Insight News ::: 11.1.10

Page 1

Election Day is November 2nd Vote and be counted 

INSIGHT NEWS November 1 - November 7, 2010 • MN Metro Vol. 36 No. 44 • The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • www.insightnews.com

North YMCA series builds leadership

Photo courtesy YMCA

Henry Crosby

By Marcia Humphrey Contributing Writer Are you a business owner or professional interested in stimulating discussions related to leadership and business strategies from some of our most dynamic community members? If so, make plans to be at the North Community YMCA Youth and Teen Enrichment Center next week and take advantage of this opportunity to sharpen your personal skill set,

while helping to positively impact the lives of children. On Wednesday, November 10th, from 11:30am-1:00pm, North Community YMCA Youth and Teen Enrichment Center, located at 1711 W. Broadway, Minneapolis, will host its first Business leadership Speaker Series Luncheon. The event will kick off with a brief networking session and the featured speaker will be University of Minnesota Basketball Coach, Tubby Smith. Following the presentation, there

will be a question and answer session. Who is the Y today? According to North Community YMCA director Henry Crosby, this event promises to be the first in a series of relevant and informative networking forums designed to examine issues of interest to business professionals. In addition, Crosby’s goal is to highlight the YMCA’s significance

YMCA TURN TO 11

Tubby Smith

A Touch of Soul at the Ordway By Chris Garner Contributing Writer A touch of soul was brought to the Ordway October 19 as African American community members gathered for “Taking Our Place Centerstage- A Community Partnership Commitment of the Ordway.” The event was held in conjunction with SoulTouch Productions, St. Paul Foundation, and Ordway

Philip Emeagwali

Flashman Photography

ORDWAY TURN TO 7

Doris Hines and her son Gary Hines

Dorothea Burns, Ordway, Board Member and Patricia A. Mitchell, Ordway, President and CEO

Let’s make North High great By Scott Gray President and CEO, Minneapolis Urban League Over the past weeks, the proposed decision by Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent Bernadeia Johnson to close North High School in 2014, and perhaps by next summer if enrollment continues to dwindle, has sparked heated debate on both sides. The school district points to dwindling enrollment which is currently hovering at 265 students; soaring per pupil expenditures because of the low enrollment at a school designed for over 1,000 students; and academic underachievement. The community’s response is that the plan to close the city’s oldest high

Scott Gray school seems calculated as feeder elementary and middle schools were closed in recent years, school boundaries redrawn, and little effort was made to determine why parents in growing numbers were sending their children to other schools and limited strategic actions taken to address concerns

Aesthetics

Twins Cities Black Film Festival

PAGE 5

about the long term educational viability of the school. Clearly, both of these viewpoints offer elements of truth and are supported by facts. For instance, findings reports such as the Itasca Project suggest that “to maintain competitive advantage we will need to address the achievement gap and looming workforce shortage.” School district officials correctly assert that one out of every four Minneapolis Public School students, and probably more, will not earn a diploma - resulting in thousands who will face employment challenges in a shifting economy that requires higher order skills. The Economic Policy Institute’s study notes that Minneapolis unemployment rates reflect the highest racial disparity in the nation. All of these viewpoints indicate a critical need

Technology

Newquist helps people learn, navigate information superhighway

PAGE 10

for our community to focus on the greater good when it comes to the North High School issue. Granted, closing the school to the dismay of the community may save the school district money, but in the end, the bigger question must be will the educational outcomes for the students who are forced to attend other schools significantly improve. It is not difficult to close a school, note a tremendous amount of saved dollars, and assert the action was a win-win simply because some of the students may end up at a school with more resources. Closure of a school in any community across this nation is but a surface solution, while too often, root-cause issues which foster these nagging educational gaps never quite make it to the discussion table.

NORTH TURN TO 9

emeagwali.com

A Nigeria without oil By Philip Emeagwali Part 3 of 5 Excerpt from Nigeria’s 50th anniversary lecture at the Embassy of Nigeria, Paris. . Lecture video and audio are posted at http://www.youtube. com/watch?v=d1mClXleezY and emeagwali.com. I wish to look back to 1960, and forward to 2060, to share my thoughts about the challenges to, and opportunities for, building a stronger Nigeria through technology. In the past 50 years, Nigeria has grown economically stronger through its use of technology to discover and then recover petroleum. Fifty years ago, Nigeria had only one oil well. Fifty years later, that first oil well is empty and abandoned. Do the math: “How many oil wells will Nigeria have left in 50 years?” Empty oil wells are not abstract, intangible things. They’re as concrete as Nigeria’s first oil well: the Oloibiri well, that now exists only on postcards. We treat our oil wells like we treat snails: We take the flesh and leave

Sports

“Uncle Ron” Washington rises to the top

PAGE 11

the shell. And we leave the shell for our children, and they leave it for their children, who will earn income by converting it into a tourist attraction. Fifty-year-old oil wells are drying up everywhere, from Nigeria to Saudi Arabia to Russia. Perhaps in 50 years, Nigeria will no longer be one of the twelve members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Our petroleum was formed millions of years ago, when our pre-human ancestors crawled on four legs. And today we’ve discovered nearly all the oil that can be discovered. Yet Nigeria’s future is being written by its few oilfields. Oil revenues account for 80 percent of Nigeria’s budget. The nagging question is: What will we do when that 80 percent is gone? What is our Plan B when our Plan A fails? Searching for more oil is not the answer. These are tough questions that we prefer to ignore but our children must answer. To prepare our future leaders for “a world without oil,” I advise newspapers and schools to sponsor essay competitions that ask,

AFRICA TURN TO 5

2010

Voters Guide

Additional statements from the candidates

PAGE 13


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.