PUB: Your Tale > The Voice

Your Tale


CALLING ALL WRITERS: The Voice launch an exciting, new platform for our readers in storytelling

STORYTELLING IS an art. Everybody loves compelling narrative that drops them in another world.

Here at The Voice, we take pride in being able to report real life stories to our readers. Our readers are hugely important to us, and therefore it gives us great pleasure in announcing Your Tale – an exciting, new platform for our readership in storytelling.

However, these stories will be ones of fiction, and instead of coming from us, they will be written by you. The Voice is calling all readers with a passion for writing fiction to step forward and submit their short stories to us. We will read every entry and select deserving submissions for publication in Your Tale.

If you have got a talent for telling a tale, look no further. Get writing and get your story out there, because we are for the reader, by the reader.

Yours,
Bart Chan
Your Tale Editor

Please note, submissions must be 1,300 words or less, and formatted in Microsoft Word. Entries not adhering to these conditions will not be read or considered. Submit your short story to your.tale@gvmedia.co.uk and include a few lines about who you are. By entering your work, you agree to The Voice retaining all rights over its content for publishing and editing.

We will not enter into correspondence over submissions, unless your story has been selected.

 

PUB: Call for Essays: 29th International Competitions of Holy Quran > Writers Afrika

Call for Essays:

29th International

Competitions of Holy Quran

 

 

Deadline: 12 May 2012

The Holy Quran is the Divine Book and the unrivaled and insurmountable miracle of Allah the Almighty, brought by the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).

So far 14 centuries have passed and nobody could have challenged its sublime language and style. The authenticity of its contents has shed light for the mankind, especially for its devout and ardent followers.

The brilliant verses of the Quran contain what is necessary for the felicity of the mankind. Therefore, the mankind has been in debt to the teachings of the Holy Quran, for it contains the ways to reach full development and spiritual proximity to the Almighty Allah. In the light of this capacity, the Quran exegetes and researchers have made extensive research to find out more about the solutions offered for the crisis of the mankind, past and present. In view of this capacity, the cultural division of Iranian endowments & charity affairs organization and the University of Quran Sciences and Knowledge (based at Qom) have decided to schedule a conference for upgrading the echelon of cultural enrichment on an international level through holding the 29th International competitions of Holy Quran. The sessions held will deal with articles submitted for participation in the competition. It is hoped that such contributions will lead to exploring more so-far-hidden aspects of the miracle of the Holy Quran. A selection of the articles will be published in the proceedings of the conference.

MAIN ISSUES AND SUBORDINATE TOPICS FOR WRITING QURANIC ARTICLES:

I. QURAN AND ISLAMIC AWAKENING

1. Foundations and characteristics of Islamic Awakening from the Perspective of the Holy Quran

2. Mechanisms of Realization of Islamic Awakening based on the Teachings of the Holy Quran

3. Causes of Deviation of Muslim Communities from Divine Goals in the Movements of Islamic Awakening from the Perspective of the Holy Quran

4. Factors and Mechanisms of safeguarding and Continuation of Islamic Awakening from the Perspective of the Holy Quran

5. Islamic Awakening and Materialization of Divine promises in the Holy Quran

6. Pathology of Islamic Movements according to the Holy Quran

7. Analysis of the Role of Zionism in the Deviation of Islamic Movements according to the Teachings of the Holy Quran

8. Ways of Interference of the West in the Movements of Islamic Awakening and Mechanisms of Counteracting them from the Perspective of the Holy Quran

9. Role of Unity in the Realization and Continuation of the Movements of Islamic Awakening and Conspiracies of Enemy in Opposing this Role according to the Holy Quran
10. Role of Leadership in the awakening of Muslim Communities according t
o the Holy Quran

11. Role and Position of the Teachings of the holy Quran in Realization, Organization, and Leading of Islamic Movements

12. Role and Position of Enlightened Youth in the Movements of Islamic Awakening according to the Teachings of the Holy Quran

13. Role of Women in the Movements of Islamic Awakening according to the Teachings of the Holy Quran

14. Characteristics of Islamic Awakening in the Islamic Revolution of Iran and Comparing them to the Recent Islamic Movements in the Light of Quranic Criteria

15. Necessity of the Establishment of a Just Islamic Government according to the Holy Quran

16. A Study of the Political System of the Islamic Republic of Iran as a Quranic, Islamic Example of a highly Qualified and Desirable System

II. THE HOLY QURAN AND PERFECTION OF HUMAN SOCIETY

1. Nature of Perfection and Spiritual Happiness in the Holy Quran

2. Features of Perfect Human Being in the Holy Quran along with a Study of Examples

3. Islamic Lifestyle according to the Holy Quran and Islamic Teachings

4. Position of Islamic Morality in the Teachings of the Holy Quran and its Role in the Perfection of Individual and Society

5. Nature of Islamic Ethical Values in the Holy Quran and Comparing them to the Ethical Norms of Western Foundations

6. Mechanisms of Realization of Islamic Morality towards Reaching a Perfect Society according to the Holy Quran

7. Factors of deviation of society from Moral Values as Examples of Cultural Invasion and Mechanisms of Counteracting them according to the Holy Quran

8. Ethical Pathology of the Youth and Mechanisms of Counteracting Moral Deviations according to the Holy Quran and Islamic Teachings

9. Quranic Mechanisms towards the Immunity of the Society against Dangerous Effects of Satellites, Internet, Computer Games, ……

10. Ways and Means of Benefitting from the Capacity of New Media and communication towards Materialization and Development of a Quranic Society

11. Role of Family in Counteracting Cultural Invasion , and Promotion of the Culture of Islamic Decency in the Society according to the Holy Quran

12. Role of Family in Safeguarding the Society and Mechanisms of its Realization based on the Holy Quran

WRITING STRUCTURE/FORMATTING

The Structure of Writing Essays for 29th International Competitions of Holy Quran

1- The structure of essay should follow: title, abstract, key words, introduction, main body text, conclusion, endnote (if there is), and references.

2- At the end of any quoted sentences should mention to the reference in a parenthesis as: (name and sure name of the author, published year, volume, page).

Note 1: repeated references should mention as the same first time. Do not use words like Ibid, opt …

Note 2: If there is more than a works for an author, specify it by alphabetical letters.

3- Additional explanations and proper names or expressions should come at the end of main body text titled endnote (references here would be as the same main body text that noted above).

4- References should sort based on alphabetical arrangement as:

• Book: sure name and first name (published year), title, translator (if there is), publication location, publisher, publishing number, volume.

• Essay: sure name and first name (published year), title, the name of journal, volume.

5- Abstract should contain 300 words including: JEL classification, title, subject, methodology of research and its most consequences, key words (utmost 10 words)

• Papers should select in a form of with margins: top 2cm, bottom 2.5cm, right and left 2cm.

• Essays should write in one column.

• Font should be Times New Roman 14

• Line spacing should be single.

KEY POINTS:

  • Whole document should contain 25 pages of 300 words.
  • It should have not published anywhere else.
  • Accepted essays will publish in a proceeding of 29th essays of international competition of holey Quran.

Full paper submission due: 12 May 2012

Notification of paper acceptance: 10 June 2012

Online submission will be available in: March 10

CONTACT INFORMATION:

For inquiries: via their online contact form

For submissions: submit online here

Website: http://www.pmfso.ir

 

 

VIDEO: 'Kinshasa Symphony': An Ode To Musical Joy In Central Africa : Deceptive Cadence > NPR

An amazing new documentary film is a must-see not just for music lovers, but for anyone who needs to see the nourishing power of the arts and human connections.

Kinshasa Symphony takes us into the everyday lives of the members of a most unlikely ensemble: the Orchestre Symphonique Kimbanguiste, located in the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, a place ravaged by war, endemic poverty and corruption.

The constant hassles and logistical problems these amateur musicians face should give serious pause to those of us leading far more privileged lives in music. They tackle big pieces — like Beethoven's Ninth Symphony and Orff's Carmina Burana — out of sheer love, learning their instruments and craft as they go.

Conductor Armand Diangienda founded the orchestra in 1994 after losing his job as an airline pilot. Never conservatory trained, he calls himself "just inquisitive by nature." He named the ensemble after his grandfather, Simon Kimbangu, a political icon in Congolese history, who also founded a Christian sect that went on to become Africa's largest independent African church.

When Diangienda first gathered 12 young people who wanted to learn to play the violin, he had only five instruments: "One of them would play for 20 minutes, and then pass the violin on to the next one." When violin strings broke, they replaced them with brake cables from old bicycles. When they needed a C trumpet, they cut up another instrument. And when they needed a bell for another trumpet, they transformed the wheel rim from an old minibus.

Albert Nlandu Matubanza, the orchestra's manager, also makes many of the orchestra's instruments himself. Years ago, there were many more instruments available in Kinshasa, but as Matubanza ruefully notes, a lot of them were stolen. Out of necessity, Matubanza has become a self-taught luthier; he took apart his own bass to figure out how it was made, then started making stringed instruments to equip the orchestra.

The group's open-air rehearsals are frequently punctuated by the noise and noxious clouds of dust and diesel spewed by cars and trucks passing along Kinshasa's unpaved streets. Electrical outages are frequent — so much so that the orchestra has a routine to deal with the annoyance. One of the group's violists, Joseph Masunda Lutete, knows to step in immediately: "When there's a power cut," he says, "I just drop my instrument and go start the generator."

The film's narrative arc takes us to their performance of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony in an empty, dirt-filled public square. But what is most revealing, and most gripping, is to see how these musicians deal with the impossible reality of Kinshasa, made possible every day by its hardworking, creative and tenacious people. One of the most wrenching segments follows Nathalie Bahati, a flutist and single mother, as she struggles to find a $40 per month apartment to keep little more than a roof over the head of the young son who accompanies her everywhere, including to her rehearsals.

The joy they take in their music-making is what gets them through. As the orchestra's concertmaster, Héritier Mayimbi Mbuangi says, "When we're working on the music, there are no limits. It's like a staircase: You go up, and up."

via npr.org

 

REVIEW: Movies—Black Love on Celluloid: 9 Films You Should Know > The Root

Black Love:

9 Films You Should Know


Denzel Washington and Sarita Choudhury in Mississippi Masala (Black River Productions)

 

I must say that it has been a lot of fun watching people express their love for one another this week. Although Valentine's Day is clearly a commercial "holiday," it actually gets people thinking about ways to demonstrate their love to their partners. Many believe that couples should demonstrate their love throughout the year, but Valentine's Day is a good reminder to show your appreciation for the one you love. It is always fun to watch colleagues delight (or not) in receiving flowers and other tokens of appreciation at work.

What I have especially loved about this Valentine's Day are the many online expressions of black love, which began before Valentine's Day, with the anniversary of the Obamas. Photos of the couple -- who appear to have a strong marriage that is built on faith, mutual respect and affection -- were present on social networks pretty much everywhere.

But black love doesn't always have to be famous love, as indicated by the many readers who sent in photos for the The Root's Celebrating Black Love photo gallery. What this says to me is that contrary to popular discourse about blacks and relationships -- which is often negative and denigrating -- black people still want and need to be loved and want to show the world the depth of that love, which may also include people of other racial and ethnic backgrounds. In my world, that's pretty courageous and cool, particularly in the face so much venom directed at blacks in relationships throughout the year.

In honor of black love and to keep the celebration going, I decided to pull together a list of films that represent black love in all of its manifestations that you may not have heard about, thought about or seen. Sorry to disappoint you, but Love JonesHav PlentyMahogany and Claudine were purposely left off of this list. Some films do not have a love relationship at the center of the narrative but feature a strong relationship in the subplot. Other films don't necessarily represent romantic love with a Hollywood ending, but couples trying to make it work in tough times. 

Nothing but a Man (1964)
This film examines the relationship between a working-class man, Duff Anderson (Ivan Dixon), and a schoolteacher, Josie Dawson (Abbey Lincoln), as they attempt to build a relationship in the Jim Crow South.Nothing but a Man exposes how the stress of living under racial and economic tyranny can affect relationships and one's sense of self. Duff and Josie must fight against society -- including Josie's father, a reverend who doesn't believe that Duff is good enough for his daughter -- while trying not to fight each other under dire social circumstances. This film features strong performances by the late legendary actor-director Ivan Dixon and jazz legend Abbey Lincoln. If that isn't enough for you, the cinematography is mind-blowing.

Killer of Sheep (1977)
Filmed in Watts in Los Angeles, Killer of Sheep, directed by Charles Burnett, is a study of the life of a couple trying to survive poverty and each other. Stan (Henry G. Sanders) works in a slaughterhouse, while his wife (Kaycee Moore) stays home, raising their daughter. The film is not a romantic look at love, but a real look at what it takes to stay married amid the struggle against poverty. The film poses no solutions; rather, it gives the viewer a look at the day in the life of a young family trying to keep love alive in a world that has literally discarded them. Burnett's film has been named a national treasure by the Library of Congress. Check it out and see what it takes for some couples to show up every day to face the world and each other.

Looking for Langston (1989)
Featuring the poetry of Langston Hughes, Isaac Julien's fantasy black-and-white film examines black gay men during the Harlem Renaissance. The film explores high society in Harlem during the 1920s with intertextual references to archival footage and photos that juxtapose the past and the present in a symbolic and meaningful way. Alex (Ben Ellison) explores his relationship with his lover Beauty (Matthew Baidoo) through a dream sequence, highlighting the complexity of being black and gay during the Harlem Renaissance. The film demonstrates the need for freedom to be true to oneself, as well as the certain death that occurs when that cannot happen because of other people's stuff.

Mississippi Masala (1991)
Directed by Mira Nair, Mississippi Masala stars Denzel Washington and Sarita Choudhury, who meet and fall in love in a small town in Mississippi. Demetrius (Washington) and Meena (Choudhury) come from two very different worlds: Demetrius is a black entrepreneur trying to succeed in a small town filled with even smaller minds, and Meena is from a working-class Indian family, bound by tradition and honor. Demetrius and Meena connect through sheer attraction and learn that they have more in common (as disenfranchised members of local and global communities) as they pursue their love against all odds.

Café au Lait (1993)
Black love can also be free love, particularly in Paris, as evidenced by this cinematic gem from the early 1990s. Biracial Lola (Julie Maudeuch) is in love with Jamal (Hubert Kounde), a well-heeled son of an African diplomat, and Felix (Mathieu Kassovitz), an impoverished Jewish bicycle messenger. If this storyline sounds familiar, Cafe Au Lait is Kassowitz' homage to Spike Lee's She's Gotta Have It, featuring an interracial ménage à trois and a surprise pregnancy to boot. If you wonder what would have happened had Lola Darling become pregnant during her trysts, check out Cafe Au Lait, which unpacks issues of interracial dating, class and sexuality in a thoughtful and comedic way.

The Incredibly True Adventures of Two Girls in Love (1995)
This film introduces us to Nicole Ari-Parker (Brown Sugar/Soul Food), who plays the character of Evie, a well-off teenager whose unlikely friendship with Randy Dean (Laurel Holloman), a poor white girl being raised by a same-sex couple, develops into a love affair. The film explores themes of interracial romance, queer identity and conflict over class that sometimes supersede issues over race and sexuality. As we celebratePariah, we can also appreciate this film, which introduced viewers to the challenges of being in love as a young person when society, including your family, rages against you.

Jerry Maguire (1996)
The addition of this film may be a shocker to some, but one of my favorite representations of black love in film history is Rod and Marcee Tidwell, played brilliantly by Cuba Gooding Jr. and Regina King, who really should have gotten the Academy Award for her performance as the original ride-or-die chick in contemporary film history. You know the story: Sports agent Jerry Maguire (Tom Cruise) has an epiphany, gets fired and starts a new firm and a new life. Tidwell demonstrates his loyalty by joining Maguire and demanding loyalty and dividends in return. While Maguire is learning to love in this film, the Tidwells already know how to love, and they demonstrate it in their personal and professional lives.

Slam (1998)
Ray Joshua (Saul Williams) is a gifted poet who is trying to rise above his surroundings in an impoverished D.C. neighborhood (Dodge City) through his poetry, but cannot seem to free himself from his hustle mentality. Joshua meets Lauren (Sonja Sohn), a poet and community activist who helps change his outlook on life and challenges him to be a better man in the process. The film boasts strong performances by Williams and Sohn, as well as slam-poetry performances that are intense, thoughtful and provocative.

Something New (2006) 
Sanaa Lathan, Simon Baker and Blair Underwood. Need I say more? Kenya McQueen (Lathan) is an upwardly mobile businesswoman who is unknowingly set up on a date with a white man, landscaper Brian Kelly (Baker). Despite her best attempt at rebuffing his attention, Kenya slowly but surely realizes that she and Brian make a good couple, to the chagrin of her well-to-do parents and hypocritical brother. Enter black doctor Mark (Underwood), and Kenya must decide whom to please -- herself or her friends and family.

Nsenga K. Burton, Ph.D., is editor-at-large for The Root. Follow her on Twitter.

 

POV + VIDEO: I Am Good Enough, Are You? > Clutch Magazine

I Am Good Enough, Are You?

Wednesday Mar 14, 2012 – by

 

I sat bewildered in front of my television screen last Monday evening entranced in an episode of VH1’s Basketball Wives. I’ll be the first to admit that I don’t watch the show weekly, but when I saw many young, well-versed, educated women of color on my Twitter timeline discussing the antics of the show’s breakout star Evelyn Lozada I immediately tuned in. I thought I’d find her fighting someone yet again, but what I saw was a woman deeply in love pleading with her fiancée Chad Ochocinco to keep it real about sleeping with other women.

“I want you to be 100 with me,” Evelyn cried. “I’d rather know. Tell me, I want to know. Go to the pharmacy and get condoms. I’m going to be sick like a mother—-er, but what can I do but respect you and know that you’re telling me the truth rather than hide it. At the end the day you don’t have to tell me nothing. I don’t want to have to babysit you, but I’d rather you be real with me because Lord knows what could happen.”

My first thought was disappointment. Disappointment that yet another woman of color was on national television sending a horrible message to the millions of young women who tune in every week to watch the show. I cringed at the thought of some woman out there accepting that her man’s going to cheat here and there, and she’s just supposed to deal with it the best way she knows how.

“He’s a ball player, so Evelyn already knows what the situation is,” one of my good guy friends casually explained to me. “She can either deal with it or be gone, because he’s going to cheat.”

Deal with it or be gone? Is that the only option? That can’t be the only option.

While ballplayers and extremely successful men are known to be more prone to step-out on their women, they certainly aren’t the only one’s.  According to a recent study, about 70% of married men admitted to cheating on their wives. It is also estimated that roughly 30% to 60% of all married couples will engage in some form of infidelity at some point during the course of their marriage.

“We live in different times,” one of my close girlfriends assured me. “More than likely you will get cheated on. Many men keep options on the side and women too. Even if you’re not sleeping with that person, most never completely cut strings of old flames or new one’s.” And to my surprise a number of my girlfriends agreed with her.

Maybe I’m old fashioned or in serious denial of the times, but whatever happened to being “enough” for your significant other? While we’re all human and there’s no question that temptation from the opposite sex is there, is it naïve to think that in today’s twenty-four hour world of new technology and immediate gratification, that monogamy is no longer an option ?

Yes, it does seem that faithfulness is not winning these days, with cheating scandals always in the news, constantly the center of attention on top rated reality shows, continuously discussed on social networks and even the topic of conversation at our dinner tables. Still, looking at strong couples of color like Kimora Lee and Dijimon Hounsou, Denzel and Pauletta Washington, Spike Lee and Tonya Lee, Boris Kodjoe and Nicole Ari Parker, Grant and Tamia Hill, President Barack and Michelle Obama and more importantly my parents and grandparents show me that faithfulness in a relationship should not only be an option, it should be a priority.

I refuse to give in and believe that I can’t be “good enough” for the man that loves me. I KNOW I’m good enough, matter of fact, I’m great enough and you are too!

 

ECONOMICS: When a Congressman Becomes a Lobbyist, He Gets a 1,452% Raise (on Average) > Republic Report

 

Aerial view of former Senator Tom Daschle's multimillion dollar mansion in northwest Washington, D.C. In 2008, Daschle reported an unregistered lobbying salary of over $2.1 million a year, in addition to hundreds of thousands in fees from consulting and speaking gigs.


Update: Our story got picked up by Reddit (welcome to Republic Report). Please give us an upvote if you can.

 

Selling out pays. If you’re a corporation or lobbyist, what’s the best way to “buy” a member of Congress? Secretly promise them a million dollars or more in pay if they come to work for you after they leave office. Once a public official makes a deal to go to work for a lobbying firm or corporation after leaving office, he or she becomes loyal to the future employer. And since those deals are done in secret, legislators are largely free to pass laws, special tax cuts, or earmarks that benefit their future employer with little or no accountability to the public. While campaign contributions and super PACS are a big problem, the every day bribery of the revolving door may be the most pernicious form of corruption today. (See our post on Monday about current members of Congress already negotiating for jobs on K Street)

Unlike some other forms of money in politics, politicians never have to disclose job negotiations while in office, and never have to disclose how much they’re paid after leaving office. In many cases, these types of revolving door arrangements drastically shape the laws we all live under. For example, former Senator Judd Gregg (R-NH) spent his last year in office fighting reforms to bring greater transparency to the derivatives marketplace. Almost as soon as he left office, he joined the board of a derivatives trading company and became an “advisor” to Goldman Sachs. Risky derivative trading exacerbated the financial crisis of 2008, yet we’re stuck under the laws written in part by Gregg. How much has he made from the deal? Were his actions in office influenced by relationships with his future employers?

Republic Report combed through the few disclosures that are out there to find out how much lawmakers make when they sell out and lobby for interests they once oversaw as public officials. To be sure, this list only shows the tip of the iceberg (out of the 44 lawmakers who left office in 2010 for a lobbying-related career, only one is at an organization that discloses his salary).

Our research effort uncovered the partial salaries of twelve lawmakers-turned-lobbyists. Republic Report’s investigation found that lawmakers increased their salary by 1452% on average from the last year they were in office to the latest publicly available disclosure:

Former Congressman Billy Tauzin (R-LA) made $19,359,927 as a lobbyist for pharmaceutical companies between 2006 and 2010. Tauzin retired from Congress in 2005, shortly after leading the passage of President Bush’s prescription drug expansion. He was recruited to lead PhRMA, a lobbying association for Pfizer, Bayer, and other top drug companies. During the health reform debate, the former congressman helped his association block a proposal to allow Medicare to negotiate for drug prices, a major concession that extended the policies enacted in Tauzin’s original Medicare drug-purchasing scheme. Tauzin left PhRMA in late 2010. He was paid over $11 million in his last year at the trade group. Comparing Tauzin’s salary during his last year as congressman and his last year as head of PhRMA, his salary went up 7110%.

Former Congressman Cal Dooley (D-CA) has made at least $4,719,093 as a lobbyist for food manufacturers and the chemical industry from 2005 to 2009. Republic Report analyzed disclosures from the Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA), an industry lobby — for companies like Kellogg — where Dooley worked following his retirement from Congress. We also added in Dooley’s salary from the American Chemistry Council, where Dooley now works as the president. The Chemistry Council represents Dow Chemical, DuPont, and other chemical interests. Dooley’s salary jumped 1357% between his last year in the House and his last reported salary for the Chemistry Council in 2009.

Former Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT) makes approximately $1.5 million a year as the chief lobbyist for the movie industry. Dodd, who retired from the Senate after 2010, was hired by the Motion Picture Association of America, the lobbying association that represents major studios like Warner Bros. and Universal Studios. Although the MPAA would not confirm with Republic Report Dodd’s exact salary, media accounts point to $1.5 million, a slightly higher figure than the previous MPAA head, former Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman. Dodd received about a 762% raise after moving from public office to lobbying.

Former Congressman Steve Largent (R-OK) has made at least $8,815,741 over the years as a lobbyist for a coalition of cell phone companies and related wireless industry interests. Republic Report analyzed disclosures from CTIA-The Wireless Association, the trade group Largent leads. CTIA counts wireless companies like AT&T, HTC, and Motorola as members. Largent left Congress in 2002, when his pay was about $150,000 as a public official. His move to the CTIA trade association, where he earns slightly more than $1.5 million a year according to the latest disclosure form, raised his salary by 912%.

Former Senator Tom Daschle (D-SD) makes well over $2.1 million as an unregistered lobbyist in addition to earning several hundred thousand a year in speaking fees and consulting gigs. When Daschle lost his seat in the Senate, he went work for the lobbying/law firm Alston & Bird, while also providing advice to lobbying firms like the Glover Park Group, AHIP, the health insurance lobbying association, and several well-connected private equity and medical device companies. Although Daschle never registered to lobby, his sky-high income became public when President Obama unsuccessfully nominated the former Democratic majority leader to be Secretary of Health and Human Services. Daschle now works at DLA Piper, another major law/lobbying firm, where he likely makes far more than his Alston & Bird salary of $2.1 million given Daschle’s significant role in crafting President Obama’s health reform proposals. Not counting the speaking fees, Daschle achieved a 1228% salary increase by moving through the revolving door.

Former Congressman Richard Baker (R-LA) made $3,219,255 between 2008 and 2009 as head of a hedge fund lobbying association. Republic Report reviewed disclosures from the Managed Funds Association, a group that represents hedge funds including Caxton Associations, Magnetar Capital, and Third Point LLC. In Congress, as a member of the influential House Financial Services Committee, Baker oversaw efforts to relax regulations governing Wall Street. Baker’s salary went up 956% after he left office.

Former Congressman Jim Slattery (D-OK) makes around $585,000 a year as a lobbyist for Wiley Rein. Slattery left Congress in 1994 to run for higher office. He didn’t win. Instead, he went to work for the law/lobbying firm Wiley Rein. When Slattery again ran for statewide office in 2008 against Senator Pat Roberts (R-KS), his mandatory financial disclosure revealed that he earned $585,000 in 2007, representing clients like Verizon Communications and Nucor Corp. Comparing his 1994 House salary with his 2007 income from Wiley Rein, Slattery’s pay jumped 337%.

Former Congressman James Greenwood (R-PA) made $6,679,935 between 2005 and 2010 as the head of the Biotechnology Industry Organization. Greenwood took the job with BIO in 2004, and still leads the association, which lobbies on a wide variety of issues on behalf of industry, including genetically modified foods and biofuels. BIO members include Amgen, MedImmune, Novo Nordisk, Genentech, and Human Genone Sciences. Greenwood’s salary shot up 671% between his last year in office and his BIO salary in 2009.

Former Congressman Glenn English (D-OK) made $9,294,207 between 2004 and 2010 as the head of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association. English, who represents many coal-dependent electric cooperatives, played a significant role in weakening climate reform legislation in 2009. Although English became head of the NREOA after 1994, Republic Report only had access to disclosures for a six year period. Comparing his congressional salary in 1994 and his last reported lobbying salary in 2009, English’s pay went up 1504%.

Former Congressman Steve Bartlett (R-TX) has made at least $9,192,761 as the chief lobbyist for an association of investment banks, including Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and JP Morgan Chase. Bartlett has worked as the head of the Financial Services Roundtable, a trade association he joined in 1999. Republic Report could only obtain disclosures from recent years, providing us an incomplete picture of his salary. Bartlett’s salary at the Financial Services Roundtable is 1770% higher than his last year in Congress.

Former Congressman Matt Salmon (R-AZ) makes around $247,523 a year as a registered lobbyist. Salmon, who retired from Congress in 2001, has represented corporate clients like General Motors and Grand Canyon University (a for-profit college) through a lobbying firm he founded, Upstream Consulting Inc. (Although his income boost was lower than most of his fellow Members-turned-lobbyists, Salmon does get props for the witty firm name.) Salmon announced his intention to run again for Congress, so Republic Report reviewed mandatory candidate disclosures filed by the candidate. The forms reveal that Salmon also receives consulting fees from Policy Impact Strategic Communicators, another lobbying company, as well as nearly $50,000 a year from a company called Solid Ground Solutions. At Policy Impact Strategic Communications, Salmon represented the Republic of Kazahkstan. Salmon enjoyed a 75% salary boost by moving from Congress to K Street.

Former Senator Gordon Smith (R-OR) has made at least $1,650,005 as a media broadcasting industry lobbyist since 2009. Smith is president of the National Association of Broadcasters, a trade group for companies like News Corp and Time Warner. Republic Report has not reviewed NAB disclosures from 2011. Smith’s last reported broadcasting lobby salary is 742% higher than his Senate salary in 2008.

 

HISTORY: Richard Theodore Greener—‘It gives me gooseflesh’: Remarkable find in South Side attic > Chicago Sun-Times

‘It gives me gooseflesh’: Remarkable find in South Side attic

Story Image

Richard Theodore Greener (1844-1922), Harvard Class of 1870

storyidforme: 27016637
tmspicid: 9796850
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RICHARD
THEODORE
GREENER’S ACHIEVEMENTS

• First African American to graduate from Harvard, in 1870.

• Appointed professor of Philosophy, University of South Carolina, in 1873.

• Admitted to practice law before Supreme Court of South Carolina, in 1876.

• Made dean of Howard University School of Law, in 1879.

• Helped elect several Republican presidents and in 1896 helped persuade the Republican Party to give an unqualified condemnation of lynching.

• Appointed to work for the foreign service in Vladivostok, Russia, in 1898.

• Awarded the Order of the Double Dragon for his services to China, in 1902.

Article Extras

Updated: March 11, 2012 3:33AM

It wasn’t much more than a ghost house by the time Rufus McDonald got the call.

The front door of the abandoned home near 75th and Sangamon was unlocked and swinging in the wind.

Drug addicts, squatters and stray animals carried away whatever they wanted. Everything that wasn’t termite-infested seemed to have been stolen. Even the copper pipes were gone.

But the scavengers missed something incredible.

Hidden in the attic that McDonald was contracted to clear before the home’s 2009 demolition was a trunk. Inside were the papers of Richard T. Greener, the first African American to graduate from Harvard.

“I didn’t know who he was,” said McDonald, 51. “But as soon as I found out, I knew this was a story that had to be told.”

Historians thought the documents were lost in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake because Greener had passed through at the time. They were astonished to learn in the past week that Greener’s 1870 Harvard diploma — water-damaged but intact — his law license, photos and papers connected to his diplomatic role in Russia and his friendship with President Ulysses S. Grant have survived.

“It gives me gooseflesh,” said Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., who leads Harvard’s W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African-American Research. “Greener was a leading intellectual of his time. It’s a remarkable discovery.”

His graduation blazed a trail for black Harvard intellectuals including Gates’ friend, President Barack Obama, the professor added. “He was the voice before DuBois and the president’s predecessor.”

Declined money on the spot

When McDonald found the steamer trunk in the Englewood attic, he suspected the contents inside were important but wasn’t sure.

The presence of the 1853 book Autographs for Freedom inside added to the intrigue.

Members of his clean-out crew told him to throw the heavy trunk and its contents away.

McDonald knew better.

He packed up the documents in a brown-paper bag and hauled them out of the house, bringing them to a book expert on the North Side.

“Do you know who Richard Greener was?” McDonald was asked. When he told him he didn’t, the expert explained Greener’s importance.

McDonald was offered money for the documents on the spot, but he declined.

He went back to the Englewood home, hoping to retrieve the steamer trunk. By then, however, not only was the trunk gone, so was the entire house. Demolished.

How the documents got to the Englewood attic is a question that might never be answered. Greener lived the final years of his life with cousins in Hyde Park. But there’s no evidence he ever lived in the Englewood home, which is nearly six miles away.

Sadness in personal life

If Greener’s importance as a “black first” and his public roles as a brilliant attorney, scholar, diplomat and orator devoted to racial equality secure his place in history, his private life was tainted by sadness, historians say.

Though Greener was helped by a handful of whites, he was resented by some blacks and was trapped under a glass ceiling that prevented him from becoming a more significant figure, they add. The discovery could encourage a fresh look at his legacy.

Born to the son of a slave in Philadelphia in 1844, he left school at 14 and became a porter at a Boston hotel.

A pair of white businessmen took him under their wing and helped him enroll at Harvard in 1865.

Harvard admitted him as “an experiment,” according to historian Michael Mounter, who wrote a Ph.D. thesis on Greener. Greener initially struggled but eventually thrived. He made allies including U.S. Sen. Charles Sumner and won prizes for public speaking and essays.

In 1873, he was appointed professor of philosophy at the University of South Carolina. He dodged an assassination attempt by a “red shirt” at an 1876 rally, but lost his job a year later when racist Democrats were elected.

Became law school dean

Married to Genevieve Ida Fleet, with whom he had six children, he became dean of Howard University’s law school; worked at the U.S. Treasury and in Republican politics and law in Washington, and befriended President Ulysses S. Grant, whose memorial he helped build.

A friend and sometimes rival of other leading African Americans of his era, including Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington, he wrote in 1879: “The negro has received so many hard knocks, and experienced so little consideration, charity, or justice from those who criticize him, that he has no quarter to give.”

In an 1894 essay he pointedly renamed the “Negro Problem” as “The White Problem.”

Sick of Washington politics, in 1898 he accepted a post from President William McKinley in Vladivostok, Russia. Leaving his family, he took a Japanese common-law wife, Mishi Kawashima, with whom he had three children. He was praised for his efforts as a U.S. agent during the Russo-Japanese war, but he was fired in 1905 after a smear campaign.

From 1909 until his death in 1922 he lived with cousins at 5237 S. Ellis in Chicago. Cut off from both his families, he was likely visited just once in Hyde Park by his daughter Belle da Costa Greene, according to biographer Heidi Ardizzone.

Along with the rest of Greener’s first family, da Costa Greene — the chic director of banker J.P. Morgan’s personal library — changed her last name to pass as white in elite New York society. “Greener had so much intelligence and passion and to see his equally talented children not have their achievements counted as African American must have been heartbreaking,” Ardizzone said.

Da Costa Greene burned her own personal papers before her death in 1950. The discovery of some of her father’s documents in an Englewood attic is “every historian’s dream,” Ardizzone said.

McDonald “is to be commended” for his discovery, Gates added.

Harvard would love documents

Harvard, the DuSable Museum of African American History, the Pierpont Morgan Library, the Black Metropolis Research Consortium and Greener’s granddaughter from his second marriage, Evelyn Bausman, 75, of Connecticut, all are interested in the documents. Bausman called the find “amazing.”

Gates — known for his 2009 “beer summit” on the White House lawn with President Obama and a Cambridge cop who arrested him on his own doorstep — says he would “love to bring the artifacts to Harvard.” He said he would offer “a fair price” but warned McDonald not to expect to get rich.

McDonald’s own education ended when he graduated from Calumet High School. But he says his research into the story behind the documents has made him proud of Greener’s story.

“You have to wonder, if Greener hadn’t graduated from Harvard, would Obama have gone to law school there?” he said. “Would Obama be president?”

HISTORY: Richard Theodore Greener—‘It gives me gooseflesh’: Remarkable find in South Side attic > Chicago Sun-Times

‘It gives me gooseflesh’:

Remarkable find in

South Side attic

Richard Theodore Greener (1844-1922), Harvard Class of 1870

storyidforme: 27016637
tmspicid: 9796850
fileheaderid: 4479723

 

 

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

 

RICHARD THEODORE  GREENER’S ACHIEVEMENTS

• First African American to graduate from Harvard, in 1870.

• Appointed professor of Philosophy, University of South Carolina, in 1873.

• Admitted to practice law before Supreme Court of South Carolina, in 1876.

• Made dean of Howard University School of Law, in 1879.

• Helped elect several Republican presidents and in 1896 helped persuade the Republican Party to give an unqualified condemnation of lynching.

• Appointed to work for the foreign service in Vladivostok, Russia, in 1898.

• Awarded the Order of the Double Dragon for his services to China, in 1902.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

 

It wasn’t much more than a ghost house by the time Rufus McDonald got the call.

The front door of the abandoned home near 75th and Sangamon was unlocked and swinging in the wind.

Drug addicts, squatters and stray animals carried away whatever they wanted. Everything that wasn’t termite-infested seemed to have been stolen. Even the copper pipes were gone.

But the scavengers missed something incredible.

Hidden in the attic that McDonald was contracted to clear before the home’s 2009 demolition was a trunk. Inside were the papers of Richard T. Greener, the first African American to graduate from Harvard.

“I didn’t know who he was,” said McDonald, 51. “But as soon as I found out, I knew this was a story that had to be told.”

Historians thought the documents were lost in the 1906 San Francisco earthquake because Greener had passed through at the time. They were astonished to learn in the past week that Greener’s 1870 Harvard diploma — water-damaged but intact — his law license, photos and papers connected to his diplomatic role in Russia and his friendship with President Ulysses S. Grant have survived.

“It gives me gooseflesh,” said Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., who leads Harvard’s W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African-American Research. “Greener was a leading intellectual of his time. It’s a remarkable discovery.”

His graduation blazed a trail for black Harvard intellectuals including Gates’ friend, President Barack Obama, the professor added. “He was the voice before DuBois and the president’s predecessor.”

Declined money on the spot

When McDonald found the steamer trunk in the Englewood attic, he suspected the contents inside were important but wasn’t sure.

The presence of the 1853 book Autographs for Freedom inside added to the intrigue.

Members of his clean-out crew told him to throw the heavy trunk and its contents away.

McDonald knew better.

He packed up the documents in a brown-paper bag and hauled them out of the house, bringing them to a book expert on the North Side.

“Do you know who Richard Greener was?” McDonald was asked. When he told him he didn’t, the expert explained Greener’s importance.

McDonald was offered money for the documents on the spot, but he declined.

He went back to the Englewood home, hoping to retrieve the steamer trunk. By then, however, not only was the trunk gone, so was the entire house. Demolished.

How the documents got to the Englewood attic is a question that might never be answered. Greener lived the final years of his life with cousins in Hyde Park. But there’s no evidence he ever lived in the Englewood home, which is nearly six miles away.

Sadness in personal life

If Greener’s importance as a “black first” and his public roles as a brilliant attorney, scholar, diplomat and orator devoted to racial equality secure his place in history, his private life was tainted by sadness, historians say.

Though Greener was helped by a handful of whites, he was resented by some blacks and was trapped under a glass ceiling that prevented him from becoming a more significant figure, they add. The discovery could encourage a fresh look at his legacy.

Born to the son of a slave in Philadelphia in 1844, he left school at 14 and became a porter at a Boston hotel.

A pair of white businessmen took him under their wing and helped him enroll at Harvard in 1865.

Harvard admitted him as “an experiment,” according to historian Michael Mounter, who wrote a Ph.D. thesis on Greener. Greener initially struggled but eventually thrived. He made allies including U.S. Sen. Charles Sumner and won prizes for public speaking and essays.

In 1873, he was appointed professor of philosophy at the University of South Carolina. He dodged an assassination attempt by a “red shirt” at an 1876 rally, but lost his job a year later when racist Democrats were elected.

Became law school dean

Married to Genevieve Ida Fleet, with whom he had six children, he became dean of Howard University’s law school; worked at the U.S. Treasury and in Republican politics and law in Washington, and befriended President Ulysses S. Grant, whose memorial he helped build.

A friend and sometimes rival of other leading African Americans of his era, including Frederick Douglass and Booker T. Washington, he wrote in 1879: “The negro has received so many hard knocks, and experienced so little consideration, charity, or justice from those who criticize him, that he has no quarter to give.”

In an 1894 essay he pointedly renamed the “Negro Problem” as “The White Problem.”

Sick of Washington politics, in 1898 he accepted a post from President William McKinley in Vladivostok, Russia. Leaving his family, he took a Japanese common-law wife, Mishi Kawashima, with whom he had three children. He was praised for his efforts as a U.S. agent during the Russo-Japanese war, but he was fired in 1905 after a smear campaign.

From 1909 until his death in 1922 he lived with cousins at 5237 S. Ellis in Chicago. Cut off from both his families, he was likely visited just once in Hyde Park by his daughter Belle da Costa Greene, according to biographer Heidi Ardizzone.

Along with the rest of Greener’s first family, da Costa Greene — the chic director of banker J.P. Morgan’s personal library — changed her last name to pass as white in elite New York society. “Greener had so much intelligence and passion and to see his equally talented children not have their achievements counted as African American must have been heartbreaking,” Ardizzone said.

Da Costa Greene burned her own personal papers before her death in 1950. The discovery of some of her father’s documents in an Englewood attic is “every historian’s dream,” Ardizzone said.

McDonald “is to be commended” for his discovery, Gates added.

Harvard would love documents

Harvard, the DuSable Museum of African American History, the Pierpont Morgan Library, the Black Metropolis Research Consortium and Greener’s granddaughter from his second marriage, Evelyn Bausman, 75, of Connecticut, all are interested in the documents. Bausman called the find “amazing.”

Gates — known for his 2009 “beer summit” on the White House lawn with President Obama and a Cambridge cop who arrested him on his own doorstep — says he would “love to bring the artifacts to Harvard.” He said he would offer “a fair price” but warned McDonald not to expect to get rich.

McDonald’s own education ended when he graduated from Calumet High School. But he says his research into the story behind the documents has made him proud of Greener’s story.

“You have to wonder, if Greener hadn’t graduated from Harvard, would Obama have gone to law school there?” he said. “Would Obama be president?”

 

 

 

__________________________

 

 


Richard T. Greener

Richard T. Greener, the first African American professor at the University of South Carolina and the first African American graduate of Harvard University, taught at the University of South Carolina during the era of Reconstruction from 1873 to 1877. It was unheard of to have an African American professor in a Southern university during that period. It would be decades before another black professor would be appointed at USC. In addition to teaching philosophy, Greener served as librarian and helped reorganize and catalog the library's holdings, which were in disarray after the Civil War. Greener was born Jan. 30, 1844, and passed away in 1922.

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>via: http://www.suntimes.com/photos/galleries/index.html?story=11149243