Insight News ::: 03.17.14

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Dreams Come True: MC Sti-Lo Reel’s “MLK” Legacy MORE O O ON PAGE GE 5

March 17 - March 23, 2014

THREADS

DANCE

PROJECT

Vol. 41 No. 12 • The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • insightnews.com

Collaboration illuminates our artistic genius

SWEET

HONEY IN

THE ROCK

JAHSE

Sweet Honey in the Rock Threads Dance Project will perform this Friday and Saturday (March 21 and March 22) with Grammy Nominated Sweet Honey in the Rock at the Cowles Center in downtown Minneapolis. The show also includes a reprise of “Humanity & Elysian Fields Avenue” – a dance about the physical and emotional

humanity through its work. This mission runs parallel to Sweet Honey in the Rock’s desire to invite people to think about who we are and how we treat each other. I have always been drawn to Sweet Honey’s music because they say in music what I try to say with movement.”

tragedies of Hurricane Katrina. “To collaborate with this nationally acclaimed music group is sure to be an inspirational, truly memorable performance,” said Karen L. Charles, artistic director for Threads. “Threads Dance Project seeks to examine, expose and celebrate the threads that connect us in the hope of improving

SHOW TURN TO 9

Bill Cameron

Threads Dance Project

Willie Dean

Radio without boundaries: Dean pursues multicultural frontiers By Harry Colbert, Jr. Contributing Writer

Barack Obama announces focus on Black and latino boys. Former NAACP President Ben Jealous, seen here leading a protest, is now fighting for racial justice in a new way.

Demanding equality By Hazel Trice Edney (TriceEdneyWire.com) Benjamin Todd Jealous, the former NAACP president, who has weaved a career through politics, the Black press and civil rights, has now announced his

next course of action in pursuit of racial equality and economic justice in America. Jealous and the Oakland, Calif.-based Kapor Center for Social Impact, located in the billionaire- Silicon Valley

JEALOUS TURN TO 4

NNPA

Black male initiative must address structural racism By Freddie Allen NNPA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON (NNPA) – If President Barack Obama’s “My Brother’s Keeper” initiative expands educational and work opportunities for young Black and Hispanic males, but fails to address the burdens of structural racism that threaten their lives, the program might not succeed, some

community activists believe. “Let’s say they do all the right things, let’s say they excel in the classroom, let’s say they are involved in community activities, but then they go out on the street and they are harassed by police, profiled and arrested,” said Walter Fields, executive editor of the NorthStar News a news website that caters to African American. “Or they go to college and they get a degree, then they go out on the labor market and they are discriminated against. How do

we control that, after you have told these young men that they have to rise above it and be better, then they run into a system that is designed to cut them down?” President Obama launched the “My Brother’s Keeper” initiative in the East Room of the White House, joined by key players in business, philanthropy and public policy. Philanthropic foundations and private corporations have

KEEPER TURN TO 9

It can be tough trying to be all things to all people. But since 1978 community radio station KFAI (90.3 FM in Minneapolis, 106.7 FM in St. Paul and online at www. kfai.org) has been trying to do just that. Offering programming that ranges from “Democracy Now!,” a far left leaning syndicated talk show to “Conversations With Al McFarlane,” a weekly program focusing on issues of concern to the Twin Cities’ African-American community, to “Soul Tools Radio,” a hiphop/soul music show hosted by local music icon, Toki Wright to “The Pop Shop” with Liberty Finch and DJ Izzy who spin “power pop, bubblegum, psychedelic, garage, rock and more,” KFAI is trying to offer something for everyone. That is not always an easy task.

DEAN TURN TO 2

Business

Lifestyle

Education

Community

Arrived! Career paths are not always easy to see

The complexity of simplicity

Students targeted for extra help in Minneapolis Spring Break Academy

Rents rising in Frogtown as light rail opening day approaches

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