Insight News ::: 6.28.10

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PHOTO: STEPHEN ALLEN

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INSIGHT NEWS June 28 - July 4, 2010 • MN Metro Vol. 36 No. 29 • The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • www.insightnews.com

Chantel SinGs (left) and Georgia “Miss Georgia” McClellon

Photos: Rich Peterson W/13TwentyThree Photography, Miss Marie Photography

Married to the microphone, singers search for stardom By Alaina Lewis Contributing Writer Chantel SinGs, and Georgia “Miss Georgia” McClellon just may be the next artists to blow

up on the Minneapolis music scene. SinGs, who spells her last name with a capitalized “G,” has been performing since before she can remember. Her sound can easily be described as mirroring the likes of her greatest

influences: Mary J. Blige, Anita Baker, and Michael Jackson. Hers is a vocal soul acquainted with real R&B, garnering music that is two parts rhythm, one part blues, and all parts captivating. Listeners can get a taste of this on her tracks which include

“Autobiography,” “Unfaithful,” and “Won’t Say A Word.” SinGs has opened for artists such as Trey Songz, Jagged Edge, Lyfe Jennings, Silk, and many others. She can also be seen weekly performing around town and hosting a myriad of

events, most notably, the “Vibin’ Industry Night Showcase,” an open mic initiative, which runs every Wednesday evening at the Lounge Night Club. SinGs co-hosts this weekly event with another incomparable class act, Mr. Jemika Hayes.

Like most multi-talented artists, SinGs doesn’t stop the buck on just slaying music, this sultry songstress can also be seen playing the role of “Traci” on the hit web series TH3M, a

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Bicycle apartheid Nice ride (if you can get it) By Al McFarlane and B.P. Ford, The Editors Blue Cross says it’s on a mission is to improve the health of all Minnesotans by making the “healthy choice the easy choice” and therefore, has stepped forward as the

lead sponsor of Nice Ride, an innovative bicycle sharing program launched last week in Minneapolis. But State Representative Bobby Champion, who represents North Minneapolis, says once again, his constituents have been relegated to being an after-thought, kicked to

the margin while affluent communities get public and philanthropic subsidy. One leader called it shameful transportation apartheid. If you are downtown or in Uptown, you will see bright green bikes that people can rent, ride and drop off at convenient bike stands, downtown, Uptown, at the U of M or Northeast.

But the program is conspicuously absent and unavailable to residents of North Minneapolis, the Phillips and Elliot Park neighborhoods and 8th Ward in South Minneapolis, except along the Midtown Greenway. Blue Cross’ support for Nice Ride, which it describes as File Photo

State Rep. Bobby Joe Champion

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File Photo

NRCC Executive Director Sherry Pugh

Anthony Dozier’s Eyes on History

Staffords host family 1810-2010 Bicentennial celebration By Jan and Julian Stafford, Ed. D.

Courtesy Ransom Stafford

John Dozier and wife Lottie Dozier. John Dozier, went to South Carolina State College in Orangeburg, SC, played football there, worked on the Atlantic Coast Line railroad as the only Black conductor in this country in the 1950’s. He retired and became a collector of old Civil War artifacts. He is the son of Ned Dozier, a very successful businessman who owned a two-story brick home at the turn of the century. Ned Dozier was a large land owner and farmer with successful pulp wooding, milling, store merchandising businesses. He was a supplier of cross ties and wood to the railroad industry.

A legacy of wealth building The Stafford Family of Minnesota hosts the annual Dozier Family Reunion in the Twin Cities –

July 1-4, 2010. More than 150

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Friends, leaders celebrate Toni Carter PAGE 2

The Dozier legacy dawns the American horizon with the birth of Anthony Dozier, Sr., recorded as 1810 in Williamsburg County, SC. At that time, James Madison was serving as the fourth President of the United States (1809-1817). Anthony, a slave, married Salina, who was born in 1815, which was the cessation of the War of 1812 involving England. In 1814, Francis Scott Key wrote our national anthem, “The Star Spangled Banner.” We wondered whether Anthony ever imagined that 200 years after his birth, our 44th President would be an African American named Barack

Walker West:

Preserving a legacy of musical excellence

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Courtesy Ransom Stafford

Bobby Stafford (center), an attorney from Northern Virginia, with two of his Minnesota nephews Alex Stafford (left) and Max Stafford (right). Obama. It is ironic that both presidents have something in common: Madison is considered

the “Father of the United States Constitution”; whereas, Obama is a scholarly constitutional

HIV/AIDS With education, there is hope amid the crisis

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lawyer and professor.

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Don’t burn bridges:

Resign like you might return someday

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