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Birmingham Youth Can Apply Now for Scholarship to attend area Elite Football Program

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Prostart Academy The City of Birmingham Mayor’s Office Division of Youth Services (DYS) announces a partnership with former NFL Player Gary Burley to offer a limited number of scholarships for interested Birmingham youth to attend his 2014 Pro Start Academy Football Camp.
Pro Start Academy is the only athletic and academic program of its kind, founded and managed by former NFL players, professionals and other experts. Our goal – to turn the average student athlete into the above average citizen athlete. We will help them excel – physically and academically. We want our athletes to capture the eyes of college recruiters and earn college scholarships. Pro Start Academy will help them do it!
The 2014 installment of this elite football camp will begin on Saturday, April 26, and continue for 16-consecutive weeks. Participants will meet each Saturday from 12 p.m. – 4 p.m. at the historic A.H. Parker High School. Birmingham residents, ages 12 – 19 years old will receive instruction from former NFL player and other professionals. Applicants must have at least one year of organized football experience. The total value of each scholarship exceeds $2,000.
Interested applicants must submit the following:
·         Completed Registration Form
·         Copy of most recent report card
·         Copy of current physical

Parents/guardians can register their child to be considered for a scholarship by submitting a completed registration form, along with a copy of their child’s physical, to DYS by 4p.m. on Thursday, April 4. Forms may be faxed to (205) 297-8139 or hand-delivered to DYS at 1608 7th Avenue N in downtown Birmingham. Selected participants will be notified on Monday, April 7.

For more information about the Pro Start Academy Football Camp Scholarships, call DYS at 205-320-0879.

Fresh Value Marketplace

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Fresh Value309 Main Street Trussville, Alabama 35173, Located across from Joel’s on main street in downtown Trussville.

Our Program means more food in your basket for less money this concept brings you our cost of goods plus 10 percent added to at the register. At Food Fresh Value Marketplace we buy big and sell big. We feature fresh cut meats, fresh fruits, and vegetables daily. Fresh USDA inspected Beef, Pork, and Chicken everyday.
Fresh Value Marketplace is a cost and 10 percent food outlet. We currently have food outlets in Millbrook, Prattville, and Montgomery Alabama. We are an Alabama owned and operated company from Thomasville, Alabama.

All White Jury: White Officers Falsely Arrested Black Teen; Awarded $119K In Damages

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teenBy JOE MANDAK, Associated Press

PITTSBURGH  — Three white officers accused in a federal civil rights lawsuit of beating a Black art student falsely arrested him but didn’t use excessive force, a jury found Monday, awarding him $119,000 in damages.
The all-white jury of four men and four women reached a split verdict in 22-year-old Jordan Miles’ lawsuit against officers David Sisak, Michael Saldutte and Richard Ewing. They found the officers liable for falsely arresting Miles but found them not liable for using excessive force to beat him.
The jurors awarded Miles $101,000 in compensatory damages and $6,000 from each officer for punitive damages for acting “maliciously and wantonly.”
Miles’ attorney, Joel Sansone, said he was gratified but confused by the verdict because he didn’t understand how the jurors came to a decision on the damages or concluded that the officers were wrong to arrest Jordan but not wrong to beat him. In closing arguments, Sansone didn’t ask for a specific amount in damages but hinted to the jury that millions of dollars may be appropriate.
“The only thing he wanted to hear was that these officers did the wrong thing,” Sansone said after the verdict.
Miles had claimed the officers confronted him in January 2010 while he was walking to his grandmother’s house to spend the night. He says they assumed he was a drug dealer because of his race and dreadlocks and beat him. At the time, he was an 18-year-old senior at Pittsburgh’s performing arts high school and had no history of police trouble.
The officers say they got rough with Miles because he fought with them while they mistakenly thought he had a gun.
The verdict stemmed from a retrial granted after another jury two years ago rejected Miles’ civil rights claims that police maliciously prosecuted him for assault, resisting arrest and other crimes when he ran from and fought with police on Jan. 12, 2010. The criminal charges were dismissed weeks after Miles’ arrest by a city magistrate who said he didn’t believe the police version of events.
But the first federal court jury in August 2012 couldn’t decide whether Miles had been wrongfully arrested or whether police used excessive force in the process, leading to a retrial on those civil rights claims.
Miles contends he was talking on his cellphone to his girlfriend while walking a block to his grandmother’s house, where he routinely spent the night, when the plainclothes officers rolled up in an unmarked car asking for money, drugs and a gun without identifying themselves. His lawyers contend that practice — which police denied using — is commonly known as a “jump out” and used to put suspected drug dealers on the defensive.
The officers maintain they flashed their badges and yelled “Police!” and stopped Miles only because he appeared to be lurking near a neighbor’s home. They claim Miles panicked and ran after being asked why he was “sneaking around” — and the confrontation escalated when Miles purportedly elbowed Saldutte in the head, then kicked Sisak in the knee, before officers mistook a “bulge” in Miles’ coat pocket for a gun.
The officers contend they discovered the bulge was from a bottle of Mountain Dew. Miles denies carrying the bottle; officers say they later threw it away.

2014 Ford Explorer

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2014 Ford ExplorerBy Frank S. Washington

DETROIT – Ford bet big on digital controls and the automaker seems to be winning. The center stack of every Ford is almost button-less, controls are actuated either through a touch screen or a touch pad. It makes for a really clean and uncluttered look.
That’s the case with the 2014 Ford Explorer. The interior of the sport utility was modern and unfettered by a lot of confusing controls. Still, it took a deep breath and some patience to understand how everything worked.
Two TFT (thin film transistor) screens on either side of a huge speedometer were key. The one on the right held controls for Explorer features like the entertainment, navigation and phone systems. On the left were controls for the vehicle itself like display mode, fuel economy and other settings. Selections were made for both sides from the steering wheel control buttons, the only place where there were actually buttons.
The 2014 Explorer was quiet, it rode really smooth and it had an ambience of quality in the interior. The MacPherson strut front suspension and the multilink coil over shock absorbers rear suspension did their job nicely.
With the streets here rift with potholes, big, small and huge, maneuverability was at a premium and the Explorer did well. Noise, vibration and harshness (NVH) was non-existent as ruddy roads were everywhere. At the time of the test drive, snow was still on the ground.
The Explorer had two engine choices: a two liter EcoBoost four cylinder that makes 240 horsepower and the test vehicle engine which was the 3.5 liter V6 that made 290 horsepower and 255 pound-feet of torque. Mated to a six-speed automatic transmission, this power train was smooth, quiet and under normal driving had plenty of oomph held in reserve.
One downside was that this engine was not a gas sipper.  We traveled 189.8 miles and averaged 16.6 MPG. The premium paid these days for unaspirated power is fuel consumption. For sure, the weight of the all-wheel-drive system and putting power to all four wheels contributed to the low mileage. The EPA rating was 17 MPG in the city and 23 MPG on the highway.
Still, the 2014 four-wheel-drive Ford Explorer had plenty to offer. It had three rows of seats and it could accommodate seven passengers. However, that third row was comfortable for two smaller people; not necessarily small children but not full-frown adults either.
Head room as well as leg room was a little close in the third row. But it was easy to access and relatively easy to get out of though a hand grip of some sort would have come in, eh, handy.
There was 21 cubic feet of storage behind the third row. With the third row folded that increased to 43.8 cubic feet of cargo space. And the 2014 Ford Explorer could tow up to 5,000 lbs.
The test vehicle had the $5,424 equipment group 302A. It included voice activated navigation, luxury seating package, power-fold third row seat, power liftgate, heated steering wheel, second row inflatable seat belts, blind spot monitoring, active park assist, lane departure land keep assist, rain sensing wipers and automatic high beams.
Of course, the test vehicle was equipped with the usual complement of creature comforts: satellite radio, Bluetooth, a rearview camera and USB and auxiliary jacks. But during the really frigid winter, several automotive attributes could be classed cold weather equipment.
Push button lock, unlock and start and stop made for quick and easy access. Remote start let the 2014 Explorer warm up before driving commenced and heated front row seats (they were cooled too) as well as heated second row seats made driving comfortable almost from the start.
The Ford Explorer is still a capable sport utility vehicle and it had all the features that you’d expect of a vehicle priced at $46,420.

Frank S. Washington is editor of AboutThatCar.com

Frank Washington

Tenth Annual MEAC/SWAC Challenge Presented by Disney

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MEAC:SWAC   The 10th annual MEAC/SWAC Challenge Presented by Disney will be played at Bright House Networks Stadium on the campus of the University of Central Florida (UCF). The previously announced Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) football matchup between the North Carolina A&T Aggies of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) and the Alabama A&M Bulldogs of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) will be played Sunday, Aug. 31, and televised on an ESPN network.
UCF approved the use of the stadium during a Board of Trustees’ meeting on Thursday. The game was played at Florida Citrus Bowl Stadium in Orlando, from 2008-2013 and Legion Field in Birmingham, Ala., from 2005-2007.  The Citrus Bowl is currently being renovated and is unavailable for the 2014 MEAC/SWAC Challenge.
“We are thrilled to have North Carolina A&T and Alabama A&M making their MEAC/SWAC Challenge debuts in our 10th anniversary game,” said Pete Derzis, senior vice president and general manager, ESPN Regional Television. “UCF’s Bright House Networks Stadium will serve as a wonderful venue, allowing us to give our student-athletes and fans an experience to remember for a long time.”
“The MEAC/SWAC Challenge Presented by Disney brings the excitement of HBCU football to Central Florida and we’re looking forward to celebrating the game’s 10th anniversary in Orlando,” said Nancy Gidusko, director of Community Relations and Minority Business Development for the Walt Disney World Resort. “Disney has a longstanding relationship with UCF and we are excited to host the event in the Knights’ stadium.”
Opened in 2007, Bright House Networks Stadium is the one of the newest college football venues in the U.S. Home to the UCF Knights football program, the stadium seats 45,323 and it serves as the crown jewel of the school’s burgeoning Athletics Village. The MEAC/SWAC Challenge marks the first time the venue will host an NCAA Division I football game not involving UCF.
More than 20,000 fans participate in the yearly Labor Day weekend festivities in Central Florida for the start of college football season. Offering More Than a Game, weekend events also include a high school career seminar, a parade, band showcase and a Legends’ Reception.
Travel options to attend the MEAC/SWAC Challenge in Orlando will be offered by Anthony Travel, the event’s official travel provider. Travel packages will include discounted hotel accommodations, game tickets and specially-priced Theme Park Tickets. For more information, visit www.AnthonyTravel.com/MEACSWAC or call 888-632-6951.
The MEAC/SWAC Challenge is owned and operated by ESPN Events, a subsidiary of ESPN. For more information about the MEAC/SWAC Challenge, or to join the event’s following on Facebook and Twitter, please visit the event’s official Web site at www.meacswacchallenge.com.

Lady Hornets Soccer Names New Assistant Coach

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Alabama State MONTGOMERY, Ala. –  Alabama State’s head soccer coach Jodie Smith has named Molly Rouse as the new assistant coach. She will be serving as the recruiting coordinator and position players coach with the main focus on the midfielders.
Prior to ASU Rouse served two years at Shattuck-St. Mary’s, College Prep Boarding school in Minnesota. While at Shattuck, Rouse played a key role in all facets of the program’s development towards new heights, which went beyond her primary duties as the assistant coach for the U18 team. Rouse was responsible for the program’s alumni relations, travel coordination and organizing recruiting events.
Before arriving at SSM, Rouse capped her stellar career playing in the Women’s Premier Soccer League with the Vancouver Whitecaps.
Coach Rouse played her collegiate career for the University of Minnesota, where she played a key role for the Gophers in the Big Ten championship game during the 2008 season. She assisted with earning two NCAA tournament appearances both during the 2008 and 2010 seasons, advancing to the Sweet Sixteen twice. Rouse was a four-year starter at the midfield position and served as team captain her junior and senior years. As a freshman Rouse was named to the All-Big Ten Team in 2007 and All-Big Ten Second Team in 2009, and earned team Midfield MVP her final two seasons. She graduated with a degree in Early Childhood Education, a minor in Child Psychology, with an emphasis on American Sign Language. While at Minnesota she earned All-Big Ten Academic honors for three years.
Rouse holds a U.S. Soccer Federation (USSF) National “C” License.
“I am very excited about Molly joining our team. She brings a wealth of experience as a player and a coach,” stated Smith. “Rouse has played at the highest level in college along with her professional career, as well as coaching at one of the leading prep schools in the country.

SOFTBALL DROPS DOUBLE HEADER TO JACKSON STATE

MONTGOMERY – The Alabama State softball team dropped a double header to Jackson State 5-2 and 9-1 Sunday at the Barbara Williams Softball Complex.

GAME 1- Alabama State was scoreless in their last three and a half innings, while holding Jackson State scoreless for their last three innings.

Both clubs managed runs in the first inning, with JSU scoring two runs on three hits. ASU’s first run of the game came on an Aleesa Yanez single to center field scoring Tamara Williams, who tripled to right field before Yanez.

In the third inning, both teams would plate runs with Jackson State pushing the score to 4-2. The Lady Hornets lone run of the inning came when Diauna Nelson slapped a double to left field scoring Meagan Dixon, who reached base as a result of a fielder’s choice.

Jackson State would score once more in the fourth inning to give the game it’s final. ASU accounted for seven hits but stranded six runners throughout the game.

GAME 2- In the second half of today’s double dip, JSU got out to an early lead as they took a 7-0 advantage after two innings. ASU’s pitching got off to a slow start as Jackson State was able to turn five hits and three walks into seven runs.

JSU scored two more runs, one in the third and again in the fourth before ASU would get their only run of the contest.

In the fifth inning, Dixon, who blasted a triple to left field, came in on a Nelson’s ground ball to second to make the score read 9-1. The Lady Hornets would run out of gas, as JSU closed the door on the weekend series finishing the game in five innings.

“I think we became complacent in what we were doing and we didn’t make adjustments,” Assistant Coach Brittanie Talley said. “Attitude can be contagious when you get down on yourself.”

Next up for Lady Hornets will be a mid-week match against Florida A&M Tuesday, April 1, with a 5 p.m. start time at the Barbara Williams Softball Complex. For live stats, updates and everything ASU Softball log on to www.bamastatesports.com

Soccer Megastar, David Beckham, Visits Florida Memorial University

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International Soccer Star, David Beckham and FMU President, Dr. Roslyn Artis

(BLACK PR WIRE) – Florida Memorial University (FMU) received an unexpected surprise by International Soccer Star, David Beckham.
Beckham was greeted by University President, Dr. Roslyn Artis, followed by a brief private meeting. The two discussed South Florida and Beckham’s upcoming plans to bring MLS soccer to the community. Dr. Artis shared some of the University’s history and discussed their upcoming development plans.
“FMU is among the leading higher education institutions in our community and I am so pleased that Mr. Beckham took the time to come on campus and see what our University is about,” said Dr. Artis.
Following their meeting, Beckham and Artis surprised the FMU soccer team during an afternoon scrimmage. “I was thrilled to see him in person and here at FMU,” exclaimed soccer player Francisco Allegro. “It is good for the University and I hope his goodwill efforts help both our University and community,” shared Head Men’s and Women’s Soccer Coach, Fernando Valenzuela.
Florida Memorial University’s Soccer Program is among the best in the Sun Conference. For a listing of the FMU soccer teams’ upcoming games, visit the website at www.fmuniv.edu.

Celebrating Women History Month

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A BIT OF HISTORY – OPENING THE WAY!

 “I have asked for equality nothing more…Women are entirely unaware of their power. Like an elephant led by a string, they are subordinated by…just those who are most interested in holding them in slavery.”
                        -Victoria Woodhall, prophet of Women’s Power, 1872
 
The formidable sisters Victoria Woodhull and Tennie C. Clafin published Woodhull and Chalfin’s Weekly, a paper that exposed the adultery of the famed Brooklyn preacher Henry Ward Beecher.
Their frank accounts of the scandal sent Victoria Woodhull to jail.
The charge  – ‘obscenity.’
The paper closed briefly but reopened – and published four more years. Today the site of its publication is a stop on Opening the Way, the women’s eNews history tour of downtown Manhattan.
Woodhull was also the first woman to run for president, nearly 50 years before women gained the right to vote.
She advocated for equal education for women, the right to vote, and women’s right to control their own health decisions.
Reprinted from Women eNews – DONATE TO Women’s eNews!)

Sonya SmithSonya Smith
by Jessica Jones

In the right place and the right time, dreams really do come true. At least that’s true for Sonya Smith, owner of Divine Hair Designs.
Prior to owing her own salon, she worked for different stylists in their salons, taking time to discover the workings of owning a business.
“That’s what enabled me to know what type of stylists I want working with me,” Smith said. “So I was working in different salons to be able to build a solid foundation for my salon.”
A few years before she became the owner of her salon, Smith had the chance to rent a building, to establish a business, but she had no equipment to operate a shop.
“I had the opportunity to get an establishment, but I didn’t have everything in it,” she said. “I told my husband the next time I save up some money, I’m going to buy everything for my salon, all the basics, so when that building comes I can move in. So I did that. I purchased all my salon equipment from Ensley Beauty Supply. I was walking by faith. I asked the store owner how long they could house it for me. They said six months. Three months after I got my salon equipment the opportunity came.”
Finally being able to own a salon was a childhood dream fulfilled for Smith, who graduated cosmetology school at Shelton State Community College in 1999.
“It’s something I’ve always had a passion for, she said. “It’s something I’ve always wanted. I worked in so many different salons with different atmospheres, different people and along with my growth, I realized that where I started, that wasn’t where I wanted to end up. And so I somehow knew this was something God put in me, it was divine revelation for me to have my own because I’m a leader and I feel like it was something that God had destined for me.”
Right before she met her destiny, Smith rented a booth from a shop owner, but two weeks after being hired at the salon, the owner decided to fire her. She was able to find work elsewhere, but the building had a power outage on a busy weekend, which left Smith unable to work for the next two days.
“I said ‘Lord, where can I go to service my clients in a nice soothing, professional environment,” she said. “Something told me to call the lady who had fired me. I still kept in touch with her and I didn’t hold a grudge. She said that I could come work the weekend at her salon, and I said, ‘well, what are you going to charge me?’ She said, ‘don’t worry about that. Just come on.’ I came that week and I never, ever left. Everything was switched over from her to me.”
The business was switched from its former owner over to her, and Smith obtained a license; a process that can be lengthy and complicated went off without a hitch, Smith said.
“I’d heard about how it’s hard to get licenses,” she said. “But for me, it was smooth sailing. When we transferred the business over from her name to my name everything went smoothly. That’s why I said that I know that God orchestrated this. I knew that this was for me even though I couldn’t believe it – sometimes I still pinch myself because it’s a dream that has finally come true.”
Smith has been operating her shop since 2009, and while she’s had a few stylists come and go, for the most part she’s been working the salon alone. She’s recently added a new stylist who rents a booth from her. When a tornado destroyed Center Point businesses in 2013, Smith allowed stylists to rent booths from her until they could find work. As part of an effort to give back to the community, she’s organized coat drives and has even held fundraisers to raise money for salon equipment. Along with managing her business, community service is important to Smith.
“I want to be able to give back no matter at what level I am,” she said. “And as I progress I’ll give more.”

Kelli SmithKelli Smith, Women on the Move
by Jessica Jones

Any college graduate will tell you school is hard. Any parent will tell you raising kids is hard, especially if they’re single. But going to school and raising two children as a single parent is doubly hard. Kelli Smith is a full-time graphic design major and a divorced, working mother of two boys, who decided to fulfil her dream of earning her degree despite the obstacles ahead of her.
“After my divorce I knew it was something I always wanted to do, get my degree and pretty much go after what my desire was, which was art, and I decided to go back to school,” Smith said. “I’ve been divorced now for three years and trying to jump back into that, being in school full time, working full time, providing for my two boys, making sure that I’m there for their school events and trying to juggle everything, it’s hard. But you know, I’m a woman of faith. I know where my help comes from and I know that God constantly and always gives me strength where I lack.”
She previously attended A&M University, but didn’t finish after she became pregnant with her first son.
“Of course I planned to graduate and become this career woman,” she said, “but God had other plans for me and His plans led me to being a wife and being a mother.”
Her marriage ended after seven years, which gave her the opportunity to finally go back to school and reach her goal –l not only for herself, but for her sons as well.
“It didn’t matter what it took,” Smith said. “I knew going in, ‘Kelli, you’re going to stick with this, whether it gets hard or not, you’re going to do it.’ And I knew my sons had me to look up to. If nothing else, even if I never use my degree, I’ve proven to my children that you can do it. Whether you’re my age, or you’re married and you feel like you’ve got something going against you, you can do it so. I think, if nothing else I’ve taught them a valuable lesson – when you do something, you go hard at it.”
Balancing home, school and work is difficult. Once she arrives home from school late in the evening, she has to make sure that her boys have completed their homework and get them ready for their next day of school. As a student, she then has her own assignments to complete. While she has her mother to occasionally help her, asking for help isn’t something she likes to do.
“It’s not that I don’t like asking for help, I just hate to be a burden on people,” she said. “I try not to be a burden on my mom, because I have two other siblings who take a lot of her time. We’ve had this conversation before, my mom and I, because I felt like I want her attention too. She tells me, ‘Kelli, you’re the child that’s going to be okay,’ but when I do need help, that’s my anchor.
After graduation this spring, she has her sights set on working for the government or working for a magazine and possibly returning to school for a masters for graphic design and business and marketing.
Although this wasn’t how she’d originally planned her life, Smith said she wouldn’t have it any other way.
“I embrace it,” she said. “I love it and I wouldn’t change any of it for the world.”

Cloritta ThomasCloritta Thomas Turning Misfortune into Greatness
By Jessica Jones

When faced with tragedy after being the target of a random shooting that left her paralyzed from the waist down, Cloritta Thomas became a living example of turning misfortune into greatness.
Thomas, native of Cleveland, Ohio, came to Birmingham in Oct. 2009 after researching facilities that could possibly help her walk again, after being paralyzed from the waist down for nearly 33 years.
“There was no potential of me walking again when I was diagnosed,” Thomas said.
But that didn’t stop her from living her life and providing for her family. After her injury and a divorce from her husband, Thomas continued raising her two boys, alone. Thomas attributes her ability to continue despite her disability to having to be her boys’ provider. “I wanted a better life for them and I didn’t want them to be with anybody else, she said.” “I was very motivated to make the best situation for them. They helped me and I helped them.”
“I couldn’t allow myself to be selfish,” she said. “I had a family. I had to keep things going and it really was only me. So I had nobody to lean on, which probably was a good thing, I had my family but they had their families and their responsibilities and I always wanted to be independent. If I felt bad [about my disability], it was just for that moment and I knew I had to keep on pushing.”
Despite the diagnosis, Thomas began noticing that a portion of her mobility had returned to her legs.
“I noticed I had some mobility coming back when I was going to physical therapy,” she said. But my insurance would only pay for it quarterly, then I would have to stop [attending physical therapy sessions]. I found out that Birmingham had a lot to offer a person with a disability such as mine.”
Since moving to Alabama, she’s been consistently utilizing the exercise equipment at Lakeshore Foundation and has seen a gradual progression in her mobility.
“Right now I’m at the point of moving my hips, and prior to coming here, I wasn’t able to visibly move my hips,” she said. “I can actually get on a machine and start propelling and you can see the activity in my hips. And since I’ve been here (at Lakeshore Foundation), I’ve been participating in a lot of trial researches that UAB has to offer, I’ve been a good candidate for that.”
A large portion of her support came from the people with whom she surrounded herself.
“I was with people who had a disability but did not let that disability hold them down,” she said. “I was with people who were teachers who were counselors. Their life was moving. They lived their lives productively. The only thing they had to do was use an aid. They had to use a wheelchair or a cane or some type of device and those were the type of people I mingled with that kept me going. It has a lot to do with your environment and your openness to know that this has happened to me but life goes on and that’s the type of person I was.”
As a peer counselor, before her incident, she witnessed people who had endured life-altering trauma and were unable to cope with their new reality, often turning to suicide or becoming depressed.
Thomas was in a rut of her own, but she eventually became motivated to continue despite her disability. The change of attitude didn’t happen overnight, she said.
“It did take me a little bit of transition when I first got injured, she said. “It took me about a year and a half to realize I was going to be wheelchair-bound. But after that period of time I was surrounded by so many people telling me what I could to as opposed to what I couldn’t do, so I had a lot of really good people around me.”
Since her recovery, Thomas found that her life after her injury was fuller than before. She’s a mentor for children with spinal cord injuries at the Spain Rehabilitation center at UAB. She also works with a leadership program at her church which mentors to students who live in the projects. She is affiliated with the MS Society, a stroke group, a senior group in Vestavia as well as Ollie, a life learning course that is offered through UAB.

 

Adriana GalueAdriana Galue to be Honored by the Birmingham International Center
by Jessica Jones
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The BIC’s annual International Women’s Day event will be held on May 22 at The Club from 6 to 9p.m. The event will feature dinner and entertainment while honoring women from the community and around the world.
Each year the BIC presents a Woman of Consequence award to an international woman and this year the BIC is pleased to announce its honoree as Colombian, Adriana Galue. Based in Boulder, Colo., Adriana Galue started working with web startups following a career in Neuroscience. She is truly passionate about technology and entrepreneurship. In addition to owning a consulting company, Adriana teaches seminars in entrepreneurship applied to technology in several South American universities. Prior to becoming an entrepreneur, Adriana worked for 10 years as research associate and scientist for both the academic and pharmaceutical sectors. During her scientific career, Adriana co-developed the pre-clinical studies of Kalydeco, the only treatment available up to date for patients suffering from Cystic Fibrosis. Adriana holds a Master’s in Neurology and Neurosurgery from McGill University and an MBA from the Leeds School of Business – University of Colorado at Boulder. Born in Colombia and educated in Canada, she is fluent in English, Spanish and French.
As a part of this event, the general public may nominate Motivating Women that reflect diversity, culture, and achievement. These women inspire and motivate others to live successfully and significantly by making differences, large and small, every day.
Any organization, club, corporation, group or family can purchase a table at which the Motivating Woman will be a special guest. The public can tell the BIC in 200 words why a motivating woman should be recognized, and they will share her story in the event program so that other women of various walks of life, unique backgrounds and experiences, can be inspired as well.
The public can complete the nomination form on the BIC website and return it to the Birmingham International Center no later than April 22. The Top 20 will be selected for recognition as Motivating Women at the International Women’s Day Awards Dinner.
The Birmingham International Center is the nation’s oldest cultural-education organization. Founded in 1951, the Birmingham International Center has grown into a resource for international business-education needs, including intercultural training, heritage and arts programming. For more information on the Birmingham International Center, visit www.bic-al.org, email bicstaff@bic-al.org or call (205) 252-7652.

NYYA PARSON HUDSONNYYA PARSON-HUDSON

Nyya Parson-Hudson is a judge on the Birmingham Municipal Court.
Parson-Hudson, the daughter of attorney Connie Parson, grew up in Wenonah and attended Ramsay High School before transferring to the Alabama School of Fine Arts. She earned her bachelor’s degree in political science at Howard University in Washington D.C., a master of science in criminal justice from the University of Alabama, and her juris doctorate at Miles College, where she was valedictorian of the Class of 2000.  Married to John Hudson, vice president of public relations, Alabama Power Foundation,   and Exective Director of the Alabama Business Charitable Trust for the Alabama Power Company, they have one daughter, Jordyn.  She and her husband formed their own Hudson Law Firm in the Alamerica Bank building. Parson-Hudson is a member of the board of AIDS Alabama, the Birmingham-Jefferson American Red Cross, the Women’s Auxiliary of the A. G. Gaston Boys and Girls Club, and the executive committee of the Birmingham Business Alliance. Parson-Hudson is an alumnus of the 2009 class of Leadership Birmingham. In 2010 she received the Young Professional Award from the Metro Birmingham Chapter of the NAACP.

Betty Marshall
Having accomplished several firsts Betty Marshall became the first Black woman appointed to a management position at Arby’s, the first in management at Shoney’s then promoted to vice president and today, she is Regional Vice President of Sam’s Club. She could not have said it better when she said she learned firsthand the true meaning of not judging a book by its cover, because she was being judged every day. She also said that if you don’t know who you are, you will answer to anything.

Ann August_Ms. Ann Dawson August, CCTM

A woman with a passion for God and Country – from her family to public service.
She served 30 years in the United States Army JAG Corps. and insures that public transit services are on the streets, six days a week.  Ms. Dawson-August believes that
“The more you know, the more you grow” and “Where much is given, much is required.”

 

 

Betty MarshallBetty Marshall
Having accomplished several firsts Betty Marshall became the first Black woman appointed to a management position at Arby’s, the first in management at Shoney’s then promoted to vice president and today, she is Regional Vice President of Sam’s Club. She could not have said it better when she said she learned firsthand the true meaning of not judging a book by its cover, because she was being judged every day. She also said that if you don’t know who you are, you will answer to anything.

AIDS United Receives Award from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for “Getting to Zero” Capacity-Building Assistance Project

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AIDS UNITED WASHINGTON, D.C. – Thanks to an award from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), AIDS United will be able to provide capacity-building assistance to community-based organizations (CBOs) around the country to help them better plan, implement, and sustain high-impact HIV prevention (HIP) interventions and strategies with HIV-positive and high-risk HIV-negative populations. Called “Getting to Zero: Capacity Building for CBOs on High-Impact Prevention Implementation (G2Zero),” the five-year project is designed to strengthen CBOs – a key part of the HIV prevention workforce – by improving their organizational capacity and creating a sustainable infrastructure for delivery of effective prevention programs.
The G2Zero project will include broad-based training and information to CBOs nationally, as well as more intensive assistance to select targeted CBOs. Over the five years, AIDS United’s staff as well as a diverse base of partners will provide this capacity-building assistance.
Partners such as the Bridging Group, Christie’s Place, GMHC, the Harm Reduction Coalition, Health Equity Institute, JRI Health, and Primary Care Development Corporation, among others, will allow G2Zero to deliver CBA to organizations that work with some of the hardest hit populations including gay and bisexual and other men who have sex with men, people who inject drugs, and those with a history of incarceration.
CDC estimates more than 1.1 million people in the U.S. are living with HIV, and nearly 50,000 new infections occur each year in the United States. Despite the epidemic’s heavy toll to date, significant milestones over the last four years have provided a clear path for substantially reducing new infections while also improving care for people living with HIV. A “perfect storm” solution has emerged with development of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy (NHAS), passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), and a deeper understanding of the power of treatment as prevention.
“We now know that our path to an AIDS-free generation must include a comprehensive HIV prevention strategy that includes treatment of those living with HIV, as well as effective behavioral interventions for those who are negative but at high risk for infection,” said Vignetta Charles, Ph.D. “Therefore we must ensure that CBOs serving these populations have the tools, training, and organizational infrastructure necessary to deploy effective treatment and behavioral prevention programs.
“We are grateful for the CDC’s investment in G2Zero, which we believe has tremendous potential to help us reduce the number of new HIV infections; reduce HIV-related morbidity, mortality and health disparities; and improve linkage to and retention in quality health care, particularly for our country’s most disproportionately affected populations.”