Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Columnist Chaz Kyser on Tyra for BHM


The editors are pleased to announce that Chaz Kyser, author of the book Embracing the Real World, as well as the Now What? career transition column appearing at THE BLACK COLLEGIAN Online, will be featured in a video to appear on the Tyra Banks Show, in a "salute to Black Women Making History" to air during Black History Month!

Congratulations, Chaz!
View the clip here:

Friday, January 18, 2008

From IMDiversity: Race, Gender & Hillary Clinton

Starting this weekend, a couple of features on our sister-site, the Professional Women's Village at IMDiversity.com, attempt to look back at the week's hub-bub surrounding the race-gender split arising in the Democratic Presidential race between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.

First, a series of Clinton-Obama analyses of from the Associated Press provide different takes on the tit-for-tat between the campaigns, and looking at how race and gender, racism and mysogyny, play into the coverage. It also looks at the impact of women voters, as well as the importance to the campaigns of parsing out that vote by generation, class, race and philosophy.

In another feature, Hispanic American Village Editor Carol Amoruso reflects on the (false?) dichotomy threatening to divide voters' loyalties in the party, in Race and Gender at Odds Again as Steinem Wades into the Clinton-Obama Fray.

On the African American Village, frequent contributor Kam Williams looks back at the N.H. results and seeks to put the focus elsewhere: on the Diebold Corporation. "For, while the punditocracy has been busy dubbing Hillary Clinton the Comeback Kid and attributing her surprise victory to women rallying to her support in the wake of her eyes welling up on camera, no one’s looking for a more plausible explanation than that overly-publicized Muskie moment.," Williams writes. Suspicious of dubious vote tallying, Williams concludes "we’re again in dire need of U.N. observers during the 2008 primary season, just to give an the democratic process a chance to unfold untainted by fraud."

Additional features will unfold, as our editors and visitors try to interpret the events in what is becoming an unhappily tense time in an otherwise historic election. One reader said that she liked Obama and Clinton "almost equally," and would support either in a general election, but "as a woman, I have to go with Clinton now."

Another wrote that she "resented having to choose" between candidates who each represented a historic political milestone she'd been "waiting for my whole life."

And, should it matter?

With a particular (but not exclusive) interest in the views of our women visitors, we ask in the Women's Village blog poll for the week: Would you lay issues aside and vote for Hillary Clinton for president for the historic precedent of having a woman in the White House?

What do you think?

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Ulysses W. Burley III discuss cancer research and the challenges facing African Americans

THE BLACK COLLEGIAN's featured blogger and columnist Al "The Inspiration" Duncan is kicking off the new year by posting a new interview and hosting a dialogue with Ulysses W. Burley III, at 24 already a noted cancer researcher. The timely new dialogue gives insight into the career path and mind of a young man who is passionate about confronting a disease that, he says, "affect(s) black people twice as much as anybody else."

This theme has been explored on THE BLACK COLLEGIAN's network of sites a great deal in the deal in the past year, becoming more timely as the election year has resurrected the issue of universal healthcare and who's falling through the cracks of insurance coverage in America. The topic's also coming to the fore through the increased media coverage and national discussion of the particular challenges facing African Americans in battling cancer.

As Dr. Burley observes, these challenges to African-American cancer sufferers receiving the attention and treatment they need are both internal and external, social and psychological.

In terms of research, he observes that "There aren’t enough African Americans going into research period, let alone cancer research." Further, "only 13% of African Americans" who aim for them "end up graduating with science and math degrees. Only 3% of us are going to pursue graduate degrees in science and mathematics."

In the interview, he suggests that ethnicity can affect both which types cancer certain groups disproportionately suffer from ... and which types can receive (also disproportionate) research focus and funds. He believes that the upcoming elections may bring national and government leadership focus back onto cancer research, not only because of the attention to universal coverage, but because several of the presidential candidates from both parties have had direct, personal experiences with and suffered tragic losses from cancer.

At the same time, he acknowledges that ethnic disparities in research and treatment are not only caused by external obstacles. If African Americans disproportionately from certain kinds of cancer, he saks, “why is this and what are we doing to intervene? I believe that if you want to change something you need to become a part of it."

He says that research careers can draw lower salaries than many other paths in the medical sphere, which may dissuade some African Americans from pursuing scientific research as a vocation.

Further, there may be a stigma attached to cancer that is prevalent in the African American community, as well as cultural and spiritual aspects to how many Blacks deal with the disease that may not be widely understood by mainstream healthcare practitioners. This was a topic recently highlighted in a new book, "You Have Cancer": A Death Sentence That Four African-American Men Turned Into An Affirmation To Remain In The “Land Of The Living”, co-authored by THE BLACK COLLEGIAN founder Preston Edwards Sr. and three of his longtime best friends. They learned they suffered from the same disease at the same time later in life. They discuss the spiritual and psychological aspects of fighting the cancer, as well as the stigmas and social issues that can prevent Black men with cancer from seeking and embracing needed treatment and attention. They also discussed the book this past week on an episode of Weekend Today with Lester Holt focused on African Americans and cancer.

In the spirited dialogue with Burley that followed the interview, many readers voiced their appreciation for the young doctor, not only admiration for his dedication and his life and work choices, but for how he stressed the importance of research.

In one response from the dialogue, however, Dr. Burley took care to stress that the need for African Americans to become advocates for community health and to pursue science degrees and careers was not limited to cancer research.

"To answer a question asked earlier, I do believe that cancer and cancer funding will become more visible in the upcoming elections. Currently candidates are solely casting their respective health care plans mainly because this is what we the people have asked for. Therefore it is up to us to demand more from them. I am hopeful that the primaries will reveal worthy representatives for both parties, and that the narrowing of possibilities will produce more focused and pronounced plans within health care, not only for cancer intervention, but global AIDS, child obesity, and diabetes to name a few. Until then, we must continue to be advocates through initiatives such as the ONE Campaign that allow citizens to apply pressure on the government through letters, emails, and phone calls of demand and concern."

Join the continuing dialogue with Ulysses W. Burley III at Al's blog.