I love music and football. And in many ways my love of both comes from the same place – high school band. Years ago, when I was a teenager, I was a decent musician, playing four instruments – piano, acoustic guitar, saxophone and clarinet. Working with those instruments and being in the band connected me […]
Category: OPINION
Mona Eltahawy…Generation Mubarak/Generation Facebook
NEW YORK – When a young Egyptian died from what his family, activists and witnesses say was a savage police beating, many of his peers – the generation of Egyptians who have known no other leader than President Hosni Mubarak – protested and mourned in the way they know best: by going online. Generation Mubarak […]
Elijah Cummings…Tragedy in the Gulf
As chairman of the House Coast Guard Subcommittee, I have been deeply involved in determining how and why the Gulf oil spill occurred and – equally important – what we must now do to assure that such a disaster never happens again. Recently, I returned to the Gulf for a second on-site congressional briefing. We […]
Adrienne T. Washington…Giving Kagan a Second Thought
The nomination of Elena Kagan, the 50-year-old solicitor general, deserves a much closer look when her Senate confirmation hearings begin June 28. Americans, particularly African Americans, cannot allow our judgment of her slim record be clouded by a knee-jerk desire to see historic President Barack Obama do well. Kagan’s record includes questionable hiring practices while […]
Marc Morial…Juneteenth Black Independence Day
(NNPA) – “The people of Texas are informed that in accordance with a Proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and free laborer.” […]
Adrienne T. Washington…Giving Kagan a Second Thought
The nomination of Elena Kagan, the 50-year-old solicitor general, deserves a much closer look when her Senate confirmation hearings begin June 28. Americans, particularly African Americans, cannot allow our judgment of her slim record be clouded by a knee-jerk desire to see historic President Barack Obama do well. Kagan’s record includes questionable hiring practices while […]
Derek Spencer…Ten Minutes to End AIDS in Black Community
There is an old saying: “Knowledge is power.” This is true about many aspects of life, but is of paramount importance when it comes to the crisis of HIV and AIDS in the Black community. As an African-American medical expert, I know the single biggest factor fueling the AIDS epidemic in our community is that […]
Dorothy Rowley…Alexander Prevails in Mayoral Forum
What happens when a prominent critic of the District’s governing body takes on two of its lead decision makers? He comes out a clear winner – at least, in the case of this week’s mayoral forum held at Trinidad Baptist Church in Northeast Washington. Small business owner and former TV reporter Leo Alexander outweighed Mayor […]
Joseph C. Phillips…Dads and Coaching
I am an assistant coach on my middle son’s youth football team. Football practice begins in August and I have spent the last two weeks reading up on defensive alignments, surfing coaching websites, and sending e-mail to some of the high school coaches in the area begging for coaching tips. If I watch one more […]
Sen. Benjamin Cardin…BP Oil Spill Is A Wake-up Call To Our Nation
As Americans continue to watch the failure of BP to turn off the oil spigot caused by the Deepwater Horizon explosion, we are distressed by the loss of life and sickened by the destruction to our Gulf Coast. Americans also are concerned about potential damage that could be caused as currents carry the oil eastward […]
George Curry…Artur Davis Made History Running for Governor of Alabama But Not the Kind he Wanted
True to expectations, Artur Davis’ quest to become the first Black governor of Alabama made history. But contrary to expectations, Davis’ stunning defeat provides a sharp – yes, historic – example not only of the cost of political arrogance, but also the underscoring for all candidates, and the national Democratic Party establishment, the sophistication and […]
Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
On the streets of Baltimore – and in the halls of Congress – the struggle to rebuild our economy continues, as it must. No other goal touches so many lives. Americans desperately want to work – an economic and psychological imperative that reveals why the Great Recession, triggered by the policy failures of the last […]

