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Vol. 37, No. 52: Section 01
Tallahassee, Florida
Dec. 29, 2011 - Jan. 4, 2012
FAMU student-athletes shine bright at graduation By Florida A&M Sports Information
FAMU tennis player Marc V. Atkinson accepts his degree from President Ammons. with a knife. As the moment of the entry of the FAMU administration came, a certain anxiety built. There clad in his green robe, donned with the artistic presidential medalion, emerged one Dr. James H. Ammons. Then
the Rattler spirit shined brightly like the sun. Several graduates as well as the people in attendance greeted and cheered him, breaking protocol to shake his hand and offer words of encouragement, while he was still in the
See GRADUATION, Page 2
Williams plays the right notes Youth of the Week
Kalon Williams By Alicia McKnight Outlook Contributor
“I want people to look at me and say, look that’s a real leader,” said Kalon Williams a 14-yearold freshman in high school. “I attend the Leon High School, home of the mighty lions,” said Williams. Williams is taking Spanish I, Biology, Algebra I honors, English I honors, Guitar I, and Orchestra. “My favorite subject is Algebra because it’s filled with a variety of problem solving equations,” said Williams. Some of Williams’ hobbies are playing the violin, video games and helping others.
Stand up for voting rights
Inside OPINION / 4 EDUCATION / 5
By Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. NNPA Columnist Special to the Outlook
RELIGION / 6
At the heart of a democracy is the fundamental right to vote. Yet for black Americans, especially, the right to vote is historically blood-soaked and sacred. We paid a heavy price to get the right to vote. But it is not just a legal right; it is also a moral responsibility to vote given the tremendous sacrifice by so many of our fore parents that successfully waged a tireless struggle to dismantle American apartheid. Today for more than 45 million black people in the United States, we cannot afford to take for granted this important civil right and civic responsibility. I strongly urge support for the NAACP’s “Stand For Freedom” national campaign against voter suppression in America. Benjamin Todd Jealous, NAACP president and CEO, is taking the right courageous leadership on this critical issue. Jealous emphasized, “It’s been more than a century since we’ve seen such a tidal wave of assaults on the right to vote. Historically, when voting rights are attacked, it’s done to facilitate attacks on other rights. It is no mistake that the groups who are behind this are simultaneously attacking very basic women’s rights, environmental protections, labor rights and educational ac-
Briefs
COMMUNITY NEWS / 7
Benjamin Todd Jealous, NAACP president and CEO
Florida Gov. Rick Scott adopted measures that prohibit persons convicted of felonies from voting for life.
cess for working people and minorities.” The NAACP and the NAACP Legal Defense Fund just issued a report entitled, “Defending Democracy: Confronting Modern Barriers to Voting Rights in America.” The national study “details a plethora of voter suppression initiatives, most of them pushed in states with large African-American populations and where voting turnout has surged.” The forces of repression have been hard at work. From the very moment in the aftermath of the election of Barack H, Obama to be president of the United States, there has been a systematic attempt to suppress and prevent another large voter turnout from the African American community
together with other communities of color. The 2012 elections will be the most important elections in our lifetime. The strength of the struggle today to protect voting rights will in part be determined by how strong a grassroots movement is built in all of the states where Blacks and Latinos make up from 30 percent to 40 percent of the voting age population. Racial discrimination is always found to most acute in those states and areas of the nation where the percentage of the black population is the highest. We must be vigilant concerning these attacks. As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. asserted years ago, “An injustice any where is a threat to justice everywhere.” See VOTING, Page 2
See YOW, Page 2
Hospital panel set for year-end report By Jim Saunders The News Service of Florida Special to the Outlook
Facing objections from public hospitals, a panel appointed by Gov. Rick Scott could call next week for revamping local hospital-taxing districts --- including turning them into “indigent health care districts.” The Commission on Review of Taxpayer Funded Hospital Districts discussed a draft report on Dec. 20 that also could lead to local votes on district taxing powers and call for more oversight of the sales or leases of public hospitals. Commissioners, who have been studying hospital districts since May, likely will finalize the recommendations Dec. 29, as they meet a New Year’s deadline for sending the report to Scott and lawmakers. “The real work is going to happen on the 29th,” said Chairman Dominic Calabro, president and chief executive officer of Florida TaxWatch. “I think we’re going to bang it out on the 29th.” A key part of the draft would re-label districts as “indigent
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Confirming that student indeed belongs before athlete, several Rattlers and Lady Rattlers walked across the stage at the Alfred Lawson Jr. Multipurpose Center and Teaching Gymnasium on Dec. 16 night to get their degrees. In what was near capacity for the 9,000+ seat arena, as family and friends from all across the country gathered to come see the culmination of years of hard work and dedication. Visibly absent from the event was the FAMU Symphonic band, which normally plays at the event; but a recording of the band was piped in over the P.A. system. With television trucks on hand and the world watching, the tension was thick enough to cut
Alumna returns 1363 E. Tennessee St, Tallahassee, Fla. 32310
Special to the Outlook
precessional. This set the tone of unity for the entire ceremony, that FAMU would stick together. Congressman, James Clyburn, who was scheduled to speak, had to be replaced, as congress would take critical votes over the week’s end prohibiting him from attending. In his place was Dr. Larry Robinson. Robinson recently returned to FAMU after being nabbed by President Barack Obama as an assistant secretary dealing with environmental issues. Robinson oversaw several issues dealing with predicting the effects of the massive BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Robinson had some wise words for the graduating seniors. He spoke of his time in school and how it prepared him for life’s challenges. He also told the kids several times, “You can get anywhere you want to go from Florida Agricultural and Mechanical
R. Paul Duncan, a health-policy expert at the University of Florida.
Dominic Calabro, president and chief executive officer of Florida TaxWatch.
health care districts” and try to prevent tax dollars from getting funneled to only certain publicly funded hospitals. The basic concept is that money should be able to flow to wherever indigent patients get care, whether that is public hospitals, private hospitals or other types of providers. “I think we’re looking at moving more towards a focus on providing indigent health care,” Calabro said.
But commission member R. Paul Duncan, a health-policy expert at the University of Florida, said he is concerned that such a change could lead to creation of a “kind of charity hospital system” that only would serve low-income and uninsured people. Duncan said public hospitals would not have as much money to buy equipment and modernize facilities to compete with private hospitals. As a result, he said in-
sured patients might drift to the better-equipped private hospitals, leaving behind low-income and uninsured patients --- and, ultimately, affecting the quality of care at public hospitals. Hospital-industry officials have closely watched the commission’s deliberations, though it remains unclear whether lawmakers will act on the recommendations during the 2012 legislative session. Scott recently said such action might wait until 2013, as redistricting will dominate much of the upcoming session. Nevertheless, Scott, who made a fortune as chief executive of the Columbia/HCA hospital chain, has made clear he would like to see changes in public hospitals. In a March executive order creating the commission, Scott said in part that the panel should determine whether it is “appropriate to convert governmentoperated hospitals to different governance models (and) what the process should be for such conversion.” During the Dec. 20 meeting, representatives of public hospitals objected to several parts of See PANEL, Page 2
Bi-Lo buys Winn-Dixie for $560 million The supermarket chain WinnDixie is being sold for $560 million to Bi-Lo LLC, the companies said on Dec. 19, creating a large grocery operator in the South. The combined company will have about 690 stores and 63,000 workers in eight states in the southern U.S. Winn-Dixie Stores Inc. will become a privately held subsidiary and its ticker will be removed from the Nasdaq. Each Winn-Dixie stockholder gets $9.50 per share in cash, a 75 percent premium to the Jacksonville, Fla. Company’s Friday, Dec. 17, closing stock price. Florida’s foreclosure mediation program ends Florida’s mandatory foreclosure mediation program has been terminated, according to a letter signed on Dec. 19, by Supreme Court Chief Justice Charles Canady. The program, established in 2009, required lenders to participate in a mediation process with struggling borrowers prior to repossessing a home. Florida motor vehicle agency warns against what it calls deceptive websites The Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles is warning customers about websites not affiliated with the state’s DMV that are luring people into paying additional fees to apply for or renew driver licenses. DMV officials called the websites deceptive and said links to them, which often appear as advertisements when people use search engines like Google or Yahoo to find the DMV website, ask users to input their name, address and credit card information and charge anywhere from $25 to $50 to route them to the official DHSMV website. DHSMV does not require a surcharge to use any of its websites -- www.GoRenew. com and www.flhsmv.gov.
This Week’s Word “Turn us back to You, O LORD, and we will be restored; Renew our days as of old...” Lamentations 5:21 (NKJV)