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Black woman shot dead seeking help in white neighborhood

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Renisha McBride

‘I Thought She Was An Intruder!’

DEARBORN HEIGHTS, Mich. (AP)  A Black woman whose fatal shooting by a US homeowner has prompted claims of racial profiling was shot in the face, a post-mortem examination found.
Renisha McBride, 19, received fatal injuries on the front porch of a home in Detroit, Michigan, on November 2.
Her family says she was disoriented and looking for help after having just been involved in a car crash nearby.
The homeowner said he had feared a burglary, but civil rights leaders are demanding justice.
Prosecutors say they are reviewing whether to charge the unidentified 54-year-old, who told police he fired his shotgun accidentally.
Stand your ground law
A lawyer for the man said he was “torn up” by McBride’s death, but that he had feared for his life at the time.
Michigan is one of several U.S. states with a so-called stand your ground law, which allows the use of deadly force if a person feels their life is in danger, though it is unclear whether that will be argued in this case.
A post-mortem examination report released on Monday confirmed that McBride had been shot in the face, but not at close range.
Demonstrators rallied last week outside a local police station to protest over McBride’s killing. The Wayne County medical examiner’s office report has ruled her death a homicide.
She was shot as she stood on the porch in the predominantly white Dearborn Heights area shortly before 4.
The Detroit Free Press reported that a car registered to McBride’s family had been involved in a collision with a parked vehicle just over two hours before the shooting, a few streets away.
It is unclear what happened in the intervening time. McBride’s relatives have called for a thorough investigation into the shooting.
“It’s hard to… believe it’s an accident when a gun is in her face and the trigger is pulled,” family lawyer Gerald Thurswell told the Detroit News on Friday.
The case has attracted the attention of civil rights leader the Reverend Al Sharpton, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and Michigan congressman John Conyers.
On Saturday, about 200 people showed up at a rally organized by Mr. Sharpton’s National Action Network.

NNPA Chairman Blasts NFL for ‘Almost a Slave Mentality’

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NNPABy Hazel Trice Edney
(TriceEdneyWire.com)

The chairman of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, a federation of more than 200 Black-owned newspapers, says the Washington Redskins’ team – under fire from a Richmond, Va. publisher – is in sync with the entire National Football League in its apparent oppressive treatment of Black businesses and consumers.
“It’s almost a slave mentality. They put us on the field and we entertain the master but we’re not reaping any benefits from the business side of it,” Campbell says. “It’s not just the Redskins. If you look around the country, the NFL as a whole pretty much neglects Black businesses and the Black community,” said Campbell, publisher of the Arizona Informant Newspaper.
He continued, “Here in Arizona, our Arizona Cardinals does zero with the Black community. Every now and then they might show up for a token Black event. But, I don’t see our African-American newspaper here in Phoenix or in Arizona being supported by the Arizona Cardinals. I believe if you called other newspapers that have [teams] in their markets, I don’t believe they’re doing much for them either. I believe the NFL as a whole takes the Black community for granted although we are their major product on the field.”
Campbell was responding to questions pertaining to a conflict between NNPA member Ray Boone, editor/publisher of the award-winning Richmond Free Press, and the Richmond-based Washington Redskins Training Camp, which is partially owned by Bon Secours Health System.
In a letter to NAACP Chairman Roslyn Brock and CC’d to Campbell, Boone states that the team contracted no business with Black-owned or locally owned businesses at its first Richmond training camp between July 25 and August 16. That includes the failure to advertise in the Black-owned Richmond Free Press while advertising with the white-owned conservative daily, the Richmond Times Dispatch which has a history of pro-segregation leadership. The conflict is steeped in an age-old battle constantly waged by Black newspapers, which are historic targets for advertising discrimination.
While Bon Secours placed paid advertisements for the training camp in the Times Dispatch, the Free Press was sent press releases, Boone said in an interview.
Brock, who has served as NAACP chair since 2010, is vice president for advocacy and government relations for the Bon Secours Health System, Inc., in Marriottsville, Md. Boone believes her corporate position has caused her to compromise her stance for economic justice in the Richmond case.
“Bon Secours, along with Mayor Dwight C. Jones and the Washington team, blatantly denied, contrary to the Mayor’s pledge, Black businesses and other local businesses the opportunity to receive vendor contracts inside the training camp,” Boone wrote in a Sept. 27 letter to Brock. “Characteristic of Richmond government and big businesses, this Bon Secours decision disgracefully enhanced Richmond’s shameful reputation as ‘The Capital of Poverty,’ with 25 percent of Richmond’s population suffering in poverty.”
When Brock had not responded to his letter for more than a month, Boone followed up with a Nov. 1 email pointing out, “This raises the unavoidable question of whether Bon Secours is restricting you from living up to your responsibility to honor the NAACP mission?”
He continued, “In the interest of fairness and the image of the NAACP, I respectfully suggest that you break your silence.”
Brock responded to Boone by email that same day, stating, “The matter you reference in your letter is local in nature and should be handled directly by the Richmond Branch NAACP and Salim Khalfani at the Virginia State Conference NAACP. I have forwarded your correspondence to them and shared the information with the leadership of Bon Secours Health System in Richmond.”
In an email, responding to a question from the Trice Edney News Wire this week, Brock said that she had not publically commented on Boone’s complaint because it is a local issue.
Brock’s email said she had “also discussed the matter in detail with” Campbell, who is serving his second term as NNPA chairman. At a Sept. 17 reception in D.C., Campbell, Boone and other NNPA publishers praised Brock for her leadership and gave her an award for social justice.
While Campbell verbally blistered the NFL, including the Redskins, he balanced his response by saying he agrees with Brock that the issue in Boone’s case is local since the economic decisions appear to have been made by the mayor and Bon Secours’ Richmond entities.
“At the end of the day, I think [the criticism of her] is unfair just because she works for Bon Secours. That’s her day job. We all volunteer at some time with the NAACP,” Campbell says, referring to Brock’s volunteer chairmanship. “While we want to see Mr. Boone and his publication get what it deserves and more so; that is definitely a local issue.”
Boone, who recently announced he has stopped using the term “Redskins” in the Richmond Free Press because it is “racist”, argues that the Redskins’ and Bon Secours’ exclusion of Black businesses underscores and illustrates the team’s mentality under the controversial name, which is receiving growing national pressure for change.
In her email to the Trice Edney News Wire, Brock also clarified that the NAACP has long stood against the Redskins name because of its roots in racism. “The NAACP passed a resolution more than 10 years ago against racial slurs being used as mascots. In the last few months the NAACP signed on letters with the Oneida Tribe, based in Washington and the National Coalition on American Tribes especially in support of their efforts to change the Redskins name,” she wrote.
Neither Mayor Dwight C. Jones; nor Virginia NAACP President King Salim Khalfani could be reached for comment by deadline. Bon Secours representatives did not return repeated phone calls.
Meanwhile, Boone, a recipient of the State NAACP’s Oliver W. Hill Freedom Fighter Award, remains focused on his quest for economic justice, promising Brock “fairness and balance” in upcoming coverage of her leadership positions with the NAACP and Bon Secours.
Such economic battles have been hard fought in Richmond and in Black and grassroots communities across the nation. Former Richmond City Councilman Chuck Richardson, known for his historic advocacy for Black businesses and contractors, recalls researching Washington Redskins’ racism as far back as 1961. That’s when he wrote a research paper in junior high school about the team and how the Redskins was “the last professional football team to allow Blacks to play for them,” he said in an interview. “This harkens back to that painful time. It hurt then and I would have thought that a greater degree of change might have occurred, but the mentality still exists. It seems so much has changed and yet so much remains the same.”

Birmingham’s Eatmon Selected as One of Just 12 ‘Afterschool Ambassadors’ From Across Nation

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EatmonEatmon will work in Alabama and nationally to expand Afterschool

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Afterschool Alliance has announced that Erika Eatmon, Education Coordinator for the Birmingham Regional Empowerment and Development (BREAD) Center, has been selected to serve as a 2013-2014 Afterschool Ambassador. She is one of just 12 local leaders from across the country to be chosen for the honor this year. Each Afterschool Ambassador will continue directing or supporting a local afterschool program while also serving the one-year Afterschool Ambassador term organizing public events, communicating with policy makers, and building support for afterschool programs. Eatmon’s Ambassadorship is sponsored by Bright House Networks, as part of the company’s ongoing commitment to afterschool initiatives and to education in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) topics.
“In Birmingham and all across the country, quality afterschool programs are doing a terrific job meeting the needs of students, families and communities,” said Afterschool Alliance Executive Director Jodi Grant. “Afterschool programs keep kids safe during the out of school time hours, help working families, and inspire students to learn by offering enriching activities like Tae Kwon Do, robotics and cooking clubs, as well as homework help, physical fitness, connections to mentors, and much more. As an Afterschool Ambassador, Erika will bring great energy to the work to build even stronger support for afterschool programs among parents, business and community leaders, lawmakers and others. We are profoundly grateful to Bright House Networks for supporting her ambassadorship and for its ongoing, generous support for the afterschool initiative. I look forward to working with Erika this year.”
Afterschool programs are under intense pressure.  The Afterschool Alliance’s 2012 Uncertain Times survey found that more than three in five afterschool programs (62 percent) reported that their funding is down “a little or a lot” from three years earlier. Even in communities where local economies and program funding are faring better, program leaders express significant concern about their financial outlook and their inability to reach all children who need afterschool programs.
“I am delighted to have this chance to help increase support for afterschool programs, which give students opportunities to explore their interests and give parents the security that comes with knowing that their children are safe and supervised, with engaging, educational activities after the school day ends,” Eatmon said. “Afterschool programs are critical to students’ success in school, to their safety, to working families, and to the nation’s workforce and its economy. We need to increase resources to afterschool programs and work toward the day when there is a program for every child who needs one.”
The BREAD Center provides afterschool and summer camp programs, adult education, and summer food service programs to more than 150 students and families in the Birmingham metro area. The afterschool program has operated as a 21st Century Community Learning Center site since 2003. BREAD offers homework help, STEM projects, gardening, recreation, nutrition, character education, and the arts. Erika Eatmon has been with BREAD since 2009.
Each Ambassador organized a major event for Lights On Afterschool, the Afterschool Alliance’s 14th annual national rally for afterschool, held on October 17 this year. Last year, 1 million people participated in some 9,000 Lights On Afterschool events across the United States and at U.S. military bases worldwide. Bright House Networks is sponsoring the Lights On Afterschool photo contest again this year, in which the public will vote for the winner on the Bright House Networks Facebook page and one program will win $2,000.
“We congratulate Erika and all of this year’s Afterschool Ambassadors,” said Reinaldo Llano, Bright House Corporate Director, Community Relations, and board member of the Afterschool Alliance. “We look forward to continuing to support the afterschool community and to helping students, teachers and families with resources that lead the way in engaged learning opportunities, specifically with the STEM education initiative.”

The other 2013-2014 Afterschool Ambassadors are:
·         Alaska, Juneau:  Terri Campbell;
·         Arkansas, Jonesboro: Rennell Woods, Executive Director, At-Risk American Male Education Network (AAMEN);
·         Colorado, Fort Collins: María Ortiz, 21st CCLC Grant Director, Poudre School District;
·         Kansas, Overland Park: Pamela Watkins, Vice President Youth Development Services, YMCA of Greater Kansas City;
·         Louisiana, New Orleans: Cyndi Nguyen, Director, Vietnamese Initiatives in Economic Training (VIET);
·         Maryland, Rockville: Elizabeth McGlynn, Executive Director, Girls on the Run of Montgomery County;
·         Nebraska, Omaha: Gwynette Williams, Program Director, Collective for Youth;
·         New York, Brooklyn: Omari McCleary, Program Director, Good Shepherd Services,
·         Texas, Fort Worth: Miguel Garcia, Director, Fort Worth After School; and
·         Washington, Cheney: Tammie Shaw.

One additional Afterschool Ambassador will be chosen and announced shortly.
Many more students across the country need access to afterschool programs. More than 15 million school-age children – more than one in four kids in the United States – are unsupervised after the school day ends. The parents of 18 million children say they would enroll their kids in afterschool programs – if programs were available.

Miles College President Dr. George T. French elected Chair of SIAC Presidents Council

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Dr. George FrenchATLANTA – The Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC) has announced that Miles College President, Dr. George T. French has been elected as chair of the SIAC President’s Council. Effective immediately, Dr. French’s two-year post as chair will commence after the SIAC Council of Presidents voted unanimously during its annual fall meeting. “It is an honor and a privilege to serve the SIAC in this capacity,” said Dr. French. “I, along with my esteemed colleagues on the council, will work together to the utmost of our abilities to serve on the foundation of knowledge and integrity for one of the preeminent athletic organizations in the Collegiate Athletic Community.” “As president of Miles College, President French has earned a reputation for effecting positive transformational change in organizations with a thoughtful and innovative leadership style,” added SIAC Commissioner Gregory Moore. “The SIAC will certainly be well served by President French’s new expanded leadership role.” Under Dr. French’s leadership, the school recently completed the $30 million “Miles Ahead” Campaign, with gifts and pledges exceeding $42.4 million, as well as the acquisition of the former Lloyd Noland Hospital Campus. Recently, Dr. French championed the construction of three state of the art buildings: the Dr. George T. French, Jr. Student Activities Center, Welcome and Admissions Center and the 204-bed Bishop Teresa E. Snorton Residence Hall.  Furthermore, Dr. French has pioneered a monumental shift in the areas of enrollment, growth, and fundraising since becoming Miles College’s president in 2006. Dr. French earned a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science with an emphasis in Policy Analysis from the University of Louisville. He earned a Juris Doctorate from Miles School of Law and is currently ABD at Jackson State University for the PhD. where he is completing his dissertation on the topic of 21st century challenges in higher education and the use of transformational and transactional leadership styles as solutions. Dr. French is a 2013 recipient of the NAACP Man of the Year award and was one of six finalists for the 2013 HBCU President of the Year.

VETERANS DAY – CROSSING OUT WAR

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Dr. Wilkerson
Dr. Wilkerson
Dr. Wilkerson

Dr. Wilkerson

Armistice Day, which was first celebrated on November 11, 1918, was changed to Veterans Day when our government passed a bill to that effect on June 2, 1954. Originally, it was a celebration of the ending of World War I, but today it commemorates the services of those who fought in all wars. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could cross out war?
“A quarter of a million crosses. That’s the price in human lives that America paid for victory in World War II. Russia and England paid an even higher price.” (Since World War II, America has lost 33,746 lives in the Korean War; 47,355 in the Viet Nam War; around 6,000 in the Iraq War, and we don’t know how many more will be killed in Afghanistan and other areas).
The crosses reach far beyond the horizon of our vision. Those crosses are there because the men beneath them died to cross out war. They endeavored to cross it out with their blood. They crossed out their hopes, ambitions, and dreams. They crossed out their personal futures to save the future of the world.
There is much crossing out that the living must do if we are to avoid new wars and new fields of crosses in new generations. We, the living, must cross out of our hearts hatred, intolerance, selfishness, and prejudice. We must cross out military force as a means of settling disputes. We must cross out narrow viewpoints and replace them with world-wide viewpoints. We must cross out fear and replace it with faith.
Each white cross marking the grave of one fallen is a vote marked on the ballot sheet of earth for lasting peace. That peace for which they died can only be achieved if we live for it now with mighty hearts.” – Dodge Transmissioner

Dr. Robert Wilkerson is a minister, writer, and founder of People for the Christian Way, an organization whose mission is to encourage all people to practice Christian principles in business, politics, and every area of life. drbobwilkerson@bellsouth.net, www.peopleforthechristianway.com.

Chruch Announcements

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images.2jpgGalilee Missionary Baptist Church, 1231 24th Street North Birmingham, AL 35234, Cordially invites you to attend the Ninety-Fifth Annual Celebration of the Galilee Missionary Baptist Church, Reverend Dr. James V. Tyus, Jr. Pastor, Sunday, November 17th, 3 p.m. Guest Speaker, Reverend Darryl L. Warren, New St. James Baptist Church. Sister Gale Layton, Chairperson; Sister Minnie Mathews, Publicity Chair.

 

Saint John African Episcopal Methodist Church

As we commemorate the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Civil Rights Movement in Birmingham, Saint John African Episcopal Methodist Church, one of the pivotal churches during the movement, invites you to participate in the celebration of its One Hundred Fortieth Anniversary observance. Activities for this momentous occasion will begin on Friday, November 15,  at 6:30 p.m. with a Praise Festival.  Parker High, Wenonah High and Talladega College choirs will be featured, along with special talent from Saint John’s members.
Saturday, November 16, will be a time for giving back to the community. From 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. a variety of community projects will take place. These include: clean-up in the Fountain Heights area, yard care for the elderly, visitation of the sick and shut-in, and a food and clothing drive for the homeless.
Sunday, November 17,  at 9:30 a.m. our celebration will culminate with worship service featuring the Saint John African Episcopal Methodist Church reunion choir and reunion praise dancers along with the message shared by the dynamic speaker Rev. Joshua Johnson (Metropolitan AME Zion Church).
Please join us for three days of spirit filled and joy inspired fellowship.
Saint John African Methodist Episcopal Church is located at 708 15th Street North, Birmingham, Alabama.  The Rev. Mashod Evans is the Pastor.  For more information you may call 205-251-3764 or email us at sjamec@bellsouth.net.

Submitted by
Brenda Kindred

Jazz Vespers with Vince Perry and Friends on Saturday, November 16, at 3:30 p.m. First Congregational United Church of Christ, 1024 Center Street North Birmingham, AL 35204. Telephone 205-322-1331.

 

It Could Be Worse

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It Could Be WorseMy God will cast them away, Because they did not obey Him; And they shall be wanderers among the nations. Hosea 9:17

Yesterday I had an awesome time with God in His Word and learned some very important information. While reading the minor prophets, I discovered they were assigned to deliver bad news to God’s people that had not been doing as God would have them to do. The minor prophets delivered messages of destruction and doom, punishment and penalty that meant death and/or famine to the receivers. I began to think about some of the assignments God has come to me with that I didn’t want to do and suddenly was relieved. Also I thought about the people that received the messages and the punishment or wrath of God. They didn’t get the second, third or fourth chances most of us have been given and there was no one pleading their case before God like Jesus does for us today.

Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” Matthew 28:19-20

God’s assignment for us today is simply to take the Good News of the Gospel out to a dying world. We have the opportunity to tell people how good God is to us and how through the dying of Jesus our (and theirs) sins are erased. You have a testimony to prove the grace and mercy of God and the people you reach won’t be killed by your message but saved instead. Just think about all the things that could be happening or things you could be doing that you would HATE to be doing and realize you don’t  have it as bad as you thought. IT COULD BE WORSE!

Thank God anyhow,
Minister Deidra Bibb

A Foundation for Living

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Rev. Reid
Rev. Reid
Rev. Reid

Blessings from Heaven

Rev. Joseph R. Reid

A young boy had just gotten his driving permit. He asked his father, who was a minister, if they could discuss his use of the car. His father said to him, “I`ll make a deal with you. You bring your grades up, study your Bible more, and get your hair cut, and then we will talk about it.” A month later the boy came back and again asked his father if they could discuss his use of the car. His father said, “Son, I`m real proud of you. You have brought your grades up, you`ve studied your Bible diligently, but you didn’t get a haircut!” The young man waited a moment and replied, “You know dad, I`ve been thinking about that. You know Samson had long hair, Moses had long hair, Noah had long hair, and even Jesus had long hair.” His father replied, “Yes son, and they walked everywhere they went!”
There are no short cuts in life. To move forward we must do what is necessary moment to moment, here, now and in the world to come. I call it receiving blessings from Heaven and we receive those blessings by praying and reflecting on gratitude and by offering our all for the Kingdom. But there is a problem, our lack of real thankfulness and willingness to give up everything for the Kingdom of Heaven. If we don’t learn to be grateful in our prayers for life and be willing to give up all, we will miss the blessings from Heaven which are eternal joy, peace, love and everlasting life here now and in the world to come.
Since we want the blessings of Heaven there are two ways of receiving them. First, we receive blessings from Heaven when our prayers reflect our gratitude for life. American novelist, short story writer, poet and journalist named Stephen Crane (Red Badge of Courage) wrote, “A man said to the universe, ‘Sir, I exist.’ “However,” ‘replied the universe,’ “that fact has not created in me a sense of obligation.” Crane was making the point that unless we tune into the universe; into existence; into God, we will miss our chance of discovering the unknown forces inside us.
I am reminded of my struggles. I knew I had a problem. Other people knew I had a problem contrary to what I thought. And God knew I had a problem. But it was not until I heard a man in AA say, “To fight against drinking is to lose. When we surrender we win.” Surrendering myself to the problem enabled me to overcoming it one day at a time. I surrendered by tuning into God. The tuning that allows us to turn to God is prayer. But not prayer in the sense we think of it, but prayer echoed in our thankfulness for being alive. To pray this prayer we have to be plugged into the hidden treasure inside. This is the treasure hidden by God in the field of our being. Our Bible says, “The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and covered up.” We cover the hidden treasure with our prayers of gratitude and thanksgiving! Only when we do this can we begin to live a life of goodness, truth and beauty otherwise we live a life of untruths, evil and ugliness.
Second, we received blessings from Heaven when we offered all for the Kingdom.  Jesus says, “The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and covered up; then in his joy he goes and sells all that he has and buys that field.” This is the only way to receive the blessings of Heaven. We must be ready to sell all we possess and have accumulated. In my sixty-two and a half years of living I have amassed and lost thousands of dollars and untold fortunes. Homes, furniture, cars, and all kinds of stuff have vanished. I’ve lost love ones, friendships and marriages. I’ve lost many things and valued relationships through carelessness, stupidity, ignorance and not knowing the Lord. But, it was not until I became ready to sell everything and lose my life if necessary to have the treasures of eternity, that I have begun receiving the blessings of Heaven.
It adds up to this, receiving blessings from Heaven allows us to seek the eternal. Whatsoever the cost, we seek God first.  We stake our all for this hidden treasure. We do this without fail.  We give up what we have accumulated and save our immortal soul. Jesus says: “Those who save their lives, lose them: and those who are ready to lose them, attain to life – to life abundant.”  The kingdom of heaven is the treasure hidden in the field of our heart. The hidden treasure is the blessings of Heaven.

2013 Hyundai Azera

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Hyundai AzeraBy Frank S. Washington

DETROIT – The 2013 Hyundai Azera is one of those ‘Oh, my goodness’ kind of cars.
After a week-long test drive the only thing to quibble about on the midsize sedan was its headrests. Other than moving up and down, they were not adjustable. For most drivers, they have to be used because they can’t be adjusted out of the way. But that was the only downside to this premium sedan.
The front-wheel-drive Azera was powered by a direct injected 3.3-liter normally aspirated V6. It made 293 horsepower and 255 pound-feet of torque. The engine was mated to a six-speed automatic transmission.
This powertrain had subtle oomph, it was quiet and it moved the 3,600 lb. Azera with ease. The car had an EPA rating of 20 mpg on the city and 29 mpg on the highway. The MacPherson strut front suspension and the multilink set up of the rear suspension were tuned so that it felt like an air suspension.
The car sort of glided over the road. And it handled some really rough patches of pavement and deep depressions (potholes) without a glitch.
In the case of the Azera, Hyundai’s fluidic sculpture design is more understated than on its smaller models. Still, the car was long, low and relatively light on its tread for a sedan that approached full-size. The beltline allowed for a long, sleek roofline accented by a port window and wraparound LED taillights. The side profile included flowing lines in the rear quarter panel. The car’s face was masculine with a powerful, winged chrome grille and headlamps that seem integrated into that grille.
The car was nimble with a turning radius of 36.5 feet and it took 2.9 turns of the wheel from lock to lock. For true lovers of driving, the 2013 Azera’s power assisted rack and pinion steering was refreshing. There was a connectedness between car and road that oft times gets lost with electric power steering systems.
But what made the Azera feel a notch above the average sedan was its interior. The passenger cabin was spacious and appointed with quality materials from the leather seating surfaces to the faux carbon fiber trim on the dash board and doors.
The test vehicle had a panoramic sun roof. There was a power sun shade on the rear window and manual sun shades for the rear side windows. The rear seats felt like they were sculpted to fit the body. There was plenty of head room and leg room was cavernous. Oh, those rear seats were heated too.
In the front, the Azera had a center stack, the only piece of equipment that was a tad behind the times as the industry is moving to horizontal control panels.
There was touch screen at the top of the center stack, audio controls, followed by dual climate controls and a storage compartment beneath. The gear selector separated the center stack from the center console. At the base of the center console were the switch for parking assist and the control switch for the rear parking shade.
Two large analogue gauges, the odometer and the speedometer, were in front of the driver. They were separated by a TFT screen rift with vehicle usage settings that were too many to go into here.
Among the Azera test car’s creature comfort where heated and cooled front seats, a backup camera, satellite radio, ambient lighting, a premium audio system, a navigation system, Bluetooth, a power tilt and telescoping steering wheel and a rear parking sensor.
Some of that equipment was in the technology package. Somewhat of a surprise was that it included a driver seat cushion extension. Up until now, that’s a feature found in much more expensive cars.
And that gets us back to the ‘Oh my goodness” characteristic of the 2013 Hyundai Azera. The base price was $32,250. Even after adding the technology option package and freight charges the car cost $37,225.

Frank S. Washington is editor of AboutThatCar.com.

Lady Hornets Edge Faulkner in Exhibition Game  

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Alabama State

MONTGOMERY – Led by senior center Quentori Alford’s performance 10 points, nine rebounds, the Alabama State University Hornets edged over the Faulkner Eagles Thursday night in a close exhibition matchup 63-60.
“It’s always good any time you get a win said Head Coach Freda Freeman-Jackson. It wasn’t pretty but this Faulkner team is not to be taken lightly they had a lot of team chemistry and it showed on the court.”
“It was the first game for all of our athletes so we expected for some of our new girls and some of the older ones to have a few jitters before they got settled into the game.”
Most of the 17 women’s roster saw action in the team’s exhibition game before the start of the 2013-2014 season on Friday against Troy.
Danielle Gazaway scored nine points. Tabitha Bradshaw had eight; while Kierra Paige, Nakiya Smith and Brittney Wright each chipped in with seven points apiece. Jasmine Peeples aided the Lady Hornets’ victory with six points and nine rebounds.
“I thought that the girls played hard today, they did some great things offensively and defensively but, we had some mistakes especially with getting into foul trouble but, overall we did enough to win the ballgame and will go back to the drawing board to improve and get ready for our contest.”
Alabama State begins its regular season at home against Troy University Friday, November 15th, in the Dunn-Oliver Acadome. The contest is slated for 6 p.m.