PUB: McGraw-Hill Black History Month Scholarship

The 2011 McGraw-Hill Black History Essay Contest & Scholarship

The McGraw-Hill Companies
Deadline: February 28th, 2011

The McGraw-Hill Companies, recognized as the #1 employer on the HBCU Connect Top 50 Employer list for 2 consecutive years, along with HBCU Connect, is proud to announce the 2nd annual Black History Month Essay Contest!

The Essay Contest is open to all undergraduate and graduate students who attend a Historically Black College or University. Students must be able to show proof of enrollment status.

The top three (3) winners will receive an Amazon Kindle and a copy of the e-Book: "Influence: The Power to Change Anything". The 10 runners up will receive a hard copy of the same book.

All participants who submit an essay are also encouraged to submit a resume if they are interested in an internship at The McGraw-Hill Companies.

Instructions:

In 500 words or less, explain how being educated at a Historically Black College or University will help you be a future influencer.

  • Essay submission deadline: February 28, 2011
  • Essay word limit: 500 maximum
  • Participants are encouraged to submit their resume along with the Essay
  • Contact scholarships@hbcuconnect.com if you have any questions
  • Winners will be announced by March 31st
Internships at McGraw-Hill
The McGraw-Hill Companies Internship Program is committed to providing students the opportunity to gain valuable work experience while learning about the exciting work offered by The McGraw-Hill Companies. A variety of internships are available at our businesses including McGraw-Hill Education, Standard & Poor's, J.D. Power and Associates, Broadcasting, as well as our other leading brands. Through our internship program, interns will have the ability to gain valuable industry knowledge through their assignments and further their career development. To view our internship opportunities visit our intern portal.

 

Essay Submission Form
If you have an account with HBCUConnect.com, please LOG IN before submitting your resume and essay. Otherwise, continue to apply to the scholarship.
First Name:
Last Name:
Email Address:
Resume:
Your Essay:

 

PUB: Sonia Sanchez & Amiri Baraka Prize In Poetry

North Carolina A&T State University Creative Writing Program 2011 
The Sonia Sanchez and Amiri Baraka Prize in Poetry

Submission period opens: February 1, 2011. Postmark deadline: March 1, 2011 (packets must be received in-house no later than March 4.)

The Creative Writing Program @ North Carolina A&T State University announces its 2011 
Sonia Sanchez and Amiri Baraka Prize in Poetry

We inaugurate this competition on the anniversary of the A&T Four Greensboro sit-in Movement and the onset of Black History Month. We seek to celebrate the courageous legacy of African-American literary achievement by honoring the legacies of two literary giants. Their literary works and personal life energies have been spent in service to the upliftment of black people worldwide and to the struggle for freedom, justice and equality for all oppressed peoples. Their scholarship. activism and poetry have reminded the world about the sacredness of human dignity and the need to preserve it. We are looking for poetry that seeks to honor the spirit of this tradition

Poetry entries: (No more than 50 lines per poem, up to 3 poems per submission, any style.) Competition will be judge by a committee of poets and writers. (should the entries not be up to our standards, we reserve the right to withhold the prize in a given year.) The winner receives 
$250 and publication on the NC A&T web site. Applicants must write in English. This competition is open to African-American writers only. Please send 4 sets of unpublished poems to the address below.

Please include the following per entry:

ľ  Four typed copies of unpublished manuscript (author's name must not appear on manuscript.)
ľ  One cover sheet with name, address, telephone, email, line count and titles of poems.
ľ  $15 reading fee in check or money order, per submission, made payable to NCAT/CWP-Poetry Prize.
ľ  Writers can submit more than one entry. Each entry must be accompanied by a separate entry fee. 
ľ  Winners to be announced April 14, 2011.
ľ  The competition is open to writers without regard to geographical region or previous publication.
ľ  SASE for acknowledgement of receipt of manuscript (optional.)
ľ  Winners and honorable mentions to be published on web site.

Please mail your submission to: 
Creative Writing Program-Poetry Prize, NC A&T State University, 1601 E. Market St., Greensboro, NC 27411.


Dr. Anjail Rashida Ahmad, Director of the Creative Writing Program, NC A&T State University, 1601 E. Market St., Greensboro, NC 27411, Tel: 336.334.7771, ext. 2370, E-mail: arahmad@ncat.edu

PUB: Universal Table/Wising Up Press: Naturalized Citizenship Project: Chinese Daughters


 


CHINESE DAUGHTERS:
All-American Girls

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
AND INTERVIEWS


The experiences of Chinese girls and young adults adopted into U.S. families in the last few decades and of the families who chose them provide us with a fascinating perspective on citizenship, both natural and naturalized, at the individual and also at the group level. 

 
  • What were the values, the understandings of culture and nationality, involved in the choice to adopt Chinese girls? 
  • How have adoptive families explained China's population control policies to their daughters? 
  • Have they made moral judgments about China's private property laws, laws which still only allow males to inherit property?  
  • How have these gender differences shaped attitudes toward civil rights and  gender equality consciously or unconsciously for these girls and for the families that have wanted them?
  • What does it mean to be Chinese in appearance but not have a hyphenated cultural identity?
  •  What combinations of values and loyalties, cultural fascinations and aversions, assumptions and doubts shape your understanding of what it means to you personally to be a U.S. citizen?  What feels natural?  What feels naturalized?

     

JOIN US IF YOU HAVE AN INTERESTING STORY TO SHARE - EVEN IF YOUR DON'T LIKE TO WRITE.  We are also conducting personal interviews for women who may not feel comfortable writing themselves, so if you want to share your story, please call us  - 404-276-6046 - or e-mail us and we will work with you to include your story in the anthology.

USE A PSEUDONYM IF THAT MAKES YOU FEEL MORE COMFORTABLE SHARING YOUR STORY.  We encourage the use of pseudonyms if that makes you feel more secure because we want you to feel comfortable sharing your story.

 

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

Deadline: February 15, 2011
We make final editorial submissions on all submitted manuscripts only after the submission deadline.

Electronic submissions only.
Word or RTF.
Prose ≤5,000 words. Poetry ≤5 poems.
Payment in copies

Submit manuscripts electronically:
chinese daughters@universaltable.org 

 

 

We consider dual submissions and previously published work only if informed of this at time of submission.
We do not pay reprint fees and it is author's responsibility to get needed permissions.

 

EGYPT: The Revolution Expands & Grows Stronger - Victory Is Certain

THE REVOLUTION EXPANDS
& GROWS STRONGER

Egypt protests: Hosni Mubarak's concessions rejected

The BBC's Jim Muir says Egyptians from all walks of life are present

Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians have poured into Cairo's Tahrir Square for the latest protest calling for Hosni Mubarak's government to step down.

Correspondents say it is the biggest demonstration since the protests began on 25 January.

It comes despite the government's announcement of its plans for a peaceful transfer of power.

President Mubarak has said he will stay until elections in September.

In Tahrir Square, attempts by the army to check the identity cards of those joining the demonstration were abandoned because of the sheer weight of numbers.

Our correspondent says the message to the authorities is simple - there is huge support from all walks of Egyptian life for the protests, and the government's concessions are not enough.

Wael Ghonim, a Google executive was detained and blindfolded by state security forces for 12 days, was feted by the crowds as he entered Tahrir Square.


At the scene

The determination of people queuing to get into Tahrir Square in the late afternoon sun has not been dented by officials' announcements of a series of concessions.

"We don't care what they are promising. Our demand is the same: Mubarak must leave," says Mariam defiantly.

A man standing behind her says the authorities have ignored the views of young people for too long. "I am 55 years old, I have tolerated this president for 30 years. This young generation is braver than mine. They have motivated us," he insists.

Some demonstrators concede that plans to make constitutional changes - which the opposition has long called for - were a positive step. They say release of the Google executive and blogger, Wael Ghonim, was another boost. Now the hope is that more can be achieved by keeping up large numbers in the heart of Cairo.

He is credited with setting up the page on the Facebook social network that helped galvanise protesters.

"We will not abandon our demand and that is the departure of the regime," Mr Ghonim told protesters in the square, to cheers and applause.

Referring to the protesters who have died in clashes with the security forces, he said: "I'm not a hero but those who were martyred are the heroes."

This latest demonstration in Cairo, as the protests enter their third week, came as large crowds demonstrated in the second city, Alexandria, and other Egyptian towns and cities.

The protesters are continuing to call for Mr Mubarak to leave office immediately, and say they are sceptical about any transition managed by the government.

In his response to the protests, President Mubarak has set up a committee to propose constitutional changes, and another is being formed to carry the changes out.

Start Quote

The real test of the revolution's success or failure is whether it changes Egypt permanently - that does not mean changing the face at the top to preserve the system, it means democracy”

End Quote Jeremy Bowen BBC Middle East editor

Vice-President Omar Suleiman, who announced the formation of the new committees, said he had briefed Mr Mubarak on recent talks with the opposition, and the president had welcomed the process of "dialogue" and "national reconciliation".

"The president also underlined the importance of continuing [the process] and moving from guidelines to a clear map with a definite timetable" for a "peaceful and organised" transfer of power, he said.

Among the key expected changes are a relaxation of presidential eligibility rules, and the setting of a limit for presidential terms.

A third committee, expected to begin its work in the next few days, would investigate clashes between pro- and anti-Mubarak groups last week and refer its findings to the prosecutor-general, Mr Suleiman said.

He also said President Mubarak had issued directives to stop repressive measures against the opposition.

Meanwhile, US Vice-President Joe Biden urged Mr Suleiman to make an orderly transition of power in Egypt that is "prompt, meaningful, peaceful and legitimate", the White House said.

During a telephone call, Mr Biden also urged the immediate lifting of Egypt's emergency laws.

Fierce clashes

The BBC's Yolande Knell reports that some of the protesters in Tahrir Square concede that plans to make constitutional changes - which the opposition has long called for - are a positive step, but others are sceptical about Mr Suleiman's intentions.

Wael Ghonim, a Google executive, hugs the mother of Khaled Said, a young businessman who died last June at the hands of undercover police, at Cairo's Tahrir Square. Photo: 8 February 2011Wael Ghonim (left) is credited with setting up a Facebook page that helped galvanise protesters

"We don't trust them any more," Ahmed, one young Egyptian queuing to get into the square, told the BBC. "How can Suleiman guarantee there'll be no more violence around the election after all the attacks we've seen on young people."

A middle-aged protester, Mustafa, said: "We are asking why there is no committee for young people. He has to ask the young people what they want - this is all about the young people."

The unrest over the last two weeks has seen fierce clashes with police, and pitched battles between protesters and Mubarak supporters.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) researchers say they have confirmed the deaths of 297 people since 28 January, based on a count from seven hospitals in the cities of Cairo, Alexandria and Suez. No comprehensive death toll has been given by the Egyptian government.

Some economic activity has resumed, but authorities have delayed reopening the stock exchange until Sunday. On Friday it was estimated that the paralysis resulting from the unrest had been costing the economy an average of $310m (£193m) a day.

The number of those on Tahrir Square has been swelling each day and dropping back overnight.

Meanwhile, leaked US diplomatic cables carried on the Wikileaks website have revealed that Mr Suleiman was named as Israel's preferred candidate for the job after discussions with American officials in 2008.

As Egypt's intelligence chief, he is said to have spoken daily to the Israeli government on issues surrounding the Hamas-run Gaza Strip via a secret "hotline".

__________________________

Ahdaf Soueif: Protesters reclaim the spirit of Egypt

A young protester holds an Egyptian flag in Tahrir Square (7 February 2011)Egyptians young and old are taking part in the anti-government protests

Egyptian novelist Ahdaf Soueif reflects on humorous and poignant moments in Cairo's Tahrir Square, where she says the people are re-discovering what it means to be Egyptian.

What is happening on the streets and squares of Egypt is extraordinary; it's nothing less than millions of people re-finding their voice - and using it.

They're using it to demand the removal of Hosni Mubarak and his regime - with everything that that regime entails: the corrupt cabinet, the fraudulent parliament, the mutilated constitution and the brutal emergency laws.

And this common, over-arching demand is being given increasingly creative and individual expression.

'Depart!'

The atmosphere on Tahrir Square is like - well, imagine a fair, where the product under scrutiny is politics, economics, governance, history and the law.

Protesters hold up a banner saying "Irhal" or "Depart"The demonstrators have vowed to stay in Tahrir Square until Mr Mubarak steps down

 

Circles of people sit on what's left of the grass to talk, friends stroll arm-in-arm discussing, marchers go by chanting and singing, bands play old protest favourites and new-minted anthems.

People carry home-made placards with their own messages.

The most common, of course is "Irhal!" ("Depart!"). But with the days passing, I've seen more impatient ones like "Irhal, my arm's hurting", "Irhal, I really need a shower", "Irhal, I can't find another joke", "Irhal means leave", and others.

One man has outlined a huge airliner on the ground with used paper cups and keeps everyone out of its outlines because the plane's ready to whisk Mubarak away.


Start Quote

Ahdaf Soueif in Cairo (Photo: Omar Robert Hamilton)

"One thing that Tahrir has already given us is a sense of who we are”

Ahdaf Soueif

 

A huge sheet of plastic pockets has been hung up and the pockets are speedily filling with caricatures.

This revolution is so organic, so personal, so real, it has exploded reservoirs of creativity in everybody taking part.

Each person coming to the square brings something: medical supplies for the field clinics which are still treating the people damaged by Mr Mubarak's police and thug militias, blankets for the thousands spending the night, cartons of water, biscuits.

Teams of young volunteers collect litter. The resulting piles are labelled "National Democratic Party".

Consensus

This is not to say that all is well with us.

The government has, for the moment, withdrawn its police and its thug militias and the army sits on the periphery of Tahrir Square - to protect us.

(6 February 2011)Protesters are sleeping on the tracks of the tanks to prevent the army from moving them

 

But the army has now put up barbed wire to narrow the entrances and exits and they're trying to move their tanks further into the square.

When the young people lay down in front of the tanks Sunday night, they fired volleys of shots into the air and dragged away three young men and beat them. The situation was diffused when a well-liked public figure intervened.

This is what we older revolutionaries are doing - putting everything we have at the service of the brave young people who have cleared a space from which we can all join the effort to reclaim our state.

Tahrir has become our civic space where leftists and liberals and Muslim Brotherhood discuss and sing and eat together.

The other cities and towns of Egypt have sent popular delegations.

The consensus is that the consensus will come out of Tahrir.

And one thing that Tahrir has already given us is a sense of who we are.

'Revolution'

People are actually articulating: "They said we were divided, extreme, ignorant, fanatic - well here we are: diverse, inclusive, hospitable, generous, sophisticated, creative and witty."

Ahdaf Soueif speaks to the crowd in Cairo's Tahrir Square (Photo: Omar Robert Hamilton)Ahdaf Soueif addressed the crowd of demonstrators in Tahrir Square last Friday

 

In Philip Pullman's Northern Lights, the aim of the evil guys is to sever children from their spirits so releasing the energy needed by the government.

Well, that's a brilliant metaphor for what we feel has been happening to us in Egypt.

We were being deliberately severed from everything we hold dear, in the service of keeping the region subservient to American and Israeli interests.

And the only Egyptians to gain anything by this were the members and cronies of the regime who amassed spectacular wealth at the material, moral and emotional expense of their fellow-citizens.

On Sunday in Tahrir, Christian masses were celebrated and Muslim prayers were said.

We all prayed together for the young people killed by the regime since 25 January and before.

Later, there was a wedding, and later still magicians and acrobats and small camp fires.

This enormous revolution that is happening in our streets and our homes is the Egyptian people reclaiming their state, their heritage, their voice, their personality.

Be with us.

>via: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12393795

Egypt unrest: Bloggers take campaign to Tahrir Square

A gate sprayed with the word 'Facebook' in Tahrir SquareSocial media sites helped to spark the protests on 25 January

 

Egypt's internet activists have played a key role in the pro-democracy protests from the outset, but they tell the BBC that the online campaigning is evolving to suit their real-life activism in Tahrir Square.

Amr Gharbeia

Start Quote

Amr Gharbeia

I hope that when we have finished this sit-in, we will have won the right to organise ourselves outside the internet”

This revolution is the result of someone sending a Facebook invitation to many people. I got it like other people on our network. The buzz around it was then created on different social media websites and with videos. I was here on 25 January when riot police forced us out and by the 28th, we were back following the violence. I've been sleeping here most of the time since.

Our social network was established in 2005, when there was a democratic opening around the time of the presidential elections. People from different backgrounds all met through blogging and hoped to use technology for social change. It meant we have all gained good contacts, experience and strong networks.

I like to think the social network is the people itself. Things like Facebook, Twitter, SMS and phones are just social tools. When they blocked Facebook and shut down technology, our network still operated because it's about people. Internet activists are also people and a lot of our organising, social work and relationships are developed offline.

This is something that people dreamt of but didn't anticipate happening in reality. If anything, it shows that all the effort we put in over the past few years has not been wasted. It has climaxed into this critical mass of people you see in the square.

At the moment I'm not getting a lot of internet connection. I'm trying not to drain my phone battery. We're still using it to distribute footage people are bringing to us that we've sorted through.

I hope the internet will continue to play a complementary role in activism. At the moment we physically exist in downtown Cairo and I hope that when we have finished this sit-in, we will have won the right to organise ourselves outside the internet.

Twitter: Amr Gharbeia

Nawara Negm

Start Quote

Nawra Negm

It [is] totally different to have real freedom rather than just hypothetical freedom or internet freedom”

I was involved in this revolution from the first day, 25 January, and I've now been spending my nights here for a while. For the past five years, I was very active online, blogging and tweeting. As we live under emergency laws in Egypt it has been very difficult to meet or communicate except on the internet. I'd never been part of a demonstration on the ground.

At first we were mocking the event on 25 January. We questioned whether it was really possible to have a "Facebook revolution". I came on the 25th because I felt it was my duty as a citizen and I couldn't believe how it turned into something so different from what we've seen before. I was walking among the people and weeping.

Now I sometimes just tweet to update people about what's going on or to call for a million-man demonstration or a day to remember our martyrs. I'm well-known among bloggers for my long articles and constant tweets, but once I was here I stopped communicating this way so much. I felt it was totally different to have real freedom rather than just hypothetical freedom or internet freedom.

Blogging and tweeting has been important as we were building our minds. This regime stopped us from doing that. We had have poor education and no national cultural programmes. I am so proud now, especially when I think of our young martyrs. In Egypt we have suffered a lot and it's about time that we start to live like real people.

Twitter: Nawara Negm

Malek Mustafa

Start Quote

Malek Mustafa

The internet gave us our backbone but it is not because of Facebook that this happened”

I'm not writing my blog right now. We're just using Twitter as it's easy and flexible to do from your mobile. If we have a lot of action here I might do as many as 20 or 30 tweets a day. We also use Bambuser for live-streaming from our mobiles here in Tahrir Square.

The internet gave us our backbone but it is not because of Facebook that this happened. It was the force used by the police that brought everybody together. If they had let us leave peacefully on 25 January, this would never have happened. It got worse with the violence on 28th: The shootings, the tear gas, the killings, the brutality. When they cut the internet and mobile phone lines this only increased people's anger.

In the square we have organised our lives well. We have a co-ordinating committee telling us where there have been attacks and a group doing cleaning. We have some people singing and some praying. We have Christians, Muslims, agnostics, leftists and rightists and we all live together well. In our community we're trying to set an example of how we can all live together. It's like a city inside the city here. We are the kernel of the revolution.

Blog: MaLek X (in Arabic)

Nazly Hussein

Start Quote

Nazly Hussein

Older people come up to us [and] say: 'We're really proud of you... You did what we didn't manage to do for 60 years'”

The revolution was publicised on the internet. The spark was Facebook. People were really sceptical about it because they didn't think you could have a revolution where you named the date, but now I look around me and I am really proud of the Egyptian people and the initiative. I'm sure that those who named the date didn't think things would go this far.

To begin with on 25 January, we had mostly young people of all classes who somehow use the internet. You have internet cafes even in the poorest areas of Egypt so even less well-educated people have access, especially to Facebook. A lot was also achieved through word of mouth - people telling their friends and neighbours. The independent media took a middle-ground to begin with as everyone was watching their backs but now they have got onboard.

After our huge turnout on the first Tuesday, demonstrations continued for the next two days and we publicised further action for Friday on the internet. That day they cut our communications and took our cameras so we had an information blackout and the violence was unbelievable. A lot of people died.

Still the threshold of fear and pain had been broken and we have kept up momentum since. Now older people especially come up to us when we're collecting trash or whatever in the square and they say: "We're really proud of you... You did what we didn't manage to do for 60 years."

People have called this the "Facebook Revolution" because it gave us a form of expression even when people were too scared to talk in big groups about political issues. We had already set up Facebook pages for people who were tortured to death. We found it was a way to talk without being tracked.

In the square we have bridged a lot of gaps. I've been living here since 29 January with tens of thousands of other people. I put my head down to sleep and I don't know the people sleeping around me. I have wonderful conversations with people from all over Egypt who normally I would never have talked to.

We're finally getting to know each other. It's wonderful.

 

__________________________

 

FEBRUARY 8, 2011

Alan Chin & David Degner in Cairo: Traffic and Camping

The Egyptian government is anxious to let the world know that life is returning to normal, that they have made enough concessions, the system works, everybody should go home. Google Middle-East executive Wael Ghonim was released from twelve days of detention. Certainly, it’s a relief for fundamental services to be restored, as this traffic jam in the Zamalek neighborhood of Cairo demonstrates.

However, the protest in Tahrir Square is not going away anywhere fast. In fact, it is taking on more permanent aspects of a long-term sit-in, as tents and plastic sheeting are erected for shelter. A group of protesters slept right next to and around the army’s tanks and armored vehicles to prevent them from moving — either out of the square, which might open the field to the pro-Mubarek mob — or further into the square, potentially evicting the encampment.

The vibe at times gravitated between echoes of Woodstock with carnival as an intrinsic part of revolution, and Tiananmen Square, Beijing, 1989, with an initially sympathetic army and foreboding, hidden power struggles. Both the regime and the protesters have proven more resilient than might have been imagined at various moments during the last two weeks.

So normal life resumed? Sure, if sleeping in the square and having the army on the streets is the new normal.

–Alan Chin

PHOTOGRAPHS by ALAN CHIN and DAVID DEGNER

 

 

 __________________________

'You have a voice in this country,' emerging protest figure says

By the CNN Wire Staff
February 8, 2011 7:37 p.m. EST

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Freed Google executive tells crowd, "This country is our country"
  • Wael Ghonim emerges as the face of the uprising
  • Crowds swell in Tahrir Square in day 15 of protests
  • The vice president announces a committee will oversee constitutional reforms

 

Cairo, Egypt (CNN) -- Galvanized by the emotional words of a freed Google executive, thousands of Egyptians jammed Cairo's Tahrir Square on Tuesday, some for the first time, dismissing the embattled regime's pledges of constitutional reforms.

The crowd swelled as the 15th day of protests progressed. A second front sprouted as several hundred protesters filled the city block where Egypt's parliament building stands.

Wael Ghonim, the Google executive who was seized January 28 and released Monday, may be emerging as a face for Egypt's uprising. After a television interview that inspired protesters, Ghonim spoke from a makeshift stage Tuesday in Tahrir Square.

"This country, I have said for a long time, this country is our country, and everyone has a right to this country," he said. "You have a voice in this country. This is not the time for conflicting ideas, or factions, or ideologies. This is the time for us to say one thing only, 'Egypt is above all else.'"

His words prompted the protesters to begin chanting "Egypt above all else."

Journalists in Egypt reveal plight

Double talk and deceit in Egypt

Egyptian opposition leader slams regime

Egyptian actor slams Mubarak regime

"I apologize to you, I am so tired," Ghonim said. "Today we are emphasizing our voice." As he walked off the stage, Ghonim told a reporter in English, "We don't care. We are going to do what we've got to do."

Ghonim, a Dubai-based marketing executive, is the administrator of a Facebook page called "We are all Khaled Said," named after an Alexandria activist who was allegedly beaten to death by police. The page is widely credited with calling the first protest January 25.

Another Facebook page created to authorize Ghonim to speak on behalf of the protesters has 150,000 fans.

"I came today for the first time (Tuesday)," said Dalia, a protester in Tahrir Square. She did not give her last name. "Nothing will make this regime go unless we keep on coming and keep on coming."

Earlier, Vice President Omar Suleiman announced on state television that a committee has been authorized to amend Egypt's constitution to allow for free, fair and competitive elections. The amendments, Suleiman said, would be drafted by an independent judicial commission.

He said he had discussed a number of reforms in recent talks with opposition representatives. Among them were greater freedom for the media, the release of detainees and the lifting of the continuous state of emergency.

He also assured Egyptians that they should not fear arrest for speaking their minds.

But with the credibility of the regime in serious question, the statements from President Hosni Mubarak's deputy fell short. Real change, say Mubarak's foes, can only come with Mubarak's immediate departure and an overhaul of the constitution, not amendments here and there.

"That's not good enough," said Mohammed Habib, a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, a key opposition party in Egypt that is outlawed by the constitution on grounds that it is based on religion.

"The first thing that the regime should do is for the president to leave," he said. "The government is dividing the opposition through these announcements."

Asem Abedine, head of the pan-Arab Nassiri party, said Mubarak is merely angling for time.

"The government is only making these announcements to avoid making real changes demanded by the people," he said. "The emergency laws should be lifted."

Mubarak has ruled Egypt with an iron hand since 1981, aided by an emergency decree that gave him sweeping powers.

The protesters have now entered the most dangerous phase of this conflict.
--Fouad Ajami, professor at Johns Hopkins University.
Frum and Shrum: Politics of US-Egypt

How dangerous is Egypt for reporters?

Obama on Egypt: 'Making progress'

Egypt: Were Obama's choices right?

Since the protests began January 25, he has appointed a vice president for the first time, reshuffled his Cabinet and announced that he won't seek a new term in September.

However, the constitution remains, reshaped in 2005 and again in 2007 to help retain power for the ruling National Democratic Party.

It has been at the heart of the dialogue between the government and some opposition representatives, who want several articles amended to make way for greater political participation.

The demonstrations, powered by the stamina of those who have put everything at risk for change, got an extra shot of energy Tuesday from Ghonim's emotional interview on Egypt's Dream TV.

He said four people surrounded him at 1 a.m. on January 28.

"I yelled, 'Help me,' but of course I knew these were security forces.

"The thing that tortured me the most when I was in detention was that people would find out that I was the admin (of the Facebook page)," he said. "Because I am not the hero -- I was writing with the keyboard on the internet and my life was not exposed to any danger."

He walked out of the Dream TV interview in tears after being shown photos of those killed in the uprising.

"I want to say to every mother and every father that lost his child, I am sorry, but this is not our fault," he said before leaving. "I swear to God this is not our fault. It is the fault of everyone who was holding onto power greedily and would not let it go."

But while the crowds remained large and boisterous, opposition voices have started to splinter.

Some, including members of the self-declared Council of the Wise, have said they don't agree that Mubarak's immediate departure would be the best thing for Egypt.

Arab League Secretary-General Amre Moussa, who was among protesters last week, told CNN that Mubarak should be allowed a "dignified exit" in September.

"I believe that the president should stay until the end of his mandate. The consensus is growing on this point because of certain constitutional considerations," Moussa said.

State television in Egypt is suggesting that the United States is helping fund the protests, which -- it says -- have been infiltrated by Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran and others.

The divisions within the opposition raised fears that they could work to the regime's advantage.

"The danger at the moment is that this opposition, which a few days ago seemed to unite, is now being divided," said Cairo-based analyst Issandr El Amrani. "The regime is using its tried and true tactic of divide and conquer."

CNN's Ben Wedeman, Salma Abdelaziz, Amir Ahmed, Frederik Pleitgen, Saad Abedine, Caroline Faraj and Jill Dougherty contributed to this report.

>via: 


 

 

 

 

INTERVIEW: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie—Three-Minute Fiction Round 6: Laughing And Crying : NPR

Three-Minute Fiction Round 6: Laughing And Crying

January 8, 2011

LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW


[8 min 15 sec]

 

Meet Our Judge: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Beowulf Sheehan/Random House

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is the author of the critically acclaimed books Purple Hibiscus and Half of a Yellow Sun.

January 8, 2011

It's back! Three-Minute Fiction has returned to weekends on All Things Considered. We're bringing you a new judge and a new challenge to start off this new year.

Our contest has a simple premise. We're looking for original, short fiction that can be read in less than three minutes — that's no more than 600 words.

Our judge for Round 6 is novelist and short-story writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. She's the author of the critically acclaimed books Purple Hibiscus and Half of a Yellow Sun.

Our Round 6 Challenge
Each round, our judge throws out a challenge for our writers, and Adichie has a good one: At some point in your story, one character must tell a joke. And, one character must cry.

To be clear, the character who tells the joke can also be the character who cries, and the crying does not have to be in reference to the joke. Just at some point within your 600-word story, those two actions have to happen, Adichie says.

"In fact, I'd say if the crying came from the joke, that joke might not be very funny," Adichie tells All Things Considered host Guy Raz. "But hey, if the writer can make it work!"

Adichie is hoping the stories she reads will be entertaining, but she's really looking for a story that grapples with human emotion.

"I am interested in character and in emotion," she says. "I think that's really for me, what fiction is about, and I think the ability to cry and the ability to laugh, for me, is in some ways what defines humanity."

"It would be lovely if there was an inventive use of language," she adds. Nailing character, emotion and inventive language in no more than 600 words would be fantastic, she says, but that's a pretty tough thing to do.

But getting down to just what matters is what short stories can do best. Writing very brief fiction "forces you to go down to the essentials," Adichie says. "Sometimes you find that stories have a lot of padding."

Some Rules

Round 6 Rules

Your story must have one of the characters tell a joke and have one of the characters cry.

Your story must be 600 words or fewer. One entry per person. Your deadline is 11:59 p.m. ET on Sunday, Jan 23.

We're accepting submissions until 11:59 p.m. ET on Sunday, Jan. 23. We must be able to read your stories aloud in three minutes or less, so again, the maximum is 600 words.

Only one entry per person. Send in your story by clicking on the "Send Us Your Original Short Story" link on the Three-Minute Fiction page.

Each and every story will be read. This time around, the faculty and students from NYU's creative writing graduate program will be helping us judge.

And, as in previous rounds, we'll post some of our favorites on NPR.org each week as we begin to narrow it down. We'll check in with Adichie every few weeks on-air as well, to find out which stories have caught her eye.

The winning story will be read on-air in its entirety, and the winner will receive a signed copy of Chimamanda's book The Thing Around Your Neck.

Finally, Adichie says to just have fun writing your story. "Sometimes the best fiction comes out from a very light touch."

via npr.org

 

EVENT: Havana—International Symposium: Women and Emancipation of Latin America and the Caribbean « Repeating Islands

International Symposium: Women and Emancipation of Latin America and the Caribbean

Sponsored by the Women’s Studies Program at Casa de las Américas, the International Symposium on “Women and Emancipation of Latin America and the Caribbean in the 19th and 20th Centuries” will be held from February 21 to 25, 2011, in Havana.

Now in its eighteenth edition, the symposium addresses an ever current set of themes: gender and history; women in Latin American and Caribbean emancipation struggles from the historical perspective; women’s testimonial work and all types of textual and artistic production produced in the midst of/around these struggles; as well as literary and artistic representations of female participation in emancipation movements.

For more information, you may see the “Premio y eventos” section at http://www.casadelasamericas.com/ or write to Luisa Campuzano, Director of the Women’s Studies Program at Casa de las Américas (see “Contact” section).

Image (tribute to women in New Providence Community Center, the Bahamas) from http://www.melanienayer.com/wp/people-culture/a-tribute-to-women-in-the-bahamas/

 

VIDEO: ‘Jew-Man Business’ | AFRICA IS A COUNTRY

‘Jew-Man Business’

GO HERE TO VIEW TRAILER

Within the inner city of Freetown, Sierra Leone lies an area known as ‘Belgium’. Hundreds of youth, many of them ex-combatants, are hustling in this area on a daily basis. Jew-Man Business, a documentary made by anthropologists Maya Mynster Christensen, Mats Utas and Christian Vium, portrays three young men in their daily lives, doing ‘Jew-man business’ in ‘Belgium’: Bone Thug lives on the street, Junior tries to leave the street life behind, Ice T is a former rebel soldier.

 A fragment of Jew-Man Business is available on the documentary’s website.

- Tom Devriendt

 

INTERVIEW: Puerto Rican student striker Gamelyn Oduardo > www.socialism.com

Voices of Color Interview
Gamelyn Oduardo:
labor support and women’s leadership are key

Interview by Yuisa Gimeno

Student striker Gamelyn Oduardo, right, engages with puertorriqueños at UCLA about how the UPR strike succeeded and next steps in building the movement. Photo: Yuisa Gimeno

Gamelyn Oduardo, a law student at the University of Puerto Rico (UPR) Rio Piedras campus, is a member of the student coordinating committee that led the shut down of 10 UPR campuses from April 21 to June 17, 2010. The successful strike stopped devastating cuts, tuition hikes and privatization. Puerto Rican feminist Yuisa Gimeno interviewed him.

What conditions motivated the strike?

The government imposed neoliberal policies that were crippling all state-owned schools and public services like water and electricity and laid off over 20,000 workers. UPR’s budget was reduced by $300 million in the last 10 years.

Maintenance and clerical workers, and faculty suffered reductions in benefits and salaries and lay-offs. For students, this meant worse conditions and less courses available. The administration was still being paid six digit salaries.

Students mobilized with the support of a 24-hour general strike of all organized sectors. The administration “locked out” all of the campuses for a week, as a “security measure.” As the union leadership backed out from the idea of a more prolonged strike, the student movement turned to itself.

What factors and groups made the strike successful?

Our occupations received massive support from labor unions, LGBT and women’s organizations, parents, religious groups and local and international artists. Action Committees were the building blocks of our strike. Internally, radical democracy was the only way in which we kept united. It is horizontal in structure, deliberation, and the discussion of ideas.

UPR faculty, maintenance and clerical workers unions and the Teacher’s Federation helped us shut down the campus and the off-site central administration office. The more radical union, UTIER (electrical workers), set up a 24-hour campsite outside the campus, provided security, brought food and water and helped keep the picket lines going.

Women were the core and vanguard of the movement and on the front lines. In many cases they were braver than the men. Women were on the coordinating and negotiating committees and held public speaking roles. The next strike is going to be the strike of the women.

As California’s eyes were on UPR, our eyes have been on California. Support from organized students and workers in California was of special importance. Rallies in solidarity throughout the world let us know that we are not alone in the struggle for public education.

What challenges does the movement face now?

The Board of Trustees still insist on imposing a “fee” of $800 to every student, while reducing worker’s benefits and services. Federal Pell grants or loans of students involved in the strike have not been released. We haven’t been able to buy books we need for school, single mothers haven’t been able to pay tuition or the rent. The Legislative Branch has enacted laws to impose restrictions on student assemblies, and propose to prohibit work stoppages at UPR.

We are organizing for another possible strike to defy the administration and take to the streets to fight the neoliberal establishment. Most students are convinced that only through radical reform can the university be fully autonomous.

How can Puerto Rican and U.S. activists work together to build solidarity?

Student activists can play an integral role in bringing people together and raising consciousness of the actions that need to be taken, but we can’t do it alone. We need rank-and-file union members. We can’t stop the capitalist offensive by ourselves. The labor movement moves the machinery of the system and they can stop it — not just for 24 hours but for a long time.

We must exchange ideas and build solidarity in person. Students in California have an open invitation to come and strike with us.

Related story:  Puerto Rican student striker tours California

 

VIDEO: Charmaine Clamor

Charmaine Clamor

Multi-Awarded Filipina Artist Breaks New Ground With "Jazzipino'
Charmaine Clamor's top-ranking albums on American jazz radio is an embodiment of jazz as the immigrant's music. And she says her Filipino spice - the new musical genre she created called "jazzipino" - that she's put in this global "jazz pot" seems to have tickled the American palate.

 

allthatjazzmatazz | March 04, 2008 |  likes, 0 dislikes

CHARMAINE CLAMOR, America's leading Filipino jazz and world vocalist and the creator of "jazzipino," performs her World Music radio hit, "My Funny Brown Pinay," a bold reinvention of the old Rodgers & Hart song, "My Funny Valentine." The song, performed in English and Tagalog, was featured on NPR's "Weekend Edition" and is the first track from her 2007 CD "Flippin' Out."

This video was shot in 12/07 by Alex V. of Pixelstream, at the famous Catalina Bar & Grill Jazz Club, in Hollywood, where Ms. Clamor was headlining the 3rd Annual Filipino-American JazzFest.

The band...
Charmaine Clamor: vocals
Victor Noriega: piano
Derek Nievergelt: bass
Abe Lagrimas: drums

http://www.amazon.com/Flippin-Out-Cha...

 

 

Charmaine Clamor, Michael Konik, Mon David, jamming,