Hats Off ToBy: DUS News
CBCC Presents Community Legends Awards
The Colorado Black Chamber
of Commerce (CBCC) presented awards to 18 community leaders last month at New
Hope Baptist Church Family Life Center. Legends of the past and future were
honored, including such notables as Dr.
Rachel Noel and the Honorable William
“Bill” Roberts to the Honorable Peter
Groff, Colorado Senate president; the Honorable Stephanie O’Malley, Denver clerk and recorder and the Honorable Michael Hancock, Denver City Council president.
Other honorees include: Honorable Omar
Blair, Honorable Elvin Caldwell, Sr.,
Honorable Hiawatha Davis, Honorable King Trimble, Charles Cousins, Lt. Col.
John and Honorable Edna Mosley,
Honorable Gloria Holliday, Lawrence and Lessie Pierre, Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Gipson, Moses Brewer, Landri Taylor, Sheila King
and Vern Howard.
During the event, CBCC
also announced four additions to their board of directors: Pat Cortez, senior vice president for Wells Fargo Bank; Kathy Nesbitt, human resources director
for Kaiser Permanente; Danielle Clemmons,
vice president for First Bank Data Corporation and Kenneth Gilkey, contract management specialist for Accenture.
For more information,
visit coloradoblackchamber.org.
APS High School Student Earns Two
College Degrees
Three Aurora
Public Schools students graduated from high school and the Community College of
Aurora last month. Among them Kyle
Peterson, received his associates degree in applied science from CCA, earned
his high school diploma from Hinkley High School and received his computer
technology degree from Pickens Technical College. Peterson accomplishes this
feat while struggling with a learning disability. He was in an Individualized
Education Program in 5th grade for his learning disabilities. He received a
Colorado award of excellence for the 2008 Colorado Leadership and
Skills for taking second place in the Skills USA at state level for
computer maintenance and repair for Pickens College. Peterson has been an
intern for the Aurora Municipal Court since June 2007 and continues to work in
the information technology department on a part-time basis. After graduating he
would like to work full time for the city of Aurora and continue to advance his
education in computer technology.
Colorado Humanities Honors Civil Rights Leaders
Colorado Humanities recognized 14 Civil Rights Leaders who have fought for
democracy and equality in Colorado, at the 7th Annual American Spirit Series
event, Martin and Malcolm: One Vision – Two Voices at New Hope Baptist Church.
The awards were given to individuals involved in furthering democracy in
Colorado.
Honorable Mary Celeste is the first
woman and lesbian to sit on the Denver County Court bench and she spearheaded
the legal challenge of Colorado's Amendment 2. The Rev. Lucia Guzman was the first Mexican-American to serve as the
executive director of the Colorado Council of Churches and serves as Denver’s
director of human rights and community relations. Brother Jeff S. Fard has worked to build community in Denver’s Five
Points District and has coordinated national events such as the Million Man
March. Vincent Harding was an
associate of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and is professor of religion and
social transformation at Iliff School of Theology, where he serves as
co-chairperson of the Veterans of Hope Project, a center for the study of religion
and democratic renewal. William Hosokawa
was interned in World War II and subsequently chronicled the history of
Japanese-American internees in books, such as Nisei: The Quiet Americans, and
numerous articles during his 38-year editorial career at the Denver Post. Edna Mosley served as Civil Rights Specialist on the Colorado Civil
Rights Commission, was the first Black to be elected to the Aurora City
Council, and was a co-founder and director of the Colorado Women’s Bank. John Mosley, a Tuskegee Airman was the
first Black to play in the Big Seven Conference as a football player at
Colorado State University. LaRae
Orullian, as the first president and CEO of the Women’s Bank in Denver, a
leader among the nation’s minority banks, is an advocate for the advancement of
women in business and leadership. The Rev.
James Peters worked with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in the South before he
served as the pastor of New Hope Baptist Church for 28 years and was a member of
the Colorado Civil Rights Commission and the Denver Housing Authority. Peggy Shivers, a lyric soprano who
shared her operatic talent with musical audiences around the world, established
the Shivers African American Historical and Cultural Collection at the Pikes
Peak Library District with her husband Clarence in 1993. Clarence Shivers, painter and sculptor, was commissioned by the
Hooks Jones Chapter of the Tuskegee Airmen Association to sculpt a memorial to
Tuskegee Airmen, which stands today in the sculpture garden of the United
States Air Force Academy. Dr. George
Tinker is an enrolled member and traditional spiritual leader of the Osage
Nation, professor of American Indian cultures and religious traditions at Iliff
School of Theology, and the author of Spirit and Resistance: Political Theology
and American Indian Liberation. Honorable Wilma
Webb was elected to the Colorado Legislature in 1980, becoming the first
minority woman on the Colorado Joint Budget Committee, where she successfully
fought to adopt the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday. Minoru Yasui appealed his arrest and incarceration during World War
II for the rest of his life and, as director of the Denver Commission on
Community Relations in 1976, was credited with averting the race riots that
inflamed other American cities.
Regis University Honors Cleo Parker
Robinson, Rebecca Love Kourlis
Regis University honored Cleo Parker Robinson with an honorary
degree and former Colorado Supreme Court Justice, Rebecca Love Kourlis with its Civis Princeps (First Citizen) Award
at their commencement ceremonies last month. Robinson is the founder, artistic
director and choreographer of Cleo Parker Robinson Dance. CPRD, now in its
38th anniversary season, celebrates the internationally renowned ensemble, which
includes an outreach program for at-promise youth called the AYE Program. The program
provides arts as an alternative to gang activity, peer pressure and substance
abuse. Justice Kourlis, who served for 11 years on the Colorado Supreme Court,
is executive director of the Institute for the Advancement of the American
Legal System at the University of Denver, a national non-partisan legal reform
organization. She is an advocate for improvement of the civil justice
system. Her father is former Colorado Gov. John Love and her mother, Ann
Love, was a 1972 recipient of the Civis Princeps award.
Boys & Girls Clubs Members Selected
For Prestigious Daniels Scholarship
Two high school students have
been awarded with the Daniels Scholarship, for their college educations. Shonnetta Henry, of the George M.
Wilfley Branch in north Denver, and Deanna
Tompkins, of the Denver Broncos Club in Montbello, were nominated for the
scholarship by the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Denver. Henry, a senior at
East High School, plans on pursuing a major in child psychology at the
University of New Mexico. She is the 2008 Metro Denver and Colorado Youth of
the Year, and will be competing for the regional Youth of the Year title in
Houston in June. Tompkins is a student at Montbello High School, and will soon
decide which university to attend. She is a junior staff member at her Club,
and a member of the Keystone Club leadership group.
In establishing the
Daniels Scholarship program, cable pioneer Bill Daniels was seeking promising
students with financial need whose academic performance may not necessarily
reflect their potential, but who demonstrate strength of character, a
well-rounded personality and a record of accomplishment in giving back to the
community.
For more information,
visit www.danielsfund.org.
Angela
Williams Receives Trailblazer Award
In April, during the second Annual Black Women's Networking luncheon,
CBCC board secretary Angela Williams
received the Trailblazer Award. The Tri Campus Black Student Services presented
"Overcoming Life's Obstacles & Winning Life's Challenges" on
April 14 at the St. Cajetan's Center on the Auraria Campus.
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