Curry Media Logo
The Curry Report
May 27, 2009
 
In This Issue
From Murder to Miracle in Philadelphia, Mississippi
The Sotomayor Pick: Bridging the Black-Latino Divide
Southern Strategy Against Sonia Sotomayor
Supreme stats: 106 white males among 110 justices
Powell urges Republicans to broaden their appeal
Job losses in an afflicted economy slow business for many black retailers
Xerox's Ursula Burns Will Take Reins During 'Daunting' Time
Pulpit of Color
From Murder to Miracle in Philadelphia, Mississippi
Curry Headshot

By George E. Curry
NNPA Columnist
   

To many Blacks who grew up in the Deep South before the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, last week's election of James Young as the first African-American mayor of Philadelphia, Miss. was as monumental as the election of President Barack Obama.

The Mississippi soil is soaked in the blood of civil rights activists. Three of the most famous - James Chaney, a 21-year old African-American from Meridian, Miss.; Andrew Goodman, 20, a White Jewish student from New York and Michael Schwerner, 24, another White also from New York - were murdered 45 years ago near Philadelphia. Their story inspired the movie, "Mississippi Burning."

Their lives were anything but a movie.

All three were participating in Freedom Summer, a Bob Moses-inspired project to bring college-aged students to the Magnolia state in 1964 to dramatize social, economic and political injustice. They had traveled 36 miles from Meridian to Philadelphia, Miss. to investigate the recent burning of Mount Zion United Methodist Church, which had hosted many civil rights activities in the area before it was destroyed by fire.

Before the trio left Meridian on June 21, 1964, a description of their blue, Ford station wagon and its license plate number had been given to the White supremacist Citizens Council and the Ku Klux Klan. With Cheney behind the wheel, Neshoba County Deputy Sheriff Cecil Price, a member of the KKK, flicked on his flashing lights and pulled the vehicle over. Chaney was arrested for allegedly driving 35 miles over the speed limit and his two companions were held for further investigation. They were taken to the county jail in Philadelphia.

Cheney was fined $20 and all three were released late that night and ordered to leave the county. Prior to letting them go, however, Deputy Sheriff Price notified his fellow Klansmen, who plotted to murder the men. Price followed the three civil rights workers to the edge of town, pulled them over again, and detained them until KKK members arrived.

In a signed statement to FBI agents on November 20, 1964, Horace Doyle Barnette, a witness, recounted:  

"Before I could get out of the car Wayne [Roberts] ran past my car to Price's car, opened the left rear door, pulled Schwerner out of the car, spun him around so that Schwerner was standing on the left side of the road, with his back to the ditch and said 'Are you that nigger lover' and Schwerner said 'Sir, I know just how you feel.' Wayne had a pistol in his right hand, then shot Schwerner. Wayne then went back to Price's car and got Goodman, took him to the left side of the road with Goodman facing the road, and shot Goodman.

"When Wayne shot Schwerner, Wayne had his hand on Schwerner's shoulder. When Wayne shot Goodman, Wayne was standing within reach of him. Schwerner fell to the left so that he was laying along side the road. Goodman spun around and fell back toward the bank in back.

"At this time Jim Jordan said 'save one for me.' He then got out of Price's car and got Chaney out. I remember Chaney backing up, facing the road, and standing on the bank on the other side of the ditch and Jordan stood in the middle of the road and shot him. I do not remember how many times Jordan shot. Jordan then said. 'You didn't leave me anything but a nigger, but at least I killed me a nigger.'"

A shaken President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, a vocal critic of civil rights leaders, to investigate the disappearance of the three men.

The FBI offered a $25,000 reward. That led to a tip about where the bodies were buried. On August 4, the bodies were dug up about six miles from Philadelphia. In the process of searching for the slain civil rights workers, the bodies of seven other activists were discovered.

The nation soon learned how Mississippi justice worked - or didn't work.

Mississippi officials refused to press murder charges, forcing the Justice Department to prosecute suspects for conspiring to deprive citizens of their civil rights. Seven men were found guilty, including Deputy Sheriff Cecil Price and KKK Imperial Wizard Samuel Bowers. Although the sentencing ranged from three to 10 years, no one was imprisoned longer than six years. Edgar Ray Killen, the ringleader of the plot, was found guilty of manslaughter years later and sentenced to 60 years in prison. Bowers was later sentenced to life for the murder of civil rights activist Vernon Dahmer.

Mayor-elect young was mindful of that bloody history after he defeated Rayburn Waddell, the three-term White incumbent, by 46 votes in a city that is 55 percent White.

A tearful Young told CNN, "The places where we were locked out, I'm gonna have the key. The places we couldn't go, I've got the key. No better way to say it than that."

 

George E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com.  

 

 

 

The Sotomayor Pick: Bridging the Black-Latino Divide
 
Sotomayor Obama


 

By Tim Padgett

© Time Magazine

May 27, 2009

 

Judge Sonia Sotomayor's nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court is a historic milestone for Latinos, but it resonates well beyond Hispanic pride. It is perhaps the most potent symbol yet of a 21st-century rapprochement between the nation's two largest minorities, Latino-Americans and African-Americans, who in the 20th century could be as violently distrustful of one another as blacks and whites were.   READ MORE

 


 
 

Southern Strategy Against Sonia Sotomayor
Sotomayor

Adam Serwer

© The American Prospect

May 26, 2009

 

Weeks ago, Jeffrey Rosen wrote a scurrilous article for The New Republic in which he asserted, on the basis of anonymous gossip, that Sonia Sotomayor, summa cum laude of Princeton, recipient of the prestigious Pyne Prize, and editor of the Yale Law Journal, was "not that smart." Rosen was candid enough to admit that he hadn't "read enough of Sonia Sotomayor's opinions to have a confident sense of them" and that he hadn't "talked to enough of Sonia Sotomayor's detractors and supporters to get a fully balanced picture of her strengths."     READ MORE
 

 

 



 

Supreme stats: 106 white males among 110 justices

 
Supreme Court 
 

By Mark Sherman

© Associated Press

May 21, 2009

WASHINGTON (AP) - If President Barack Obama wants to make the Supreme Court more diverse, he has a wider range of options than any of his predecessors. When Ronald Reagan was president, only about 40 women served on the federal bench, the most common source of Supreme Court nominees.
Today, more than 200 women hold federal judgeships, along with 88 African-Americans, 60 Hispanics and eight Asian-Americans.

All but four of the 110 Supreme Court justices in the nation's history have been white men. Two are African-American men, Clarence Thomas and the late Thurgood Marshall, and two are white women, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sandra Day O'Connor.  READ MORE



 

Powell urges Republicans to broaden their appeal 

 

 Colin Powell
 

By Charles Abbott
Reuters
May 24, 2009 

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Republican Party needs to broaden its base rather than move farther to the political right to make gains against President Barack Obama's Democrats, former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell said on Sunday.

"Let's debate the future of the party. And let's let all the segments of the party come in," Powell, a Republican who served in President George W. Bush's Cabinet but endorsed Obama last year, told CBS's "Face the Nation."

"And, if we don't do that, if we don't reach out more, the party is going to be sitting on a very, very narrow base. You can only do two things with a base. You can sit on it and watch the world go by, or you can build on the base," Powell added.

READ MORE 

 


 


Job losses in an afflicted economy slow business for many black retailers

 Money


By Gregory Lewis

(c) South Florida Sun-Sentinel

May 24, 2009

 

The signs of the recession in black communities go beyond layoffs and lines at unemployment offices.

There's no waiting for tables during the lunch hour rush at popular diners such as Betty's Soul Food Restaurant off Sistrunk Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale and Donnie's Place in the revitalized black business district of
Delray Beach. Barbers chairs in Cut 'N' Corners in Miramar and in Delray Beach's Top Notch Beauty, Spa & Suites go empty as regular customers wait an extra week to get their hair done. The Book Lover's Lounge in Lauderhill has closed, forcing owner Kesha Davis to hawk her wares at community events. As the saying goes: When white businesses catch a cold, black businesses get pneumonia.

"This recession is like a hurricane," said Mark Vitner, Wachovia Corp. economist. "It has cut a wide swatch. It's difficult for all, but in the African-American community unemployment tends to be higher."

In fact, while nearly 9 percent of all Americans are out of work, the rate for black adult men and women is more than 6 percentage points higher at 15 percent.  
 

READ MORE 
 
 
 
Xerox's Ursula Burns Will Take Reins During 'Daunting' Time
 
Ursula Burns


By Katie Hoffmann

 May 22 (Bloomberg) -- Xerox Corp.'s Ursula Burns, who takes the reins at the world's largest high-speed color printer maker in less than six weeks, has a mandate: getting budget-cutting customers to increase spending on office equipment.

Burns, 50, will become chief executive officer on July 1, ending the eight-year run of Anne Mulcahy, who will stay on as chairman. Mulcahy, 56, named Burns president in 2007, almost three decades after Burns joined Xerox as a summer intern.

Burns, who will be the first black female CEO among Fortune 500 companies

 READ MORE

 


Pulpit of Color


Alysa Stanton 
 
 

By Stewart Ain

© The Jewish Week
May 20, 2009

 

As a student rabbi, Alysa Stanton - who next month becomes the first ever African-American woman rabbi - was assigned to intern in a congregation in Dothan, Ala.

But no sooner did she arrive than the president of the congregation called the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati to complain.

"He said, 'Are you kidding,?'" recalled Rabbi Ken Kanter, director of HUC's rabbinical program. Stanton said she was told that a "black person ministering to a white congregation in the Deep South was unheard of."

However, Rabbi Kanter said, the congregation "very quickly recognized they had a rabbi who happened to be a woman and who happened to be African-American. She quickly became their rabbi and at the end of the year they wanted her to stay because she was so well loved."

  


 READ MORE





Speaking Engagements
Microphone
 
June 2, 2009
Kaiser Family Foundation
Washington, D.C. 
 
June 5, 2009
Urban Financial Services Coalition
Detroit, Mich.
 
June 11, 2009
 Black AIDS Institute Media Roundtable
Washington, D.C.
 
June 21, 2009
Old Storm Branch Baptist Church
North Augusta, S.C.
 
June 23, 2009
Atlanta Chapter
Knoxville College
Alumni Association
Atlanta, Ga.
 
June 25, 2009
The PowerNetworking Conference
Atlanta, Ga.
 
June 26,2009
National Newspaper Publishers Association
Minneapolis, Minn.
 
June 28-30, 2009
Raindbow PUSH
Convention
Chicago, Ill.
 
July 18-21, 2009
National Speakers Association Convention
Phoenix, Ariz.
 
August 2-5, 2009
National Black Nurses Association
Toronto, Canada
 
August 6-9, 2009
National Association of Black Journalists
Tampa, Fla.
 
August 30-September 3, 2009
White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities
Washington, D.C.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Book George Curry for a Speech 
 
Podium
Let Curry Spice Up Your Next Event 
Quick Links
 
Join Our Mailing List!
"Keeping it Real with Rev. Al Sharpton"
Al Sharpton Headshot
Listen to George Curry every Tuesday 2-3 P.M., EST, on Sharpton's Radio Program 

 
"The Bev Smith Show"
Bev Smith
 
.

Listen to George Curry on "The Bev Smith Show" every Friday, beginning at 7:12 p.m., EST
 
 

 
Books by George E. Curry 
 
Emerge
 
The Best of Emerge Magazine
Edited by
George E. Curry
 
"This whopper of an anthology perfectly captures black life and culture...This retrospective volume is journalism at its best: probing, controversial and serious...Although Emerge was devoted unequivocally to African-Americans, Curry's vision and editorship of this book will instruct, provoke and sometimes entertain or inspire any reader."
- Publishers Weekly

AAction
 
 
 The Affirmative Action Debate
Edited by George E. Curry

"... Collects the leading voices on all sides of this crucial dialogue...the one book you need to understand and discuss the nation's sharpest political divide."
 


 
Gaither
 
 
 Jake Gaither: America's Most Famous Black Coach
By George E. Curry

"Curry has some telling points to make on the unlooked for effects of court-ordered desegregation."
- The New York Times
 
"... an excellent example of sports writing."
- Library Journal