019, it was the same Alabama State at Jackson State homecoming on tap this year that drew the biggest crowd (35,013). With all that’s at stake as we mentioned above, the attendance could certainly be bigger. Benedict at the Morehouse homecoming in 2019 had the second largest crowd at 25,911. Fort Valley State is the homecoming opponent for the Maroon Tigers this season. The Morehouse homecoming is always among the top three each year. Florida A&M was third with 25,649 at its homecoming vs. N. C. Central in 2019. The Rattlers have a big date hosting Grambling this year at homecoming on Oct. 30. NC A&T was fourth with a capacity crowd of 21,500 for its 2019 homecoming vs. Howard. Expect the same because cops won’t allow more than that for its big date this year vs. Monmouth. WHAT HOMECOMING GAMES ARE NOT EXPECTED TO BE COMPETITIVE? 1) North American at Texas Southern homecoming (Oct. 2) – All you need to know is that NAU is a school started in 2007. Its first graduating class in 2013 had 12 students. It made its football debut in September of 2020. 2) Virginia University-Lynchburg at Norfolk State homecoming (Oct. 16) – The Spartans are the only HBCU to schedule VUL for homecoming this season. The Dragons, usually welcomed in for HBCU homecomings, have 10 away games on their 11-game schedule. Find your team’s 2021 Homecomings listed alphabetically by school and date below. And make your plans now. If tickets are on sale, they will go fast.
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HOMECOMINGS BY SCHOOL
Southern ready to bring smoke!
FAMU’s Marching 100 drum majors perform during halftime for Florida A&M University’s homecoming game against North Carolina A&T at Bragg Memorial Stadium in Tallahassee, Fla., Oct. 14, 2017
HBCU Homecomings church services. There’s tailgating before, after and during the game with a fashion show throughout. Alumni bands and cheerleaders get to perform and then there’s the dazzling halftime shows of the bands. There is plenty to enjoy! OH YEAH, THE GAMES It’s funny, but fans don’t come to homecoming to see a competitive game. A blowout is preferred. It makes the revelry merrier. But don’t get it twisted, the revelry goes on win over lose. What are likely to be the most competitive or compelling homecoming games this year?
from page 8
1. Monmouth at North Carolina A&T homecoming (Oct. 30) – The Hawks are the two-time defending Big South champion while the Aggies, in their first year in the conference, are trying to end their reign and show they are the new power in the league. Monmouth head coach Kevin Callahan said he assigned someone to do special research on A&T’s GHOE (Greatest Homecoming on Earth) to prepare his team for the game. 2. Jackson State at Alabama A&M homecoming (Oct. 9) – In the spring, Connell Maynor’s squad defeated Deion “Coach Prime” Sanders’ first team 52-43 en route to winning the SWAC East and later
the SWAC title. Prime Time would like nothing better than to turn the tables. 3. Southern at Arkansas-Pine Bluff homecoming (Oct. 16) – First-year head coach Doc Gamble and UAPB beat the Jaguars in Baton Rouge in the spring 33-30 to open the season en route to dethroning Southern as SWAC West champion. New Southern coach Jason Rollins will try to do the same at Pine Bluff. 4. Alabama State at Jackson State homecoming (Oct. 16) – Jackson State has likely not forgotten ASU head coach Donald Hill-Eley’s comment about a shoe lodged in the rear of (allegedly) a JSU fan after the Hornets handed the Tigers their first loss under Sanders, 35-28 in the spring. Payback again may heighten the tension at this contest.
ALABAMA A&M vs. Jackson State ALABAMA STATE vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff ALBANY STATE vs. Edward Waters ALCORN STATE vs. Grambling State ALLEN vs. Columbus State ARKANSAS-PINE BLUFF vs. Southern BENEDICT vs. Morehouse BETHUNE-COOKMAN vs. Miss. Valley State BOWIE STATE vs. Johnson C. Smith CENTRAL STATE vs. Allen CHOWAN vs. Lincoln (PA) CLARK ATLANTA vs. Allen DELAWARE STATE vs. SC State EDWARD WATERS vs. Central State ELIZABETH CITY STATE vs. Chowan FAYETTEVILLE STATE vs. Johnson C. Smith FLORIDA A&M vs. Grambling State FLORIDA MEMORIAL vs. Webber International FORT VALLEY STATE vs. Clark Atlanta GRAMBLING STATE vs. Texas Southern HAMPTON vs. Kennesaw State HOWARD vs. Norfolk State JACKSON STATE vs. Alabama State JOHNSON C. SMITH vs. Saint Augustine’s KENTUCKY STATE vs. Lane LANE vs. Texas College LANGSTON vs. Texas Wesleyan LINCOLN (MO) vs. Missouri Southern LINCOLN (PA) vs. Elizabeth City State LIVINGSTONE vs. Saint Augustine’s MILES vs. Benedict MISSISSIPPI VALLEY STATE vs. NC Central MOREHOUSE vs. Fort Valley State MORGAN STATE vs. North Carolina Central NC A&T vs. Monmouth NC CENTRAL vs. Norfolk State NORFOLK STATE vs. Virginia-Lynchburg PRAIRIE VIEW A&M vs. Alabama State SAINT AUGUSTINE’S vs. Chowan SAVANNAH STATE vs. Clark Atlanta SC STATE vs. Morgan State SHAW vs. Johnson C. Smith SOUTHERN vs. Prairie View A&M TENNESSEE STATE vs. Murray State TEXAS SOUTHERN vs. North American TUSKEGEE vs. Lane VIRGINIA STATE vs. Lincoln (PA) VIRGINIA UNION vs. Lincoln (PA) VA. UNIV. OF LYNCHBURG vs. Univ. of Ft. Lauderdale WEST VIRGINIA STATE vs. UNC Pembroke WINSTON-SALEM STATE vs. Livingstone
Oct. 9, 2:00 p.m. CT Oct. 9, 2:00 p.m. CT Oct. 9, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 9, 1:00 p.m. CT Oct. 30, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 16, 2:00 p.m. CT Oct. 23, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 9, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 2, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 2, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 1:30 p.m. ET Oct. 9, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 1:30 p.m. ET Oct. 16, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 30, 4:00 p.m. ET Nov. 6, 1:30 p.m. ET Oct. 23, TBD Oct. 16, 2:00 p.m. CT Oct. 9, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 16, 2:00 p.m. CT Oct. 30, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 9, 1:00 p.m. CT Oct. 2, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 16, 2:00 p.m. CT Oct. 9, 2:00 p.m. CT Oct. 16, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 9, 1:30 p.m. ET Oct. 9, 4:00 p.m. CT Oct. 2, 1:00 p.m. CT Oct. 16, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 30, 1:00 p.m. ET Nov. 6, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 16, 2:00 p.m. ET Nov. 6, 2:00 p.m. CT Sept. 25, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 16, 3:00 p.m. ET Oct. 16, 1:30 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 6:00 p.m. CT Oct. 30, 5:00 p.m. ET Oct. 2, 2:00 p.m. CT Oct. 23, 1:00 p.m. CT Oct. 23, 2:00 p.m. ET Oct. 9, 1:00 p.m. ET Oct. 30, TBD Oct. 16, 1:30 p.m. ET Oct. 23, 1:00 p.m. ET
On campus during Howard’s homecoming
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CRY MACHO AT THE MOVIES By Hollywood Hernandez
CRY MACHO is a modern day western starring and directed by Clint Eastwood. Eastwood plays Mike, a rodeo cowboy who's down on his luck. After being a top cowboy he breaks his back in a competition. His usual Clint Eastwood gruff exterior costs him his job as a horse trainer and he finds himself out of work. He spends his time fixing things around the house and working with animals. Mike can repair a car as well as he can train a horse.
trying to leave his tough guy ways and Eastwood, now in his 90s has a real grasp on the role. Ivan Hernandez plays the young boy Lucas who is mentored by Eastwood. A young man who doesn't trust anyone, he slowly learns to trust people with the help of Mike and a kind woman named Martha (Natalia Traven). Martha has several daughters and together they all make one big happy family until Federal Marshals show up in town and Mike and Lucas have to flee to the United States. Lucas is reunited with his father in America, played by Dwight Yoakum, and Mike heads back to Mexico. CRY MACHO is a different role for
Tax expert spills the beans You’re on the on recent episode of Wrong Train From Marva with Love ASK ALMA By Alma Gill
Maria McGee Lockett
FROM MARVA WITH LOVE By Marva J. Sneed
To pay a debt he owes he takes a job traveling to Mexico to bring a man's son home from an abusive relationship he's living in with his alcoholic mother. On the way back to Texas Mike finds redemption by showing the young 12-year-old how to be a good man. The movie, adapted from a novel, took over 20 years to make and it seemed to make Eastwood the perfect character for the movie. Mike is
Eastwood. Rather than the rough and cruel character he usually plays he's a man looking for his kinder side and who wants to leave his macho personality behind. I liked seeing Eastwood playing his softer side. He finds love and he helps everyone in town, including the animals. It's an enjoyable movie. On my "Hollywood Popcorn Scale" I rate the movie a LARGE.
Maria McGee Lockett is a multi-faceted woman: She’s an entrepreneur, accountant and a licensed ordained minister and for more than three decades she has prepared individual and business tax returns in Dallas. There’s more. She operates a tax school where she trains students how to prepare returns and to open their own tax businesses. Dubbed the “Tax Expert," Lockett stopped in on From Marva with Love to talk about business expansion, the pandemic – and her ministry. MS: Tell us about your background and how you became the tax expert? ML: About November of 1988, which is back before many were born, God blessed me with a business. At the time, he gave me the name Hughes Networking and I had no idea in 1988 what networking meant. I was a wife and a mother, and I had no idea, but I wrote it all down. I began to do it and I started with tax preparation. It was a gift. I have a gift of detail and I’m also an accountant. With that, I started doing it for pennies. I got certified in tax preparation. I began my business and that’s been over 33 years ago.
MS: How has your business been affected by the pandemic? ML: About five months after I opened my new office, the pandemic hit. I didn’t have to shut it down, but I shut it down for a little while. I didn’t do face-to-face appointments. I do tax preparations; I have a tax school and (I do) credit repair for my clients. MS: You are very passionate about helping people. What is the lesson that you want them to know about the best way to have their taxes done? ML: That’s an excellent question. The rule of thumb is you want to break even. It’s not about getting money back at the end of the year. Unfortunately, tax laws change every single year. So, if you got credit for this year, you may not next year. They may kick the whole thing out. I say, ‘Get your money now.’ There was so much more to our conversation about taxes, entrepreneurship and ministry. To hear the full interview, go to BlogTalkRadio.com by clicking here: https://bit.ly/3hnuISo To listen on the Texas Metro News Facebook page, click here: https://bit.ly/3noyVcf. For more information contact Maria McGee Lockett email: hughesnetworking@usa.com or by direct extension at (214) 962-9506. Tune in to From Marva with Love Fridays 11am - 1pm on BlogTalkRadio and Facebook.com/ TexasMetroNews marvasneed@ myimessenger.com
Dear Alma, I’m 25 and getting ready to marry a wonderfully fantastic man. We are totally compatible and get along in every way. Our sex life is amazing, and I really love him. However, I recently met a new man to whom I am unbelievably attracted, but just physically. I know deep inside that I want to be with my fiancé forever. My question to you is: Would it be so wrong to have sex with my new friend just one time? So far we’ve only gone to lunch and out for drinks. I see this as my last chance to hook up before I say “I do.” Vonda M., Wheeling, W.V. Honey Chile, please. This is easy. All you want is for me to tell you, “Sure, girl, go on and get your swerve on before your wedding night.” NOT! Keep it moving, sister, cause you won’t find that train on the Ask Alma railroad tracks of life. Of all the things you could have on your mind before your wedding, you’re daydreaming about another man. Really!? Let me school you for a minute. Take a bus to Fantasy Land. That way you’ll have your moment of satisfaction (just not for real) and you won’t hurt your new husband or yourself by making the worst mistake of your life. What if you do it and you don’t have a good time. Then, you’d be mad you put yourself out like that. What if you do it and you like it? Then you’ll want more, and you couldn’t because you’d be married. Back up, take a chill pill and remind yourself of the morals that I’m sure are somewhere within your reach. You’ve found a great fiancé, and you want a quickie before you march down the aisle. You’ve made that perfectly clear. However, my brain is on pause and I just have to say – the real question here should be: Are you sure you’re even ready to get married? That Train Don’t Run on the Ask Alma Railroad Alma Alma Gill’s newsroom experience spans more than 25 years, including various roles at USA Today, Newsday and the Washington Post. Email questions to: alwaysaskalma@gmail.com. Follow her on Facebook at “Ask Alma” and twitter @almaaskalma.
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Global Pandemic from page 1 tective equipment. Amidst this heroism, the US is facing a shortage of nurses, making their situation even harder. Despite having around 4 million registered nurses in the US workforce, the continuing rise of COVID-19 cases means the country will need about 1.1 million more nurses by 2022 in order to fill the gap. However, COVID-19 has served as a wake-up call not just for the healthcare sector to hire more nurses. According to a US News article on nursing school admissions, the pandemic has also sparked an interest among students, and universities and nursing schools are receiving a high number of inquiries and applications. Face-to-face classes are still a challenge, so colleges are pivoting by promoting their online programs instead. Those with no nursing education can get certifications and degrees to become registered nurses (RNs), while those who are already RNs can take online RN to BSN degrees. This type of program
is more advanced and lets nurses specialize in certain areas, like mental health or gerontology. Plus, online nursing degrees are accredited by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education, which means that graduates are just as qualified as those who trained in a traditional way. While this may help supply capable nurses, it still won’t be enough to fill the gap. WHY WE MUST ADDRESS THE NURSING SHORTAGE NOW Instead of simply relying on nursing schools for new nurses, it’s also important to recognize problems that cause a shortage — namely how to retain nurses. As previously mentioned, nursing has become a very dangerous profession that’s made even more stressful due to inadequate working conditions, such as a lack of PPE and understaffing. The mental and emotional distress has caused some nurses to leave their jobs or get sick themselves. This only makes the situation worse, aggravating staffing issues. Many nurses now work long 12- to 16-
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hour shifts, causing them to suffer from widespread health and wellness problems such as being overweight, getting inadequate sleep, and experiencing burnout. A surge in coronavirus cases due to the new Delta variant is once again putting pressure on these nurses. It’s more highly contagious compared to other strains, and it currently makes up 83% of COVID-19 cases in the US. If we continue to turn a blind eye to the nursing shortages, we might end up fighting a losing battle. Nurses are putting their lives on the line in order to fight the coronavirus. And for all the difficulties that they go through to keep their patients alive, we should be doing as much as we can to help them. More than just expressing our gratitude, nurses should be given proper working conditions in order for them to do their job without sacrificing their well-being. Jennifer Riggs is a freelance writer who covers everything from current events to health and wellness. When she isn't typing away on her laptop, she is tending to her indoor garden — she started with two table plants before the pandemic and now has over fifty in her studio apartment. Photo credit: Unsplash, Source: shorturl.at/eqHRZ
My Truth from page 1 your doorstep to date your daughter?” Good question, but who has the answer? Also what about those who are incarcerated? How they are treated is not a concern until someone wants to speak out about their loved one being mistreated! Still taking things a step farther, some have no problem with the incarcerated being treated like animals and being subjected to inhumane
• September 23 - 29, 2021
living conditions; failing to realize that some of those behind bars will one day be released and if they are treated a certain way, well they may act that same way when they are released. Talk about chickens coming home to roost! Well we are going to be dealing with quite a few chickens if we don’t get off our butts and take more of an interest in what is happening in our communities. We have to care about one another and we have to realize the significance of our existence. We are not on this earth
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just to passively exist. We are supposed to be active participants. This means that we are supposed to care about others and those we will never see or meet. We have a responsibility and how we respond will determine if we were on the right side of history. It will also solidify our legacy. When there are family gatherings will your descendants laugh, cry, cuss, shake their heads, say a prayer or deny any relation to you? Or will they beam with pride? It’s your life! “Exclusive Service”
To the Business Owners that are searching for a way to increase the volume of new & repeat customers coming to your business by trying the one time only, “60 day free trial” period of the Exclusive Service. Send your name and whom we are to contact, the name of your business, & complete physical mailing address including the zip code, along a contact number where you can be reached. Please mail your letter to: Mr. Tommy Hester / 3903 FM 813 / Waxahachie, TX 76165. Thank you in advance for your time and consideration.
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To the Business Owners that are searching for a way to increase the volume of new & repeat customers coming to your business by trying the one time only, “60 day free trial” period of the Exclusive Service. Send your name and whom we are to contact, the name of your business, and complete physical mailing address including the zip code, along with a contact number where you can be reached. The Exclusive Service is available to 5,000 small business owners. Please mail your letter to: Mr. Tommy Hester / 3903 FM813 / Waxahachie, TX 76165. Thanks in advance for your time and consideration.
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• September 23 - 29, 2021
sisted on being himself unconditionally and became a global icon and inspiration to people everywhere.” Since this project produced its first marketing ads and an official trailer, Muhammad Ali enthusiasts like me have been punch drunk with anticipation. America is facing a time of historical reckonings and adjustments right now, but Ali can stand the test. The boxer, born Cassius Clay, faced racism, oppression, and cultural bias that this nation
wants you to forget. The State of Texas can forbid educators to present the tenets of "Critical Race Theory," but the challenges Ali overcame prove that CRT is real. The essence of CRT rightly promotes that the law and legal institutions are inherently racist. The life and times of Ali provide the evidence in plain sight. Everyone likes to sugarcoat history, and few of us are willing to admit it. We praise an uncle, post-mortem, even if they were just a little bit perverted. We re-
member grandmother's famous sweet potato pie and never mention how bland some of her other food was. That is life and a testament to our questionable ability to forgive and forget. However, stories like Ali’s must be presented transparently. Some historians are quick to squeeze the serum from the fruit and neglect to discuss what happened to the seeds. America likes to brag about "the juice" without discussing the seed of racism that continues to rob the sweet taste of success from people who don’t look like the original squeezers. (Jefferson, Washington, et al.)
Parenthetically, you should be leery of those "America the paradise" historians who will whitewash Ali and recast him as some candy-assed, highly celebrated conformist, readymade for a "Wheaties" box. Ali didn’t earn that coveted cereal-box cameo until 1999, after the Olympic torch. Before Ali became an “acceptable Negro”, most White folks and an appreciable number of Negroes hated him. To this crowd, his first names were uppity, loudmouth, troublemaking, and a few other invectives, but they all agreed that his surname was Nigger. Thus, from
Clay to Ali, he grew up in an environment that remains hostile, hurtful, and humiliating to himself and his race. Major PBS projects like Ali always have significant corporate funding, so we owe a debt of gratitude to Bank of America, philanthropist David M. Rubenstein, and so many others on the PBS donor list. Muhammad Ali will be a blockbuster to some and a review for others. But, for most of us Ali fanatics, it is just PBS programming some more Smart TV! Vincent L. Hall is an author, activist, and an award-winning columnist.
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Virtual and liVe Community Calendar
Sickle Cell Disease Awareness Hispanic Heritage Month Alopecia Awareness SEPTEMBER 23 North Texas Giving Day The Connection with Debra BrownSturns. Facebook.com/TexasMetroNews, BlogTalkRadio.com. 7-8 pm. 646200-0459.
In-Person Lunch & Learn: “Cultivating a Strong, Active Board” At Frazier House, 4600 Spring, 75210. Free. 11:30 am–1pm. Reg: www.zwhjcoc.org/classes. Hiring: Deputy Director, Strategy, Higher Education/Workforce. Application Deadline. Send cover letter, resume, and salary requirements to: careers@cftexas.org. LCUPN September Monthly Mixer at Sambuca 360, 7200 Bishop Rd., # 270, Plano.
SEPTEMBER 24 – OCTOBER 17 STATE FAIR OF TEXAS SEPTEMBER 24 From Marva with Love, with Marva Sneed. 11 am -1 pm. CST, Fridays on Facebook Live/@TexasMetroNews, and BlogTalkRadio.com. Join the conversation at 646-200-0459. State Fair Classic, High School Battle of the Bands at Beverly D. Humphrey Tiger Stadium, 200 E. Wintergreen, Lancaster. 8 am. State Fair Classic RADIO ONE GOLF CLASSIC at Cedar Crest Golf Club, 1800 Southerland Ave, Dallas. 9 am. The Perot Museum of Nature and Science Towers of Tomorrow with LEGO Bricks Exhibit, 2201 N. Field St. Dallas. Tickets: https://www.perotmuseum.org/
SEPTEMBER 25 State Fair Classic Grambling vs. Prairie View @ The Cotton Bowl Fair Park. 4 pm kick off. Tickets: www.statefairclassicfootball.com. Four Girls and a Guy at Cedar Hill Farmers Market, 300 Houston St. Cedar Hill. 9am-1 pm.
Marriage Resuscitation Seminar. Host Bishop Eli Jacobs & Lay Elect Dareia Jacobs. Guest: Apostle David Ransom. 1-5 pm. 200 N. Plano Rd. Richardson. Tickets: Eventbrite.com/e/marriageresuscitation.
West African Dance, Drum & History Virtual Residency Event. Monday Dance 6-7 pm. Reg: https://bit.ly/3BO5cgJ.
SEPTEMBER 28
Sophisticated Saturdays HBCU Edition @ House of Blues, 2200 N. Lamar St. 10-pm-2 am. Tickets: HOBClassic.eventbrite. com.
THE DOC SHEP SPEAKS SHOW! From 11 am. CST on Facebook Live/@TexasMetroNews, @fnsconsulting, and You Tube @ docshepspeaks
4th Annual Neighborhood Summit at Alan E. Sims Cedar Hill Recreation Center, 310 E. Parkerville Rd. 9-11:30 am.
Soul Line Dance Tuesday-Live! Virtual, host BE Creative Arts Center. 7 pm CDT. Reg: www.becreativeartscenter.com FREE.
State Fair Classic Grambling vs. Prairie View Pre Game Concert - Dru Hill at the State Fair Classic Game, Fair Park, 3809 Grand Ave. 2 pm.
Oak Cliff Thrives with Oak Cliff Chamber of Commerce. 6-7:30 pm. Tickets: oakcliffchamber.org/oak-cliff-thrives Apply Today.
State Fair Classic Grambling vs. Prairie View Post Game Concert - The Black Pumas at the State Fair Classic Game, Fair Park, 3809 Grand Ave. 7:30 pm. Diana Ross & The Supremes Music History Livestream Program with Washington DC History & Culture. 9-10:30 pm. CDT. Tickets: https://bit.ly/3hpydri. DBDT: ENCORE Dancing Beyond Borders West, In-Person Only at W. E. Scott Theatre, 3505 W. Lancaster Ave. Ft Worth 7:30 pm Tickets www.dbdt.com. Homecoming Celebration Jazzercise Duncanville, 201 James Collins Blvd. 9-10:30 am. DINNER AT DAQ’S Feat: Maurice Curtis on Sax, at Daq’s Luxury Daiquiri Lounge, 8700 Preston Rd. Plano. 6-10 pm Becoming A Woman of Influence. Host Love At The Well, Keynote Speaker: Dr. Tiffany Gil. 9:30 am CDT. Reg: www. loveatthewell.com.
SEPTEMBER 26 The World According to Drew, host Andrew Whigham, III on BlogTalkRadio. com 8-10 am. It’s thought-provoking, enlightening, informative, and entertaining news commentary. Join the call at 646200-0459. A Celebration For Bishop T. D. Jakes at The Potter’s House of Dallas, 6777 W. Kiest Blvd. 9 am. In Sanctuary or Live stream: @ tdjakes.org/stream.
SEPTEMBER 27 African American Museum 2021 Fall Exhibition- Sepia: Past. Pride. Power. African American Museum, 3536 Grand Ave. 10 am-5 pm. Free, For info: 214-565-9026.
Facebook Live — Help With Your Job Search from Indeed Experts by AARP Programs. 6 pm. RSVP: https://www.facebook.com/AARPPrograms
SEPTEMBER 29 I Was Just Thinking with Norma Adams-Wade. From 11 am -1 pm. CST On Facebook @TexasMetroNews & BlogTalkRadio.com. Join in at 646-200-0459. Ask Dr. Amerson with Dr. Linda Amerson.12 pm. CST @DFWiRadio. com, and Live on Facebook @DrLindaAmerson. RECHARGING STATION A panel discussion on mental health, by Dallas-Fort Worth FAMU National Alumni Association. Virtual Reg: http://www.dfwfamualumni.org/ Facebook Live — Focusing Your Job Search on Government Work by AARP Programs. 6 pm. RSVP: https://www.facebook. com/AARPPrograms UTA’s Center for African American Studies 10th Annual Opening Lecture. Speaker: Roland S. Martin. 6-8 pm. at E. H. Hereford University Center, 300 W. 1St. in the Bluebonnet Ballroom. Reg: https://bit. ly/3lGIUHd Together We Dine Virtually 5:30-7 pm CDT via Zoom. For info visit: www.projectunity.net. Register: https://bit.ly/3hMBK36
SEPTEMBER 30 The Connection with Debra BrownSturns. OnFacebook.com/TexasMetroNews & BlogTalkRadio.com. 7-8 pm. 646-200-0459. African American Museum 2021 Fall Exhibition-Ruth Mae McCrane: Scenes from the Lost Book of the Bible 3536 Grand Ave. 10 am-5 pm. Info: aamdallas. org.
OCTOBER 1
From Marva with Love, with Marva Sneed. 11 am -1 pm. CST, Fridays on Facebook Live/@TexasMetroNews, and BlogTalkRadio.com. Join the conversation at 646-200-0459.
OCTOBER 2 Community Vaccine Event at Dallas West Church of Christ, 3510 N. Hampton Rd. Info: 214-820-4846 10 am-12 pm. Reg: https:bit.ly/3tDallasWest Market at Park Lane - Fall Series at The Sops at Park Lane, 8080 Park Ln. 11 am-4 pm. Las Chicas del Barrio 1st Annual Car Show. At the Latino Cultural Center, 2600 Live Oak St. 2-4 pm. Tickets: https://bit.ly/3kpsrrx. 20th Anniversary Sister To Sister 5 K Walk & Run, host Lynne Haze at Alan E. Sims Recreation Center, 310 E. Parkerville Rd. Cedar Hill, 8:30 am-12:30 pm. Reg: www.celebratinglife.org Virtual HBCU College Tour. Hosted by HUX Made Productions. 9 am CDT Find the list here: www.HBCUCollegeTour.com. Reg: https://bit. ly/39nooG0 Free Mammograms for those who qualify! The Alan E. Sims Cedar Hill Recreation Center, 310 East Parkerville. 9:30 am-3:30 pm. For appt. Methodist Health Connection at 214933-7200.
OCTOBER 3 The World According to Drew, host Andrew Whigham, III on BlogTalkRadio. com 8-10 am. It’s thought-provoking, enlightening, informative, and entertaining news commentary. Join the call at 646200-0459. 1st Oaktoberfest Host Go Oak Cliff At the Tyler/Vernon station. 11 am-5 pm RSVP: https://bit.ly/39pDJWB.
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College of Education and Human Services
Presents
Education:
A Vision for Healing Society
The 2021 COEHS Symposium will be 100% VIRTUAL; the in-person option will not be available.
September 24, 2021
8:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon CST Registration is now open
tamuc.edu/healing k
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THE STATE FAIR IS BACK AND SO IS THE BEST WAY TO GET THERE!
TAP. PAY. GO. Now, PAY with any contactless card!
Plan your fair adventure at
DART.org/StateFair