Insight News ::: 09.01.14

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Urbane Exposure uses concert to attract AfricanAmericans and AfricanAmerican volunteers to Minneapolis Parks; Goapele, Martin Luther, Theresa Payne to headline MORE ON PAGE 10

Insight News September 1 - September 7, 2014

Vol. 41 No. 37 • The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • insightnews.com

PROFILE IN EXCELLENCE

Kimberly Smith-Moore: Restoring home equity By Harry Colbert, Jr. Contributing Writer

Scott Gray

The goal: Equality and justice for all By Ryan T. Scott Contributing Writer With multiple examples of extreme police force used in encounters nationwide, highlighted by advanced community connectivity through technology, the vast communication generated by these events provides a watershed platform for discussion, and thus solutions.

GRAY TURN TO 5

Some monthly mortgage payments are less than what some pay in rent. But with that being said, for many the dream of owning a home is still just that … a dream. One major hurdle to home ownership, even for a person with a qualifying credit score, is coming up with the money for a down payment on a home. Through Wells Fargo and the nonprofit, NeighborWorks America – a leader in affordable housing and community development, native Northsider, Kimberly Smith-Moore, is offering many homebuyers the chance to get into their new home with down payment assistance grants of up to $30,000. “There are people out there who are hard working people who have decent credit, but just don’t have the money for a down payment,” said

Smith-Moore, vice president of customer grants programs with Wells Fargo Mortgage Servicing. “We want to show that home ownership is still alive.” Wells Fargo introduced the LIFT programs to help housing markets recover in the wake of the housing crisis, and to support homeownership and advance neighborhood recovery through a commitment to home lending, homebuyer education, and homebuyer support. According to Smith-Moore, to date, more than 7,600 new homeowners have been able to achieve the dream of homeownership with the support of LIFT programs. In the Twin Cities, the cooperative for profit and not for profit partnership has poured in more than $9 million to support moderate to middle income home buying. Nationwide that dollar amount will reach $215 million spread across 29 markets

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Kimberly Smith-Moore

A Black mother weeps for America: STOP KILLING OUR BLACK SONS! Justspeak Photo (c) Roy Lewis

Congresswoman Shelia Jackson Lee (D-Tx.) shakes the hand of President H.E. Goodluck Jonathan, Federal Republic of Nigeria, at a dinner held in his honor at the Grand Hyatt Hotel, August 6th 2014 in Washington, DC.

By Irma McClaurin, PhD Culture and Education Editor No Domestic Tranquility for our Black sons They are not insurgents. They are not enemy combatants. They are not hostile enemy forces. They are not terrorists. They are our Black sons. And I beg you America to stop killing them in their own backyards, in the streets outside of nightclubs, on the phone talking to their girlfriend, and a few blocks from convenience stores from which they may or may not have stolen cigars. They do not deserve to die for such trivial incidents. Stop it. Stop killing our Black sons. They are the babies whom we carried in our wombs for nine months and birthed them into a world we thought was filled with hopes and dreams, and promises of a better future,

U.S.-Africa relations: Beyond the summit By George E. Curry NNPA Editor-in-Chief

Ervin D. Fowlkes Sr. in Birmingham, Alabama, USA, on May 3rd, 1963, being attacked by police dogs during a civil rights protest. and a better life. Stop killing our Black sons. America, the young Black men you kill are our future and potential scientists and doctors,

lawyers and entrepreneurs; they are our future bus drivers, train conductors, teachers, garbage men, mechanics, cable TV guys, the clerk at the

Bill Hudson

neighborhood grocery stores. Whatever their roles in the future, large or small, they do

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WASHINGTON (NNPA) – The recent conference of African leaders convened by President Obama in the nation’s capital demonstrated that the U.S. is finally recognizing what China, the European Union, India and the rest of the world have known and acknowledged for years: The future of humanity is increasingly African. A report issued earlier this month by the United

Health

Business

Lifestyle

Breast feeding: An amazing gift

What’s so great about Millennials?

Ferguson, Missouri: A change is going to come

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Nations, titled, “Generation 2030: Africa,” made that unmistakably clear. “Africa’s population will double in just 35 years to 2.4 billion in 2050, and is projected to eventually hit 4.2 billion by 2100. About half a billion will be added already by 2030. More than half of the 2.2 billion projected rise in the world’s population between 2015 and 2050 will take place on this continent alone. As a result of changing global

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Moments in Sports The Vikings may surprise in 2014

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