6 OUR TIME PRESS March 12 – 18, 2015 | THE CALENDAR (For full calendar, check online: www.ourtimepress.com) Saturday, March 14 10:00-3:00pm – TAX PREPARATION HELP! Volunteers from the Medgar Evers College Accounting Department will assist. Medgar Evers College, 1650 Bedford Ave., Bklyn.:Rm. 2008 718-270-5195 Sunday, March 15 3:00pm Black History Great Debate: “Is Bill Cosby Being Lynched, Yes or No?” Dr. James McIntosh vs Journalist Mary Alice Miller. John Henrik Clarke House, 286 Convent Avenue, Harlem, NY Saturday, March 21 10:00-3:00pm – TAX PREPARATION HELP! Volunteers from the Medgar Evers College Accounting Department will assist. Medgar Evers College, 1650 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn; Room 2008 Contact: 718-270-5195; FREE 10:00am-3:00pm: COLLEGE FAIR/ Career Day at First Baptist Church of Crown Heights with more than 40 colleges represented. 450 Eastern Parkway. Subway: 4 or 5 to Franklin; 3 to Nostrand. Michelle Goudy: 917-826-4123. 1:00pm-6:00pm: Sistas’ Place hosts an African Bazaar featuring Tribal Truths Collection wear by Brenda Brunson Bey, Leather Locs by Sherlock, Ta Ankh Creations (knitwear & crochet accessories), Kiini Ibura Jewelry by Melody and hats and things by Sylvia. African Bazaar at Sistas’ Place, 456 Nostrand Avenue, are about enjoying the finest in clothing, jewelry and accessories produced by African people for African people. And at about 3 pm, Viola Plummer will be making remarks about the plebiscite and what it means for us. (718) 398-1766 Monday, March 23 7:00pm-8:30pm: Schomburg’s Women’s Jazz Festival 2015 Celebrates Great Women of Blues and Jazz, curated by Toshi Reagon. Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture; Tickets $25, $30. Tuesday, March 24 3:00-5:00pm: Schomburg Education and Teachers College’s Center on History and Education present: A History Education Roundtable: Challenging American Inequality: Historical Literacy Matters Why have we traditionally looked to historical knowledge as a building block of democratic participation and a central component of what it means to be an American? How can history pedagogy be framed as a challenge to social and economic inequality? How do we reach young learners to appreciate the study of history as integral to their quality of life and the well-being of American democracy? Remarks: Thomas James- Provost and Dean of Teachers College and Acting Director of the Center on History and Education. Panelists: Khalil Gibran Muhammad, Director of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library; Prithi Kanakamedala, Assistant Professor, Department of History, Bronx Community College; THE BROOKLYN ANTI-VIOLENCE COALITION CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO ATTEND oman of Courage WAwards Luncheon The sEVENTH Annual SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 2015 at MT. PISGAH BAPTIST CHURCH 212 Tompkins Avenue (Entrance on Dekalb Avenue) 12:00 P.M. - 3:00 P.M. HONORING WOMEN WHO HAVE DEDICATED THEMSELVES TO SERVING THEIR COMMUNITIES WOMAN OF COURAGE AWARD: Hazel N. Dukes HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES AWARD: Yvonne Ajago POLITICAL EMPOWERMENT AWARD: Olanike Alabi COMMUNITY SERVICE AWARD: Darma Diaz CLERGY AWARD: Pastor Gwendolyn H. Dingle LEGAL SERVICE AWARD: Justice Deborah A. Dowling PUBLIC SERVICE AWARD: Pauline Latham LAW ENFORCEMENT AWARD: Michelle McLeod EDUCATION AWARD: Dr. Shelia Tranumn TRAIL BLAZER AWARD: Joni A. Yoswein THERE IS NO COST FOR THIS EVENT. R.S.V.P. Bianca Robinson 347.216.1346 bavcinc'aol.com Mae Ngai, Lung Family Professor of Asian-American Studies and Professor of History, Columbia University; and Tim Bailey, Director of Education, The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History. Moderator: Yohuru R. Williams, Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs and Professor of History, Fairfield University. Hosts: Bette Weneck, Associate Director of Teachers College’s Center on History and Education, and Deirdre Hollman, Schomburg Center’s Director of Education and Exhibitions. Thursday, March 26 OPENING: The Fifth Annual NEW VOICES in BLACK CINEMA FESTIVAL kicks off with Ben Bowman’s “Knucklehead”, a hard-hitting Brooklyn drama starring Alfre Woodard and Gbenga Akinnagbe (“The Wire”) as a dysfunctional mother-son pair. Screening hosted by Martin Majeske, ActNow Managing Director, is followed by a Q&A with Bowman and Akinnagbe. Details to be provided in next week’s Our Time Press, the event’s community media sponsor. For more information, www.actnowproduction.org. Saturday, March 28 10:00am-6:00pm: National Black Writers Conference 2015 Biennial Symposium: “Voices of Liberation and Resistance & a Tribute to Danny Glover”@ Medgar Evers College, CUNY, 1650 Bedford Avenue, BK, Founders Auditorium. The NBWC focuses on activism, liberation and resistance in literature and the arts. 718-804-8883; CBL hotline: 718-270-4811. The cost of the 2015 NBWC Biennial Symposium is $10 ($5 for students, faculty and seniors). Registration is available prior to the symposium and onsite. Visit the Web site for more VOL. 20 NO. 11 information, www.centerforblackliterature. org or nbwc2015.eventbrite.com. 12:00noon-3:00pm: The Brooklyn Anti-Violence Coalition will present their 7th Annual Women of Courage Awards Luncheon, honoring Hazel Dukes, State Committeewoman, 57th AD, and Olanike Alabi at Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church. Open to the Public. No charge. RSVP: Diana Robinson: 347-216-1346. 9:00a-4:00p: Take Diabetes Risk Test! FREE! Offered by the Delta Sigma Theta/ Brooklyn Alumnae Chapter in conjunction with the American Diabetes Association for Alert Day! Find out if you are at risk of Developing Type 2 Diabetes at the Bedford-Stuyvesant Family Health Center, 1456 Fulton Street. Tuesday, March 31 7:00pm: A Celebration of the Activism of Barbara Smith. Panel Discussion moderated by Susan Arbetter. Milne 200, Downtown Campus, SUNY Albany. Barbara Smith, pioneering activist, will discuss her new book, “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around: Forty Years of Movement-Building with Barbara Smith” (2014). Smith, organizer, writer and publisher, has played key roles in multiple social justice movements. She is Public Service Professor in the School of Social Welfare at UAlbany, and a former member of Albany’s Common Council. Co-sponsored by SUNY Press and Rockefeller College of Public Affairs & Policy. RSVP-Space is limited: mhunt@albany.edu. NEXT YEAR February 2016: Our Time Press celebrates 20 years as the largest Black-owned community paper in Brooklyn, New York. www.ourtimepress.com
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