Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Friday, January 23, 2009
Friday, January 16, 2009
Green and Black for the Environment
The Green Revolution has hit the world by storm. Its kinda like the movements that happened where concepts such as organic eating, electronic networking sites, blogging and others changed the way that the world's citizens live their lives.

Well, a local museum is hosting a ground breaking exhibit which features the innovation of African American architects, designers, engineers and business leaders that are making headway in the Green Revolution. The Museum of Science and Industry will showcase innovations in agriculture, renewable energy and sustainable building contributions made by our folks!

The Green Revolution has to do with living lives that have the least impact on the environment. That could be from starting a compost, buying locally grown foods, recycling or not using harsh chemicals to clean. The US Green Building Council selectively doles out the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) green building certification which recognizes buildings with a stamp of approval after its constructors have adhered to environment friendly guidelines and processes during construction. I had the privilege to live in a LEED certified dorm during a recent fellowship. For examples, shower heads used less water, lights dimmed if there was not movement in a particular room, and the building used solar energy.
I plan on getting to this one!
January 15- March 1, 2009
Museum of Science and Industry
5700 South Lake Shore Drive
Friday, January 9, 2009
Opinion Bound to DC
I leave for DC next weekend. Making the pilgrimage to DC for Obama's Inauguration will be my generation's March on Washington. I witnessed the excitement in Grant Park on Election Day and this trip will complete the package.
With all of this Obama phenomenon, there has been one thing thats been eating at me. I will pose the issue as a statement rather than asking a question: Racism is not over. There is no such thing as Post-Race America!-yet
Thoughts?
Mississippi Anyone?
Still, I recognize that I probably wouldn't know how the hell to act back in the day. I am talking about those days that our grandparents grew up in before they moved north. I know it
was hard, from what I hear. And I don't even like to think about the pain and suffering that they experienced but seem to no longer be afflicted by. It seems like maybe those feeling of animosity and resentment toward the oppression of blacks back then has been passed down to me. That's why its always tense for me to watch a movie like, "A Time to Kill" or to read "To Kill A Mockingbird".
Here's an excerpt of a review from last week's edition of The Chicago Reader of a new play that relives the pre-civil rights Mississippi experience ...
Endesha Ida Mae Holland's 1991 autobiographical play is compo
sed of short vignettes that chronicle her life and times in post-World War II, pre-civil rights Greenwood Mississippi. The script moves so quickly from one memory to the next that at times their impact is blunted, and in the end the fragments never quite click together into a unified whole. Still, director Audrey Morgan, and her talented cast kept me enthralled.
From the Mississippi Delta
Runs through January 11, 2009
at the ETA Creative Arts Foundation
7558 S. South Chicago
773-752-3955
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