HBPA College Scholarship

Hispanic Business and Professional Association Foundation
Scholarship Application 2012-2013 (click here for application)

Application due April 9, 2012

HBPA Foundation of the Inland Northwest

HBPA Foundation is a non-profit organization affiliated with HBPA Spokane providing college scholarships, promoting an annual Recognition Ceremony to celebrate educational success among Hispanic/Latino graduating students, and recognizing scholastic achievement of Hispanic/Latino youth in 7th through 11th grades with a GPA of 3.0 or above.

Bunker Roy: Learning from a barefoot movement

Bunker Roy  on TED – ideas worth spreading.  SEE VIDEO

Their philosophy is simple – enable the local community. Working in villages that were nowhere near a town, they saw how the absence of regular power supply affected every aspect of local life – from health and education to farming. “There was need for local power production, so we brought in more than 3,000 solar lights to the villages and trained locals in operation and maintenance,” said Bharti.

 

 

 

Reading Beyond the Requirements

Dr. James Burnley in a recent article for students exhorted them to go beyond what they were presented in classes:  “…. go further and seek the truth about your history. Seeking such truth means that you will have to read beyond what you are required to read in most if not all of the degree programs you are seeking to attain.”

Burley discusses the work of Mamie & Kenneth Clark:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RqsGTS5TPQ&feature=related

Full text of Dr. Burnley’s article:
Reading Beyond the Requirements or Learning to Love the Black Dolls

 

 

Ericka Huggins, Former Black Panther Party Leader, to Speak at Gonzaga

The Melding of Spiritual Activism and Social Justice is the title of a lecture to be given by Ericka Huggins on February 13 at 7 pm at Gonzaga University’s Jepson Wolff Auditorium. Ms Huggins is an “activist, poet, professor, and former Black Panther Party Leader and political prisoner”.

 

Writing Your Life Story Class Correction

In our post “We All Have A Story” of February 1, 2012 we gave information about a writing class. The class has been cancelled for winter quarter but will be offered in the Spring. The new information is below.    For more information check the Community Colleges of Spokane Continuing Education website.

Writing Your Life Story*
Item: M370 Dian Zahner
1:00 PM – 3:00 PM Location: Magnuson Building, Rm: 0120
Sessions: 5 Tu 2917 W Fort George Wright Drive Spokane, WA 99224
4/3/2012 – 5/1/2012 Fee: $36.00

How To Be Black: Baratunde Thurston

It’s no coincidence that Baratunde Thurston’s new memoir and satirical self-help book How to Be Black was slated for release on the first day of Black History Month.

“I feel great about that,” Thurston tells Fresh Air‘s Terry Gross. “I think we have a moment every year in our country where everyone buys black stamps and thinks more explicitly about black people and blackness, so it was a perfect month to release a book on this subject.”

Thurston, a stand-up comedian and The Onion‘s digital director, says that he doesn’t get as many gigs this month as one might think.

Let Baratunde tell you his story.

 

We All Have a Story

From Angela B:

Loved the calendar story today and I found a lot of similarity with self. I am supporting the Giants for once because a Ugandan is playing in the team.

Kiwanuka Goes Home, but His Heart Is Far Away

 

By SAM BORDEN

Published: January 30, 2012 New York Times

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. – Mathias Kiwanuka says he does not remember how old he was when he first found out his grandfather had been assassinated. He struggles to remember the point at which he realized the true meaning of his own last name. He is not certain when he became aware of his family’s importance in African history.

But that is not important, Kiwanuka said recently, because he knows now. He read about his grandfather Benedicto Kiwanuka’s becoming the first prime minister of Uganda and heard about the plight forced upon a man trying to mold freedom out of a society stiffened by chaos. He learned about the pain and suffering Benedicto saw and felt.

And so he knows, too, about Benedicto’s being killed by the despot Idi Amin, a death foretold by some, dreaded by many and seen by experts as a development that set back progress in East Africa for years.

This week, as the Giants prepare to face the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl, Mathias Kiwanuka will be the subject of countless articles and interviews. The reason is obvious: This is his return home. Kiwanuka, now a linebacker for the Giants, was born in Indianapolis. He went to Cathedral High School, a little more than 10 miles from Lucas Oil Stadium, where the Super Bowl will be played Sunday. He won two state championships.

Everyone will want to tell his story, whether it is about his old high school days or how he ended up at Boston College. Old friends will gather around, too, wanting to know about how this season went or how Kiwanuka’s brother, Ben, is doing a year and a half after a horrific motorcycle accident that Kiwanuka witnessed from his own bike just feet away. (Ben is doing well, Kiwanuka said.) Some may even want to talk fatherhood – after all, Kiwanuka and his fiancée are expecting a daughter in March.

See the full story

We all have a story to tell. We would love to publish yours here. Send it to us at info@4comculture.com

Need help getting started telling your story? The Cummunity Colleges Institute for Extended Learning has a class you can take starting tomorrow:

Writing Your Life Story

We all have a story to tell. Let’s remember, write it, and possibly pass it along. Exercises each day with prompts, reading and free writes help you write your story. class includes a bibliography of memoirs and hits on how to write a memoir.

Item: M370 Dian Zahner

1:30 pm – 3:30 pm 5 Thursdays 2/2/2012 – 3/1/2012 $36

Location:   CenterPlace, Rm: 205 2426 N Discovery Place, Spokane Valley

Contact (509) 279-6030 or 1 – (800) 845-3324

Starting Them Young

Marva Collins is the teacher I was looking for all my life. She started a school on Chicago’s Westside one block from where we lived when I was growing up but it wasn’t until I got to Spokane after graduate school that I discovered her – too late for me and for my son.  We don’t know about these things until we start communicating with each other.  What are the resources in our community that could improve our children’s futures?

Take a look at Marva Collins’ approach:

http://www.marvacollins.com/

Black Heritage Day January 6

 

Black Heritage Day January 2