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	<title>Diversity Focus Magazine and Newspaper</title>
	<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com</link>
	<description>Bringing Diversity News to the masses</description>
	<pubDate>Fri, 07 Mar 2008 14:57:31 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>McCain seals nomination;</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/424</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/424#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 07 Mar 2008 14:57:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[McCain seals nomination;
Huckabee drops out
By Staff
DALLAS (BP)&#8211;John McCain sealed the Republican nomination March 4 in
 part by drawing evangelical votes from Mike Huckabee, while Democrat
 Hillary Clinton gave her campaign a much-needed boost by winning three of
 four primary states against rival Barack Obama.
McCain&#8217;s sweep of Ohio, Texas, Rhode Island and Vermont gave him the
 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>McCain seals nomination;<br />
Huckabee drops out<br />
By Staff</p>
<p>DALLAS (BP)&#8211;John McCain sealed the Republican nomination March 4 in<br />
 part by drawing evangelical votes from Mike Huckabee, while Democrat<br />
 Hillary Clinton gave her campaign a much-needed boost by winning three of<br />
 four primary states against rival Barack Obama.</p>
<p>McCain&#8217;s sweep of Ohio, Texas, Rhode Island and Vermont gave him the<br />
 required 1,191 delegates to clinch the nomination, forcing Huckabee out<br />
 of the race. The former Arkansas governor and Southern Baptist pastor<br />
 had promised to withdraw once McCain was the nominee.</p>
<p>During his victory speech, McCain called Huckabee a friend and<br />
 commended Huckabee&#8217;s supporters for their &#8220;passionate commitment.&#8221; </p>
<p>&#8220;Now, we begin the most important part of our campaign &#8212; to make a<br />
 respectful, determined and convincing case to the American people that our<br />
 campaign and my election as president, given the alternatives<br />
 presented by our friends in the other party, are in the best interests of the<br />
 country we love,&#8221; McCain said.</p>
<p>Huckabee won in Ohio and Texas among voters who profess to be<br />
 evangelical or born-again, but McCain wasn&#8217;t far behind. In Ohio, Huckabee won<br />
 among that constituency 48-45 percent, and in Texas, 49-42 percent.<br />
 Evangelicals made up 44 percent of GOP voters in Ohio and 60 percent of<br />
 such voters in Texas. </p>
<p>Huckabee did win a majority of votes among those who attend church more<br />
 than once a week. In Ohio he won that group 54-46 percent, and in<br />
 Texas, 60-33 percent. But that constituency is in the minority; it made up<br />
 18 percent of Ohio Republican voters and 28 percent of Texas GOP<br />
 voters. (Exit polls were not conducted among Republicans in Rhode Island and<br />
 Vermont.)</p>
<p>During his concession speech, Huckabee called McCain an &#8220;honorable man&#8221;<br />
 who had run an &#8220;honorable campaign.&#8221; Huckabee also said he was<br />
 committed to seeing the Republican Party united and to McCain winning the<br />
 White House.</p>
<p>&#8220;One of the things I&#8217;m proudest of is that the two campaigns that I<br />
 believe have been run in the most civil manner are the two in the<br />
 Republican Party that have lasted on their feet to the final,&#8221; Huckabee said<br />
 before turning his attention to his campaign. &#8220;&#8230; No one has ever gotten<br />
 this far with such limited resources. But the fact is what we&#8217;ve been<br />
 able to do was to ask of every one of our staff that they work as if<br />
 they were two or three people, and they worked as if they were four. And<br />
 I want to say thanks to them, every last one of them.&#8221;</p>
<p>Huckabee quoted from Scripture twice, including referencing the Apostle<br />
 Paul&#8217;s famous words to Timothy: &#8220;I fought the good fight. I&#8217;ve<br />
 finished the race. And I&#8217;ve kept the faith,&#8221; Huckabee said.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;d like to have finished it first, but we stayed in until the race<br />
 was over,&#8221; he said. &#8220;And that for me has been the most important goal of<br />
 all. I&#8217;d rather lose an election than lose the principles that got me<br />
 into politics in the first place. We started this effort with very<br />
 little recognition and virtually no resources. We ended with slightly more<br />
 recognition and very few resources.&#8221;</p>
<p>Huckabee told the story of several contributors, including one woman<br />
 who sold her wedding ring on eBay and gave the money to the campaign.</p>
<p>&#8220;I only pray to God that I&#8217;ve been able to give them a voice, a voice<br />
 for the unborn children of this country, a voice for life,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>On the Democratic side, the winner among weekly churchgoers was the<br />
 winner in all four primaries. Clinton won among that group, 51-47 percent,<br />
 in both Ohio and Texas &#8212; two key states she carried &#8212; and 62-37<br />
 percent among weekly churchgoers in Rhode Island, which she also carried.<br />
 Obama won among that constituency, 60-40 percent, in Vermont, which he<br />
 carried. Weekly churchgoers made up 34 percent of Democratic voters in<br />
 Ohio, 42 percent in Texas, 36 percent in Rhode Island and 17 percent in<br />
 Vermont. (Unlike Republican exit polls, Democratic exit polls do not<br />
 include a question asking voters if they are professing evangelicals.)</p>
<p>Clinton still trails Obama in the delegate count, but her three<br />
 victories gave her the ability to stay in the race. Her husband had said she<br />
 had to win Ohio and Texas if she were to win the nomination. </p>
<p>Clinton had not won a primary or caucus since Super Tuesday, Feb. 5. </p>
<p>&#8220;You know what they say, as Ohio goes, so goes the nation,&#8221; she said<br />
 during her victory speech. &#8220;Well, this nation&#8217;s coming back, and so is<br />
 this campaign&#8230;. You know, they call Ohio a bellwether state. It&#8217;s a<br />
 battleground state. It&#8217;s a state that knows how to pick a president. And<br />
 no candidate in recent history, Democrat or Republican, has won the<br />
 White House without winning the Ohio primary.&#8221;<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Compiled by Michael Foust, assistant editor of Baptist Press. </p>
<p>Study: 1 in 100<br />
Americans are in prison<br />
By Erin Roach</p>
<p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)&#8211;More than one in every 100 American adults are<br />
 in jail or prison, according to a recent study by the Pew Center for the<br />
 States, which also found that about half of released inmates return to<br />
 jail or prison within three years.</p>
<p>Mark Earley, president of Prison Fellowship Ministries, told Baptist<br />
 Press the Pew report signals a significant social and moral crisis in the<br />
 country that should be addressed in part by Christians heeding a<br />
 parable found in Matthew 25.</p>
<p>&#8220;Jesus said, &#8216;If you visit a prisoner, you visit Me,&#8217;&#8221; Earley said. &#8220;So<br />
 we have a mandate from our Lord to care for, to visit and to seek the<br />
 transformation of those who are in prison.&#8221;</p>
<p>John Robson, assistant professor of Christian ministry at New Orleans<br />
 Baptist Theological Seminary&#8217;s extension center at the Louisiana State<br />
 Penitentiary in Angola, said the prison problem can be attributed to an<br />
 amoral, postmodern society, and he said the solution lies in granting<br />
 inmates access to a faith-based education.</p>
<p>The Pew study, released Feb. 28, noted that at the start of 2008, more<br />
 than 2.3 million adults were behind bars, and in 2007 alone, the prison<br />
 population rose by more than 25,000. Also last year, states spent more<br />
 than $49 billion on corrections, compared to $11 billion 20 years ago,<br />
 the study said. Meanwhile, national recidivism rates remain unchanged<br />
 and many inmates are low-level offenders who have violated the terms of<br />
 their probation or parole.</p>
<p>Data from the U.S. Department of Justice indicated that one in 30 men<br />
 between the ages of 20 and 34 are in prison, and while men are roughly<br />
 13 times more likely to be incarcerated, the fastest-growing<br />
 subpopulation in America&#8217;s prisons is women, Pew found.</p>
<p>Bill Glass, a former NFL player and founder of the Champions for Life<br />
 prison ministry, told BP he believes the nation&#8217;s crime problem is<br />
 directly related to the breakdown of the American family.</p>
<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s very little childhood fatherly discipline or love or being<br />
 involved. As a result the child tends to feel disenfranchised, disjointed,<br />
 without a father to give him direction. That generally is the cause of<br />
 crime,&#8221; Glass said.</p>
<p>&#8220;When the father doesn&#8217;t take his rightful place in the home and make<br />
 the child feel blessed, it makes him angry,&#8221; said Glass, coauthor of<br />
 &#8220;Crime: Our Second Vietnam.&#8221;</p>
<p>During a recent visit to Mississippi&#8217;s death row, Glass went from cell<br />
 to cell and asked each of the 44 men there the same question: &#8220;How do<br />
 you and your dad get along?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Forty-four out of 44 hate their fathers,&#8221; Glass said. &#8220;That&#8217;s typical<br />
 among violent criminals.&#8221;</p>
<p>This tragedy, Earley said, provides an open door for the church to go<br />
 into prisons, show Christ-like love to the inmates, share the news of<br />
 salvation with them and &#8220;help those who come out of prison who have been<br />
 transformed by Christ to really be welcomed into the community and<br />
 welcomed into churches.&#8221;</p>
<p>Prison Fellowship, the ministry founded by Charles Colson in 1976, is<br />
 the world&#8217;s largest Christian ministry to prisoners and their families.<br />
 Earley said the reason the national recidivism rate has remained<br />
 unchanged is because there are no programs on a large scale to help people<br />
 change their lives.</p>
<p>&#8220;The programs that we do show a dramatic reduction in recidivism,&#8221;<br />
 Earley said. &#8220;One was studied by the University of Pennsylvania and showed<br />
 that after two years of being out of the program, only 8 percent were<br />
 returned to prison&#8230;.</p>
<p>&#8220;The fact of the matter is, nationally what [the government is] doing<br />
 is merely warehousing people and not giving them the opportunity to<br />
 change their lives, and so they&#8217;re coming out really more antisocial than<br />
 when they went in,&#8221; he added.</p>
<p>Earley said at least one-third of those in prison are nonviolent<br />
 offenders, and they are being housed at an incredible cost to taxpayers. The<br />
 Pew study said the number of people behind bars doesn&#8217;t necessarily<br />
 correspond to an increase in crime but can be attributed to a trend in<br />
 policy choices that send more lawbreakers to prison through &#8220;three<br />
 strikes&#8221; measures and other sentencing laws.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think that&#8217;s where, from a policy standpoint, this problem [of<br />
 overcrowded prisons] can be attacked most successfully,&#8221; Earley said.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve talked for many years about being tough on crime, and that&#8217;s<br />
 important,&#8221; Earley, a former attorney general of Virginia, said. &#8220;But I<br />
 think it&#8217;s just as important to be smart on crime. Part of being tough on<br />
 crime and smart on crime means that we don&#8217;t put people in prison for<br />
 long periods of time that we&#8217;re angry at &#8212; we put people in prison for<br />
 long periods of time who are a threat to society.&#8221;</p>
<p>Robson, director of the Angola training program, said the results of<br />
 postmodernism&#8217;s toll on America are seen in the burgeoning prison<br />
 population.</p>
<p>&#8220;There are no more absolutes compared to maybe 50 years ago when the<br />
 absolutes were in place,&#8221; Robson told Baptist Press. &#8220;Postmodern thought<br />
 and philosophy permeates. There&#8217;s no anchor in our society, therefore<br />
 the drug culture can take over anytime it wishes.&#8221;</p>
<p>The answer, he said, is faith-based education in America&#8217;s prisons. Two<br />
 hundred inmates, he said, have graduated from the seminary&#8217;s program<br />
 at Angola with bachelor&#8217;s degrees in Christian ministry.</p>
<p>&#8220;You want to change the streets of this country? You put ministers of<br />
 the Gospel at the entry level into a prison system and change these men<br />
 from the inside out with faith-based education,&#8221; Robson said. &#8220;And you<br />
 will discover that cynicism will begin to melt away into nothing. The<br />
 streets of our nation will change.</p>
<p>&#8220;It has nothing to do with race. It has nothing to do with social<br />
 status. It has nothing to do with anything but spiritual issues inside of a<br />
 man&#8217;s heart. We know because we&#8217;ve seen this happen at Angola first and<br />
 now at nine other prisons in Louisiana,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>Angola once was called the bloodiest prison in America, but Robson was<br />
 sitting in front of 95 inmates for a hermeneutics class at Angola when<br />
 he spoke with BP. Those men, he said, were learning to interpret the<br />
 Bible because the answer to their problems is found in God&#8217;s Word.<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Erin Roach is a staff writer for Baptist Press.</p>
<p>RSS: A Missouri judge has ruled in favor of Windermere Baptist<br />
 Conference Center in its legal battle with the Missouri Baptist Convention over<br />
 who has the right to elect that organization&#8217;s trustees.</p>
<p>Mo. Baptists to appeal<br />
Windermere ruling<br />
By Staff</p>
<p>JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (BP)&#8211;A Missouri judge has handed down a summary<br />
 judgment in favor of Windermere Baptist Conference Center in a legal<br />
 battle over who has the right to elect that organization&#8217;s trustees.<br />
 Missouri Baptist Convention officials immediately announced they would appeal<br />
 Circuit Court Judge Richard G. Callahan&#8217;s March 4 ruling, which<br />
 bypassed a planned jury trial, to the Missouri Court of Appeals in Kansas<br />
 City.</p>
<p>The case stems from a move by Windermere trustees in 2000 to amend the<br />
 conference center&#8217;s charter to allow them to elect their own<br />
 successors, rather than continue the historical pattern of trustees being elected<br />
 by messengers to the Missouri Baptist Convention annual meeting. </p>
<p>Four other Missouri Baptist Convention entities &#8212; the Baptist Home<br />
 retirement center, the Word &#038; Way newsjournal, the Baptist Foundation and<br />
 Missouri Baptist College &#8212; also took control of their own trustee<br />
 elections at a time when a conservative movement in the state was about to<br />
 gain control of Missouri Baptist Convention entities.</p>
<p>The Missouri Baptist Convention&#8217;s attorney, Michael Whitehead, said MBC<br />
 leaders were disappointed that a jury did not have an opportunity to<br />
 hear testimony that former MBC Executive Director Jim Hill intentionally<br />
 withheld key information about Windermere&#8217;s charter from the<br />
 convention&#8217;s executive board.</p>
<p>&#8220;We are deeply disappointed that a jury did not get to hear the<br />
 evidence,&#8221; Whitehead said, &#8220;but we also are glad to be headed back to the<br />
 court of appeals, where we&#8217;ve successfully countered similar arguments<br />
 before. We&#8217;re confident in our case on appeal.&#8221; </p>
<p>Callahan&#8217;s 43-page decision held that a trial was unnecessary because<br />
 the motions &#8220;set forth uncontroverted facts sufficient to enter summary<br />
 judgment on enough legal issues to dispose of every claim between<br />
 plaintiffs and Windermere.&#8221;</p>
<p>In the first section of his opinion, Callahan held that Windermere&#8217;s<br />
 charter, giving the Missouri Baptist Convention the right to elect<br />
 trustees, did not make MBC a &#8220;statutory member&#8221; under the nonprofit code. As<br />
 a result, the Missouri convention was not entitled to protections<br />
 accorded to members, such as the right to approve charter changes. </p>
<p>Next, Callahan noted that the original Windermere charter could have<br />
 expressly provided &#8220;that Windermere&#8217;s articles could not be amended<br />
 without the consent of the MBC; however, MBC again failed to include any<br />
 such provision &#8230;.&#8221; The judge concluded: &#8220;In the absence of the above two<br />
 limitations which MBC chose not to include in Windermere&#8217;s articles at<br />
 the time of incorporation, the Windermere board of trustees had broad<br />
 authority to amend its articles&#8230;. For whatever reasons, MBC&#8217;s 2000<br />
 executive board and messengers did not avail themselves of those<br />
 protections in 2000. This court cannot re-write history.&#8221; </p>
<p>Missouri Baptist Convention lawyers had disputed the claim that the<br />
 convention &#8220;chose not to include&#8221; the convention approval clause.<br />
 Whitehead said the evidence was that former MBC Executive Director Jim Hill<br />
 admitted he intentionally left out the clause but did not point out the<br />
 omission to the executive board or the convention.</p>
<p>&#8220;Most MBC messengers in 2000 had no idea this clause was important, or<br />
 that it was being left out by Dr. Hill,&#8221; Whitehead said. &#8220;We wanted a<br />
 jury to hear Dr. Hill&#8217;s testimony and let them decide.</p>
<p>&#8220;Judge Callahan described Windermere&#8217;s breakaway as showing &#8216;a<br />
 seemingly ungrateful spirit,&#8217;&#8221; Whitehead observed, &#8220;but blamed the MBC<br />
 executive board, former executive director and messengers for not using<br />
 stronger language in 2000 in the Windermere charter.</p>
<p>&#8220;Admittedly, Hill watered down the charter language, but the MBC&#8217;s<br />
 actions were still legally sufficient to give Missouri Baptists recourse<br />
 from this flimflam,&#8221; he said.</p>
<p>In the fall of 2007, Callahan set the Windermere case for trial on Feb.<br />
 1, 2008. However, on Jan. 18, the judge informed attorneys he was<br />
 canceling the trial because he expected to dispose of the case on summary<br />
 judgment. The judge invited attorneys for both parties to submit<br />
 proposed judgments. Callahan&#8217;s March 4 decision essentially adopted the<br />
 Windermere draft language, rejecting the convention&#8217;s argument that the<br />
 Windermere charter was a legal contract and that the right to elect trustees<br />
 gave MBC certain rights.</p>
<p>While waiting for the ruling, Missouri Baptist Convention attorneys<br />
 conferred with members of the MBC&#8217;s legal task force to consider the<br />
 options available after Callahan&#8217;s order. Chairman Randy Comer, pastor of<br />
 Highview Baptist Church in Chillicothe, confirmed that the task force<br />
 agreed to appeal in case of an unfavorable judgment.</p>
<p>&#8220;We have assumed from the beginning that the technical legal arguments<br />
 raised by defendants in this case would be decided ultimately in the<br />
 appeals courts,&#8221; said David Tolliver, interim executive director of the<br />
 Missouri Baptist Convention. &#8220;No question, we would rather be defending<br />
 a favorable ruling on appeal than seeking reversal of an unfavorable<br />
 ruling. But there is also no question that this is the fastest, most<br />
 efficient way to get to the court of appeals for a final resolution.</p>
<p>&#8220;I wholeheartedly disagree with the judge&#8217;s verdict,&#8221; Tolliver added.<br />
 &#8220;Missouri Baptists purchased Windermere, funded Windermere and built<br />
 Windermere and now it has been taken from us. We are profoundly<br />
 disappointed in this decision.&#8221;</p>
<p>The ruling does not directly affect the other four corporations that<br />
 also broke away. MBC leaders expect further proceedings in those trials<br />
 to be stayed while the Windermere case is being appealed. A stay also<br />
 may be requested in a separate case in Camden County against Windermere<br />
 over the sale of 941 acres of undeveloped land to a developer who had a<br />
 business relationship with Jim Hill.</p>
<p>A timetable for the appeal is not yet known, but Whitehead said he<br />
 expected a notice of appeal to be filed soon, with a briefing schedule to<br />
 follow soon after.<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Reported by The Pathway, newsjournal of the Missouri Baptist<br />
 Convention.</p>
<p>Iowa is missionaries&#8217;<br />
&#8216;field of dreams&#8217;<br />
By Mickey Noah</p>
<p>EDITOR&#8217;S NOTE: This is the fourth of eight stories highlighting North<br />
 American Mission Board missionaries as part of the 2008 Week of Prayer,<br />
 March 2-9, and the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American<br />
 Missions, with a goal of $61 million to help support 5,000-plus North<br />
 American missionaries. 2008 Week of Prayer missionaries are Daniel and<br />
 Marta Caceres, Dewey and Kathie Aiken, Melanie Lawler, Jon and Mindy<br />
 Jamison, David and Shirley Proffitt, Jon and Linda Hodge, Brad Lartigue,<br />
 and Chris and Monica Woodall.</p>
<p>DES MOINES, Iowa (BP)&#8211;The mention of Iowa conjures up Midwestern<br />
 scenes of green cornfields, pig and dairy farming, small towns and the<br />
 fictional setting for movies like &#8220;The Music Man&#8221; and &#8220;Field of Dreams.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Hawkeye State certainly is all those things and more. But Des<br />
 Moines &#8212; Iowa&#8217;s capital and largest city, with 500,000 people &#8212; also is<br />
 plagued with the same neighborhood gangs, crime, violence, drugs and<br />
 poverty of other American cities. Just ask Jon and Mindy Jamison.</p>
<p>For nearly nine years, Jon and Mindy, both 33, have been co-directors<br />
 of the Friendship Baptist Center in inner-city Des Moines. They also are<br />
 the Baptist Convention of Iowa&#8217;s church and community ministries<br />
 directors.</p>
<p>The Jamisons are among 5,000-plus North American Mission Board<br />
 missionaries in the United States, Canada and their territories supported by<br />
 the Annie Armstrong Easter Offering for North American Missions and<br />
 Southern Baptist churches&#8217; gifts through the Cooperative Program.</p>
<p>The theme for this year&#8217;s March 2-9 Week of Prayer for North American<br />
 Missions is &#8220;Live with Urgency: Seize Your Divine Moment.&#8221; The 2008<br />
 Annie Armstrong Easter Offering goal is $61 million.</p>
<p>The Friendship Baptist Center, a non-descript building, sits on the<br />
 corner of Meek Avenue and Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway in Des Moines.</p>
<p>&#8220;The neighborhood surrounding the Friendship Baptist Center is a<br />
 poverty-impacted community,&#8221; Jon says. &#8220;Upwards of 30-35 percent of the<br />
 households are in poverty. Many of the people are victims of crime. There&#8217;s<br />
 a lot of violence, gang activity and drugs in the communities<br />
 surrounding the center. So we have a challenge just outside our doors.</p>
<p>&#8220;Many people struggle with having something to eat, having clothes to<br />
 wear, shelter, heat in the winter. For kids in the area, there&#8217;s no one<br />
 at home to take care of them. Kids must find a way to wake themselves<br />
 up in the morning. If there&#8217;s food in the house, they have to make their<br />
 own breakfast. They have to find a way to school, if they go. Many<br />
 kids are sort of their own parents. That may sound like fun, but it also<br />
 brings some struggles for the kids.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mindy echoes her husband.</p>
<p>&#8220;The kids get up and don&#8217;t take a bath because there&#8217;s no water. They<br />
 don&#8217;t have a toothbrush or shampoo. They probably forget to take their<br />
 books to school. They walk to school in the cold, and it gets very cold<br />
 in Des Moines,&#8221; she says. &#8220;They go hungry and without basic needs, much<br />
 less encouragement and nourishment.</p>
<p>&#8220;I think if that doesn&#8217;t break our heart, if that doesn&#8217;t concern us,<br />
 then our heart isn&#8217;t lined up with the heart of Christ. He was so<br />
 concerned for the least of these.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mindy, who grew up doing urban missions work in her native Fort Myers,<br />
 Fla., calls the neighborhood around the Friendship Center &#8220;great&#8221; and<br />
 &#8220;horrible&#8221; at the same time. The center serves primarily African<br />
 Americans and Hispanics and refugee families from Zaire, Sudan and Bosnia. </p>
<p>The Friendship Center is multi-faceted. &#8220;Kids Club&#8221; is an after-school<br />
 program in which children come in and get help with their homework,<br />
 play board games or sports. They also learn about life skills, nutrition<br />
 and even how to cook. And, of course, the Jamisons teach them about the<br />
 Bible.</p>
<p>&#8220;Once we get to know the kids better, we offer a Bible study and teach<br />
 them what God says about their lives and how God wants to be a part of<br />
 their lives,&#8221; Jon says. &#8220;Many times, we tell them Bible stories, and<br />
 it&#8217;s the first time they&#8217;ve ever heard Bible stories. It&#8217;s great to see<br />
 the lights come on when they realize that God loves them and can provide<br />
 for them.&#8221;</p>
<p>Telling the center&#8217;s kids Bible stories is different from teaching<br />
 children who&#8217;ve grown up in a Southern Baptist church, who can finish the<br />
 story just by giving them the story&#8217;s character or topic.</p>
<p>&#8220;Many of the neighborhood kids here are waiting on the edge of their<br />
 seats to find out how the Bible story ends,&#8221; Mindy says, &#8220;because they<br />
 haven&#8217;t heard it before.&#8221;</p>
<p>Mindy credits the center&#8217;s 15 Kid&#8217;s Club volunteers, who come and &#8220;pour<br />
 their lives into these kids every day.&#8221; In all, some 250 volunteers<br />
 support Jon and Mindy each year in their myriad of ministries.</p>
<p>&#8220;The kids get to meet volunteers from all over who may be Iowa State<br />
 students, people from local churches and others. The kids get to rub<br />
 shoulders with them and be mentored by them. Our kids get help with their<br />
 homework, hear the Gospel and get a snack. It&#8217;s so important &#8230; to get<br />
 them here, off the streets and into a positive place.&#8221;</p>
<p>Another key project for the center is teaching English as a Second<br />
 Language (ESL), conversational English and the ability to read.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a great way for us to connect to the community,&#8221; Jon says.<br />
 &#8220;Immigrants and refugees come to Des Moines and need to provide for their<br />
 families. They need a job. And often they can find better jobs if they<br />
 speak English. They may not have a hunger need or a clothing need, but<br />
 it&#8217;s easy for them to know that they have a need to speak English.&#8221;</p>
<p>The center also provides food to the hungry, clothes to the needy,<br />
 adult Bible studies, GED tutoring and summer camps.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Clothes Closet is an important ministry because it&#8217;s free, and<br />
 because it&#8217;s meeting such a basic need,&#8221; Mindy says. &#8220;A lot of our ladies<br />
 come to the Clothes Closet. They call it &#8216;The Mall.&#8217; It&#8217;s fun for them<br />
 to come and get new clothes for themselves and for their children, as<br />
 well as free household items.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Clothes Closet offers the Jamisons a chance to build personal<br />
 relationships, share with the women &#8220;customers&#8221; and talk about spiritual<br />
 things.</p>
<p>&#8220;When they come in for clothes, we ask them about other needs in their<br />
 lives,&#8221; Mindy says. &#8220;We ask them if we can pray for them. We ask them<br />
 if they know about Christ. It&#8217;s an avenue for us to share the Gospel and<br />
 build relationships.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;We have found that forming relationships is the way we&#8217;re going to<br />
 introduce Christ in Des Moines,&#8221; Jon says, &#8220;not only to the children but<br />
 to the adults. If we can connect with them on a level that is<br />
 non-threatening -– a level that says, &#8216;I&#8217;m fun and I want to have fun with you&#8217;<br />
 &#8212; then we can relax. Once we get to know them, the spiritual<br />
 conversations can take place. We can talk to them about the things that bother<br />
 and worry them, and share the love of Christ with them.&#8221;</p>
<p>One of the most challenging problems facing the Jamisons is ongoing<br />
 gang activity in the area &#8212; and trying to deter kids at the Friendship<br />
 Center from joining the gangs that roam inner-city Des Moines.</p>
<p>&#8220;Many of the kids join a gang because either they want power or<br />
 protection,&#8221; Jon says. &#8220;Some people will join a gang because they know they<br />
 can wield power. They can be a powerful person in the neighborhood. Or<br />
 they fear that without the gang they will be picked on. They feel like a<br />
 gang gives them a ready-made group of people who are willing to stand<br />
 up with them.</p>
<p>&#8220;A lot of times the gang becomes their family. The gang provides<br />
 immediate support, immediate family and immediate love.&#8221;</p>
<p>Gangs make it especially difficult for the children and youth who want<br />
 to do what&#8217;s right, who want to follow Christ, Jon notes.</p>
<p>&#8220;The kids still have to face the pressures of violence in the streets,&#8221;<br />
 he says. &#8220;They have to decide, &#8216;Am I willing to stand alone and be a<br />
 Christian and follow Christ and do what that means, or do I want to<br />
 surround myself with gang members and let them become my family?&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>Through the Friendship Baptist Center, the kids are taught that God<br />
 loves them and that God has a plan for them beyond violence and<br />
 destructiveness.</p>
<p>&#8220;Some people have not heard the name of Jesus. We share the Gospel and<br />
 often it&#8217;s the first time someone&#8217;s ever heard of Jesus,&#8221; Mindy says.</p>
<p>&#8220;This community also is, at times, devastated by violence,&#8221; Jon adds.<br />
 &#8220;Many people in the community have had violence affect them in some way.<br />
 Family members have been affected. We have many people from the<br />
 community who are in prison right now because of violence. Our goal is that<br />
 as these people come to know Christ, the crimes will stop and the<br />
 reliance on drugs will stop.&#8221;</p>
<p>The stakes are high in inner-city Des Moines, Jon says.</p>
<p>&#8220;While we know we&#8217;re attempting to reach this community for Christ,<br />
 there are gang leaders who are attempting to reach the community, too.<br />
 There are people of other faiths who are trying to reach this community,&#8221;<br />
 he says, referring to Muslims, Buddhists and Mormons who are aggressive<br />
 in spreading their religions locally.</p>
<p>The Jamisons say they are &#8220;blessed&#8221; they are able to serve together as<br />
 husband and wife and bring Maggie, their almost 2-year-old daughter, to<br />
 work with them every day.</p>
<p>&#8220;When Jon and I first met, we both knew that God had called us to do<br />
 inner-city missions work, and so we knew we would work together. We can<br />
 come to work together every day and can both be used of God,&#8221; Mindy<br />
 says.</p>
<p>Jon, a native of Elizabethton, Tenn., and Mindy both accepted Christ as<br />
 children, graduated from Carson-Newman College in Jefferson City,<br />
 Tenn., and from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary. They fell in love<br />
 with missions through the mission trips they participated in during<br />
 their youth.</p>
<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re so thankful that we don&#8217;t have to stop our work and go and raise<br />
 funds somewhere,&#8221; Mindy says of the financial cooperation among<br />
 Southern Baptist. &#8220;[W]e can focus on the ministry without worrying about<br />
 where funds will come from or where our next paycheck will come from, or<br />
 how to find money to feed hungry people.</p>
<p>With the aid of the Cooperative Program and Annie Armstrong offering,<br />
 &#8220;we are able to offer &#8230; consistent, reliable ministry for those in<br />
 need all year-round. We also know Baptists are praying for us as they<br />
 give. It enables us to be here and the ministries to continue. It&#8217;s our<br />
 lifeline here in Iowa.&#8221;<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Mickey Noah is a writer with the Southern Baptist North American<br />
 Mission Board.</p>
<p>Calif. high court hears<br />
&#8216;gay marriage&#8217; case<br />
By Staff</p>
<p>SACRAMENTO (BP)&#8211;The California Supreme Court heard oral arguments<br />
 March 4 in a case that could lead to &#8220;gay marriage&#8221; being legalized this<br />
 year and thrust the issue once more into a presidential election. </p>
<p>The seven justices heard arguments for a longer-than-usual three hours<br />
 and are expected to issue their ruling within 90 days.</p>
<p>The case began in 2004, when the city of San Francisco began issuing<br />
 marriage licenses to homosexual couples. The Supreme Court ruled then<br />
 that the licenses were being issued in violation of state law, although<br />
 the justices didn&#8217;t deal with the hot-button question of whether the<br />
 state&#8217;s ban on &#8220;gay marriage&#8221; violated the California Constitution. The<br />
 city filed suit after it lost that case, seeking to have the state law<br />
 changed.</p>
<p>At issue is Proposition 22, a law passed in 2000 to prohibit &#8220;gay<br />
 marriage&#8221; and protect the natural definition of marriage. Voters approved it<br />
 by a margin of 61-39 percent.</p>
<p>The justices peppered lawyers for both sides with tough questions. </p>
<p>&#8220;Over 60 percent of voters said they weren&#8217;t ready for that change,&#8221;<br />
 Justice Carol A. Corrigan told lawyers supportive of &#8220;gay marriage.&#8221; &#8220;&#8230;<br />
 Is it better for this court to decide or the people of California to<br />
 decide?&#8221;</p>
<p>But Chief Justice Ronald George asked attorneys for the other side how<br />
 the current law was any different than past laws prohibiting<br />
 interracial marriage. The current state law, he said, &#8220;defines marriage by whom<br />
 it excludes.&#8221; </p>
<p>According to the Los Angeles Times, three of the justices indicated<br />
 they would uphold the current law and one justice indicated that &#8220;gay<br />
 marriage&#8221; should be legalized. The other three justices, the Times said,<br />
 didn&#8217;t indicate a position. </p>
<p>A victory for homosexual activists in the case would be their biggest<br />
 yet, being it would be in the most populous state in the country.</p>
<p>&#8220;California&#8217;s a bellwether state. What happens here, blows east,&#8221; Larry<br />
 Bowler, a retired deputy sheriff from Sacramento, told Reuters. He<br />
 opposes &#8220;gay marriage.&#8221; </p>
<p>Attorneys for two pro-family groups &#8212; the Alliance Defense Fund and<br />
 Liberty Counsel &#8212; appeared before the court. ADF was representing the<br />
 Proposition 22 Legal Defense and Education Fund, Liberty Counsel<br />
 representing the Campaign for California Families.</p>
<p>&#8220;Marriage is more than a private relationship between two people who<br />
 love each other,&#8221; Mat Staver of Liberty Counsel said in a statement.<br />
 &#8220;While it is a private relationship, marriage serves a public purpose to<br />
 preserve society&#8217;s interest in procreation and to provide the optimal<br />
 environment for children. The state has an interest in protecting an<br />
 institution that predates government in order to encourage responsible<br />
 procreation among opposite-sex couples.</p>
<p>&#8220;Among opposite-sex couples, procreation is sometimes planned and<br />
 sometimes unplanned,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Children are thus the natural consequence of<br />
 opposite-sex relationships. Providing for the next generation is<br />
 essential to any society, but providing an environment that encourages<br />
 stable relationships for the well-being of children is critically important.<br />
 Marriage thus provides encouragement for opposite-sex couples to unite<br />
 for the sake of children. Same-sex couples do not need marriage to<br />
 encourage their unions, because such relationships never produce unplanned<br />
 children.&#8221;</p>
<p>Glen Lavy of the Alliance Defense Fund said, &#8220;The government should<br />
 promote and encourage strong families. In this case, marriage laws that<br />
 will do that are under attack by political special interests wishing to<br />
 further their agenda. </p>
<p>&#8220;The law California voters passed defines marriage as the union of one<br />
 man and one woman,&#8221; Lavy added. &#8220;Californians know this is the<br />
 foundation for strong families. But certain special interest groups are trying<br />
 to bypass the democratic process by asking the court to redefine<br />
 marriage.&#8221;</p>
<p>California already has a domestic partnerships law granting same-sex<br />
 couples the legal benefits of marriage.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, on the East Coast, the Connecticut Supreme Court is expected<br />
 to issue its own &#8220;gay marriage&#8221; decision any day, meaning that two<br />
 such decisions could be handed down this year, months before the general<br />
 election.<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Compiled by Michael Foust, an assistant editor of Baptist Press</p>
<p>Cornmeal outreach<br />
aids flooded Zambians<br />
By Staff</p>
<p>LUSAKA, Zambia (BP)&#8211;About 100 families in an isolated area on Zambia&#8217;s<br />
 Lunsemfwa River will be receiving food assistance after heavy rains<br />
 and flooding wiped out their crops and some homes.</p>
<p>In early March, Kevin Rodgers, a Baptist Global Response field partner,<br />
 will be trucking 55-pound bags of cornmeal to a river landing, where<br />
 the bags will be loaded onto a rubber boat and taken 30 minutes up the<br />
 river.</p>
<p>&#8220;The boat can only hold about 500 pounds of cargo, so it will take 15<br />
 to 20 trips over two days to move the entire shipment,&#8221; said Mark<br />
 Hatfield, who leads Baptist Global Response work in sub-Saharan Africa. &#8220;The<br />
 Lunsemfwa River has lots of hippo and crocodile, so there&#8217;s plenty of<br />
 adventure in this small project.&#8221;</p>
<p>The only other access to the area requires several days of walking,<br />
 Hatfield said.</p>
<p>In mid-January, Zambian President Levy Mwanawasa declared a national<br />
 disaster in the country&#8217;s flooded districts.</p>
<p>&#8220;All our maize stocks have since been washed away,&#8221; Chief Sianjalika, a<br />
 traditional leader in one of the flooded areas, told a reporter. &#8220;We<br />
 have remained with completely nothing. My people are starving, even<br />
 their goats and chickens have all disappeared.&#8221;</p>
<p>Families in the area will be able to replant maize along the river once<br />
 the waters recede and should be able to see a harvest in a few months,<br />
 Rodgers said. A hunger crisis is emerging, however, because fields<br />
 that were supposed to be maturing right now are gone. The bags of cornmeal<br />
 should be enough to tide them over until residents can bring in a new<br />
 harvest.</p>
<p>In addition to providing destitute people with needed food relief, this<br />
 effort also will help improve future working relationships in a remote<br />
 area where outsiders, especially Westerners, are not trusted, Rodgers<br />
 added.</p>
<p>&#8220;This will be an opportunity to show love and support for their human<br />
 needs in a crisis situation, without developing dependency,&#8221; Rodgers<br />
 said. &#8220;It gives us an opportunity to minister to a large group of people<br />
 at one time and also the credibility to be allowed to start new projects<br />
 in the future.&#8221;</p>
<p>The project is being financed with $3,200 from the Southern Baptist<br />
 World Hunger Fund, one of the ways Southern Baptists who care reach out to<br />
 people in need, Hatfield said.<br />
-–30–-<br />
Compiled by Baptist Press assistant editor Mark Kelly. Baptist Global<br />
 Response is on the Web at www.gobgr.org.</p>
<p>College association<br />
names new exec<br />
By Mark Brown &#038; Tim Fields</p>
<p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)&#8211;Board members of the International Association<br />
 of Baptist Colleges and Universities have elected Michael Arrington,<br />
 provost of Carson-Newman College, as executive director of the<br />
 association.</p>
<p>IABCU, with offices in Nashville, Tenn., is owned and operated by its<br />
 51-member Baptist-related higher education institutions.</p>
<p>Arrington, 62, succeeds Thomas Corts, who was named in September by<br />
 President Bush to coordinate all education initiatives for USAID (United<br />
 States Agency for International Development). </p>
<p>Arrington, who assumed the IABCU post March 1, will retire at the close<br />
 of the academic year at Carson-Newman, located in Jefferson City,<br />
 Tenn.</p>
<p>&#8220;The IABCU board of directors is delighted to have found someone as<br />
 capable and as passionate about Christian higher education as Mike<br />
 Arrington,&#8221; said Evans Whitaker, president of Anderson (S.C.) University and<br />
 chairman of the IABCU board. &#8220;Dr. Arrington brings to his new role a<br />
 wealth of teaching and administrative experience in Baptist institutions<br />
 that will serve our association well as we cooperate together to share<br />
 best practices and advance the distinctives of our institutions,&#8221;<br />
 Whitaker added.</p>
<p>A Nashville, Ark., native who earned the B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. from the<br />
 University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arrington joined Carson-Newman as<br />
 provost and vice president for academic affairs in 2001. Previously,<br />
 he invested all but one year of his professional career at Ouachita<br />
 Baptist University in Arkadelphia, Ark., another IABCU member school. He<br />
 began his work in education as a sixth-grade social studies teacher in<br />
 Missouri.</p>
<p>Hired by Ouachita as a history professor in 1973, Arrington began what<br />
 he thought would be a classroom career there. Just one year into his<br />
 tenure, he was promoted to the academic affairs office as assistant to<br />
 the dean and director of the academic skills development office. For the<br />
 next 27 years, he served in several academic capacities, including<br />
 associate vice president, prior to being named the university&#8217;s chief<br />
 academic officer in 1986. In the course of his service he led Ouachita&#8217;s<br />
 strategic planning committee, chaired the North Central Accreditation<br />
 Steering Committee, served as dean of arts and sciences and oversaw a host<br />
 of committees, councils and task forces.</p>
<p>&#8220;In my life I have had one intentional career plan and that was to<br />
 teach,&#8221; Arrington said. &#8220;Everything after that has strictly been the<br />
 providence of God. And, while I still think that teaching at an academically<br />
 driven Christian institution is among the highest of callings, I am<br />
 grateful that the Lord found it purposeful that I could invest my<br />
 professional life in supporting the classroom experience. That is why I am<br />
 humbled and invigorated by the opportunity to serve institutions that seek<br />
 to sharpen students&#8217; minds while shaping their hearts.&#8221;</p>
<p>Arrington said he joined Ouachita&#8217;s faculty with a certain skepticism,<br />
 thinking that Christian higher learning might not measure up to<br />
 public-funded education. His cynicism was quickly overridden by the commitment<br />
 to excellence he saw in his colleagues for teaching and for student<br />
 development.</p>
<p>&#8220;I learned that our work was to educate students while helping them see<br />
 why we chose to be Baptists and why we intentionally integrate faith<br />
 and learning,&#8221; he noted. &#8220;That&#8217;s something that I see as central to the<br />
 association&#8217;s work. I intend to use this opportunity to promote Baptist<br />
 higher education in general while finding new ways to keep our schools<br />
 connected to each other.&#8221;</p>
<p>Joe Bill Sloan, president of Carson-Newman and associate provost under<br />
 Arrington until he was named interim president last year, said his<br />
 colleague is &#8220;an ideal fit for the IABCU.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Mike&#8217;s support, advice and wise counsel have been invaluable as we<br />
 have moved through a period of transition,&#8221; Sloan said. &#8220;And, though the<br />
 IABCU appointment is a great recognition of his abilities and skills as<br />
 a Baptist educator, I think our member institutions will quickly find<br />
 him to be a visionary leader and proactive servant.&#8221;</p>
<p>Arrington will continue to make his home in east Tennessee with his<br />
 wife Pam, a Carson-Newman associate professor of education. They have a<br />
 married daughter and one grandchild.<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Mark Brown is director of news and media relations for Carson-Newman<br />
 College and Tim Fields is director of communications for the<br />
 International Association of Baptist Colleges and Universities.</p>
<p>EDITORIAL: Obama lacks trust<br />
in the whole Word of God<br />
By Will Hall</p>
<p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)&#8211;&#8221;&#8230; I would just refer them to the Sermon on<br />
 the Mount, which I think is, in my mind, for my faith, more central than<br />
 an obscure passage in Romans&#8230;.&#8221;</p>
<p>It&#8217;s only a partial statement given by Barack Obama as a pithy defense<br />
 of his support of civil unions for homosexual couples.</p>
<p>However, even if it&#8217;s only a short take from a Q&#038;A during a campaign<br />
 event in Nelsonville, Ohio, this statement gives a fairly full view &#8212; at<br />
 least biblically &#8212; of how he could come to such wrong conclusions<br />
 about marriage (he supports civil unions, granting legal recognition of<br />
 homosexual couples without the name &#8220;marriage&#8221;) as well as abortion (he<br />
 opposed legislation protecting the lives of newborns delivered after an<br />
 unsuccessful abortion) and other spiritual issues.</p>
<p>Never mind the Sermon on the Mount does not contradict biblical<br />
 teaching about marriage. In fact, in this passage of Scripture, Jesus actually<br />
 strengthens His instructions regarding marriage as a union between a<br />
 man and a woman.</p>
<p>You see, the real problem with Obama&#8217;s statement is he shows he does<br />
 not believe every word of the Bible is true.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve tried to look at it from a number of perspectives and it&#8217;s the<br />
 only conclusion to draw. If he truly reverences all Scripture as<br />
 God-breathed, how could he dismiss a single word as obscure?</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a common trap that snares many &#8212; to view the &#8220;red letters&#8221; with<br />
 more value than what&#8217;s printed in black.</p>
<p>For others, it&#8217;s an actual tactic used to try to justify emotions and<br />
 beliefs that run counter to clearly espoused instruction from God. It&#8217;s<br />
 how homosexuals and those who support a homosexual agenda make the<br />
 contorted claim that Jesus never condemned homosexuality.</p>
<p>The reality is Jesus spoke every word in the Bible from &#8220;In the<br />
 beginning&#8221; in Genesis 1:1 to &#8220;Amen&#8221; in Revelation 22:21 &#8212; and not a single<br />
 word is obscure.</p>
<p>His words include Romans 1:24-32 and 1 Corinthians 6:9-11 &#8212; each<br />
 condemns homosexuality, and the latter declares that change from<br />
 homosexuality is possible. His words also include John 3:16, 2 Peter 3:9 and 1<br />
 John 2:1-6 &#8212; which offer hope to anyone, regardless of the sin, who<br />
 repents and submits to the will of God.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, Obama&#8217;s troubling answer in Ohio is not an isolated<br />
 offense. He made a similar refrain in 2006 before a Washington, D.C.<br />
 gathering of liberals and moderates for the &#8220;Call to Renewal&#8221; conference<br />
 organized by Jim Wallis&#8217; Sojourner organization: &#8220;Which passages of<br />
 Scripture should guide our public policy? Should we go with Leviticus, which<br />
 suggests slavery is OK and that eating shellfish is abomination? How<br />
 about Deuteronomy, which suggests stoning your child if he strays from the<br />
 faith? Or should we just stick to the Sermon on the Mount &#8212; a passage<br />
 that is so radical that it&#8217;s doubtful that our own Defense Department<br />
 would survive its application?&#8221;</p>
<p>It&#8217;s hard not to see a troubling pattern.</p>
<p>Like his statement in Ohio, his rhetorical questions about Leviticus<br />
 and Deuteronomy simply are strawman claims which misappropriate passages<br />
 of the Bible to create doubts about the sufficiency of Scripture.</p>
<p>Without doubt, the Old Testament is relevant today and teaches us moral<br />
 truths and principles God used to shape Israel to be His nation.</p>
<p>However, it is disingenuous at best for Obama to hint the dietary laws<br />
 God delivered specifically to Israel somehow are in play today; nor is<br />
 it right to imply there is serious discussion on any scale that such<br />
 laws apply to the New Testament church (see Acts 10:9-16 to put any such<br />
 concern to rest).</p>
<p>The same is true about his suggestions regarding the stoning of a child<br />
 and slavery. For the record:</p>
<p>&#8211; 1 Timothy 1:8-11 condemns slave traders, and the book of Philemon is<br />
 Paul&#8217;s passionate appeal to secure the freedom of the runaway slave,<br />
 Onesimus.</p>
<p>&#8211; The story of the prodigal son (Luke 15:11-32) gives insights about<br />
 the New Testament teaching about how to deal with children who stray<br />
 from the faith.</p>
<p>I imagine some upon just reading the headline for this column will cry<br />
 &#8220;politics&#8221; and follow with a wrongheaded &#8220;connecting of dots&#8221; to try to<br />
 make a case about political bias by me, Baptist Press and the Southern<br />
 Baptist Convention. Others will read my setting the record straight as<br />
 the &#8220;Bible thumping&#8221; of a &#8220;fundamentalist.&#8221; Neither of these<br />
 conclusions would be true.</p>
<p>For me, the issue simply is about setting the record straight. </p>
<p>For too long, and in too many venues, such concocted exegesis has<br />
 ruined the public&#8217;s understanding not about public policy and social issues<br />
 but about the authenticity of the Word of God. Political and religious<br />
 wonks throw out strawman sound bites like Obama&#8217;s knowing they can&#8217;t be<br />
 attacked without a thoughtful reply, something not fostered in debate<br />
 forums or the sound bite framework of most network and cable news.</p>
<p>In the end, it&#8217;s not about politics or economics or social policy, but<br />
 it is about the authority of the Word of God.</p>
<p>During his message at &#8220;Call to Renewal,&#8221; Obama counseled the crowd, &#8220;So<br />
 before we get carried away, let&#8217;s read our Bibles. Folks haven&#8217;t been<br />
 reading their Bibles.&#8221;</p>
<p>I accept his challenge, and offer one in return: Let&#8217;s read our Bibles<br />
 &#8230; and trust every word.<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Will Hall is executive editor of Baptist Press.</p>
<p>FIRST-PERSON:<br />
Actors find God&#8217;s grace<br />
By Phil Boatwright</p>
<p>KANSAS CITY, Kan. (BP)&#8211;&#8221;I don&#8217;t read, I watch.&#8221; This is the credo of<br />
 many a film critic. Truth be told, movie reporters read a great deal.<br />
 And occasionally we discover a book that no film could match.  </p>
<p>&#8220;Grace Is Enough&#8221; (B&#038;H Books) by Willie and Maylo Aames is such a<br />
 discovery. I knew the actor Willie Aames from shows such as &#8220;Eight Is<br />
 Enough&#8221; and &#8220;Charles In Charge.&#8221; I knew he and his wife had moved to Kansas<br />
 City, where I now call home. And I knew they were Christians and<br />
 responsible for the &#8220;Bibleman&#8221; and &#8220;Missy Files&#8221; videos. I had no idea,<br />
 however, of the horrible existence they had made for themselves in their<br />
 early years through drug use, or the indescribable pain that had been<br />
 inflicted on them by family and others who had stolen their childhood.  </p>
<p>The first three quarters of their book may be the most difficult<br />
 biography I have ever read. It grieves, it angers, it frustrates. Indeed,<br />
 several times I just wanted to put it down rather than read of the horrors<br />
 people can inflict on one another. But don&#8217;t let that description keep<br />
 you from examining their book. For I believe the remaining chapters<br />
 will enrich your spiritual walk.  </p>
<p>In their time of deepest despair, while Willie was in the midst of<br />
 &#8220;Charles In Charge,&#8221; Christ was revealing Himself. Patiently, lovingly,<br />
 Christ started touching their hearts, letting the embattled couple know<br />
 who really was in charge.  </p>
<p>Throughout their lives, both Willie and Maylo witnessed others who had<br />
 a deep-seated faith. At first the couple mocked these people, but<br />
 slowly they realized that there was something missing in their own lives.<br />
 And after hearing a message of hope on radio, they decided to give church<br />
 a try. Eventually, through the power of God and the guidance of a<br />
 pastor, they accepted Christ. </p>
<p>In &#8220;Grace is Enough,&#8221; Willie and Maylo speak of the child abuse, both<br />
 physical and sexual, that maimed their childhood. They realized they<br />
 needed to come to terms with those who had inflicted such wrongs on them.<br />
 They knew they had to do what Mark 11:25 instructs &#8212; forgive, that you<br />
 might be forgiven. Willie and Maylo&#8217;s words of encouragement reminded<br />
 this reader that sometimes forgiveness takes time, and that by seeking<br />
 and trusting Jesus, forgiveness can be achieved.  </p>
<p>I was privileged to speak with Willie and Maylo recently. Following are<br />
 excerpts from our conversation:  </p>
<p>BOATWRIGHT: In the book you mention how Scott Baio (the star of<br />
 &#8220;Charles in Charge&#8221;) prevented you from getting a substantial raise while<br />
 doing his show. How are you able to forgive those who have wronged you,<br />
 either financially or physically?</p>
<p>WILLIE: Well, I was very upset with the situation with Scott, because<br />
 Maylo and I were trying to buy a home. I couldn&#8217;t see where he had any<br />
 say over how much I got paid, and yeah, that really affected our<br />
 relationship. But after a while, you just have to drop it. It is what it is.<br />
 And I look at my life and I look at the things God has given me. He&#8217;s<br />
 always been faithful to give me what I need, when I need it. And most of<br />
 the time if I had had it earlier, the money would have been harmful to<br />
 me. So I look at that stuff and look at my own life and have to say<br />
 that I would not want to hold any of that in. It wouldn&#8217;t be any good for<br />
 me and it certainly isn&#8217;t any good for the relationship.</p>
<p>MAYLO: To forgive, let&#8217;s say, my mother, for the ultimate betrayal in<br />
 my life, it was a long process. I told God I&#8217;m blinded by my rage. In my<br />
 flesh I didn&#8217;t want to forgive her. But after a period of time I began<br />
 to realize that God did not create her for that kind of evil and that<br />
 His heart was broken over her. God calls me to forgive her. And the way<br />
 I do that is by putting Him in front of her and saying, &#8220;I&#8217;m going to<br />
 have to look at you through Christ.&#8221; I&#8217;ve gotten to the point where I<br />
 feel bad for her. &#8220;What went wrong with you? What happened to you that<br />
 you would do these things to others?&#8221; That was the beginning of<br />
 forgiveness.  </p>
<p>BOATWRIGHT: You speak of mind-crippling depression in the book. Has<br />
 having to dredge up the past caused the depression to return?</p>
<p>WILLIE: The hardest part for me was letting my parents know what<br />
 happened to me as a kid. [Willie was sexually abused as a youngster by an<br />
 older acquaintance]. I hadn&#8217;t told anybody about that, not even Maylo,<br />
 until it was written in the book. For me, it hasn&#8217;t led to depression<br />
 because I&#8217;ve dealt with it so much over the years. But I had to write about<br />
 it. It was necessary for us to be brutally honest so we could relate<br />
 to those in need.</p>
<p>MAYLO: I have spoken so many times to women&#8217;s groups over the years<br />
 about these matters [Maylo suffered from both physical and sexual abuse],<br />
 so I was fine writing about it. I just wanted, like Willie said, to be<br />
 honest. I wanted to be honest for other women, so that they knew there<br />
 was hope for them.</p>
<p>BOATWRIGHT: Are you hearing stories of how the book is affecting<br />
 people?</p>
<p>MAYLO: Yeah, we do. We get e-mails all the time. Somebody in Mexico<br />
 just read the book and it had been a help to her.  </p>
<p>Willie: It&#8217;s nice to know that the message has really gotten out &#8212; the<br />
 fact that there is always hope. I feel blessed.  </p>
<p>BOATWRIGHT: How is your daughter dealing with the frankness of the<br />
 book?</p>
<p>MAYLO: She&#8217;s awesome. She&#8217;s a very upfront, honest person, with a great<br />
 sense of humor, and I&#8217;ll tell you that even in the small Christian<br />
 school that she goes to, these kids have already been through more than<br />
 most in the older generation. She is so aware that this house belongs to<br />
 Christ. She&#8217;s seen my mother and what seeking after the things of the<br />
 flesh can lead to.  </p>
<p>WILLIE: The other thing is that her friends look at us as real. They&#8217;ll<br />
 talk to us when they won&#8217;t talk to anyone else.  </p>
<p>MAYLO: I&#8217;ve had some of her friends&#8217; parents say, &#8220;There are some<br />
 things that my daughter won&#8217;t tell me and I want you to know that you can<br />
 keep her confidence. You don&#8217;t have to tell me.&#8221; That speaks well of the<br />
 parents.  </p>
<p>BOATWRIGHT: Does the addiction ever let go or do you still struggle<br />
 with the temptation of drug use?</p>
<p>MAYLO: You know, I never think about that. Now, I&#8217;m more addicted to<br />
 naps.  </p>
<p>WILLIE: I just have one of those addictive personalities. I can get<br />
 addicted to anything. Right now, it&#8217;s oranges. I&#8217;ll eat seven oranges at a<br />
 time. It&#8217;s just my personality. I don&#8217;t think it ever goes away. I<br />
 think it&#8217;s a part of your makeup. And because of that, you have to be<br />
 vigilant. You have to be watching all the time, because when you&#8217;re not,<br />
 that&#8217;s when you&#8217;re gonna get nailed.<br />
***************</p>
<p>Please lift Willie and Maylo up in prayer. With this book they are<br />
 ministering to a world in pain</p>
<p>NEW ON DVD: &#8220;Saving Sarah Cain,&#8221; based on the Beverly Lewis book &#8220;The<br />
 Redemption of Sarah Cain,&#8221; is out on DVD (FoxFaith). Rated PG (no<br />
 language), the movie tells the story of successful, self-absorbed Sarah Cain,<br />
 who travels to Amish country to attend her sister&#8217;s funeral but soon<br />
 discovers she is now the legal guardian to her five Amish nieces and<br />
 nephews. Faced not only with instant motherhood, but also with the culture<br />
 shock of a lifetime, she must decide whether to raise the children in<br />
 the city or return them to their Amish roots. I was moved by the kids&#8217;<br />
 performances, engrossed in the story and awed by the locales,<br />
 beautifully captured by director of photography Matthew Williams. It&#8217;s a film<br />
 I&#8217;ll watch again.<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Phil Boatwright reviews films from a Christian perspective for<br />
 previewonline.org.</p>
<p>FIRST-PERSON: Careless<br />
language versus anti-Semitism<br />
By Richard Land</p>
<p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)&#8211;It has come to my attention in the last 48 hours<br />
 that some people were offended by my reference to Senator Chuck<br />
 Schumer (D-NY) as a &#8220;schmuck&#8221; during the Criswell Lecture Series at Criswell<br />
 College, Jan. 29-31. In reviewing these criticisms I have learned some<br />
 consider the word crude, if not obscene. I apologize for my ignorance<br />
 of that fact. If I had known that, I would never have used the word. I<br />
 always attempt to avoid crude and offensive language as a matter of<br />
 conviction.</p>
<p>As Jeffrey Weiss of The Dallas Morning News has pointed out, the idiom<br />
 means &#8220;jerk,&#8221; which was my intended usage. I truly apologize to anyone<br />
 offended by my use of a word they perceived to be crude or obscene. I<br />
 used the word &#8220;schmuck&#8221; in my reference to Senator Schumer solely in an<br />
 attempt to employ a word that alliterated with Schumer&#8217;s name and<br />
 describe my perception of his behavior during the confirmation hearings for<br />
 Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito &#8212; nothing more!</p>
<p>However, I am deeply offended that anyone would interpret my remarks as<br />
 anti-Semitic. My entire Christian life I have been taught, and<br />
 believe, that the Jews are God&#8217;s chosen people. I have said on dozens of<br />
 occasions in public that anti-Semitism is the most irrational of prejudices<br />
 for a Christian, since Jesus our Savior was Himself a Jew. My entire<br />
 public ministry I have denounced anti-Semitism, and I have sought to<br />
 combat it wherever and whenever I have encountered it. Anyone who knows me<br />
 knows this to be true. Once again, as Jeffrey Weis commented,<br />
 &#8220;Elevating a relatively harmless insult into an accusation of anti-Semitism<br />
 devalues real attacks on Jews and Judaism.&#8221;</p>
<p>Anti-Semitism is far too dangerous and virulent in our world to<br />
 tolerate the luxury of such a trivialization going unchallenged.<br />
&#8211;30&#8211;<br />
Richard Land is president of the Southern Baptist Ethics &#038; Religious<br />
 Liberty Commission. </p>
<p>***********</p>
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		<title>Indiana Senator David C. Ford dies</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/421</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/421#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Mar 2008 15:47:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Local News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/421</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Indiana state Senator David C. Ford has died from complications of pancreatic cancer, 24-Hour News 8&#8217;s Jim Shella reported.
In late January, family members confirmed the Hartford City lawmaker was &#8220;critically ill with cancer&#8221; and underwent surgery. 
The four-term Republican senator served as Assistant Majority Floor Leader and chaired the Senate Committee on Economic Development and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href='http://diversityfocusmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/7968431_bg1.jpg' title='7968431_bg1.jpg'><img src='http://diversityfocusmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/7968431_bg1.thumbnail.jpg' alt='7968431_bg1.jpg' /></a><br />
Indiana state Senator David C. Ford has died from complications of pancreatic cancer, 24-Hour News 8&#8217;s Jim Shella reported.</p>
<p>In late January, family members confirmed the Hartford City lawmaker was &#8220;critically ill with cancer&#8221; and underwent surgery. </p>
<p>The four-term Republican senator served as Assistant Majority Floor Leader and chaired the Senate Committee on Economic Development and Technology. In addition, he was a member of the Judiciary, Tax and Fiscal Policy, and Education and Career Development committees.</p>
<p>Last year, Ford was named a Government Leader of the Year by the Indiana Chamber of Commerce.</p>
<p>Ford&#8217;s Senate District 19 includes Adams, Allen, Blackford, Grant and Wells counties.</p>
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		<title>Lincoln License Plate Unveiled</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/420</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/420#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 Mar 2008 15:34:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Local News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/420</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Governor Daniels Signs Bill Authorizing Special Plate      
INDIANAPOLIS – The new Indiana license plate commemorating the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial was unveiled today by Ron Stiver, Commissioner of the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles (BMV) and Connie Nass, chairperson of the Indiana Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission.
Members of the Bicentennial Commission and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Governor Daniels Signs Bill Authorizing Special Plate      </p>
<p>INDIANAPOLIS – The new Indiana license plate commemorating the Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial was unveiled today by Ron Stiver, Commissioner of the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles (BMV) and Connie Nass, chairperson of the Indiana Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission.</p>
<p>Members of the Bicentennial Commission and Michael Blickman, chairman of the Indiana Historical Society Board of Trustees attended the ceremony that was held in the Rose McKee Lanham Gallery at the Eugene and Marilyn Glick Indiana History Center in Indianapolis .</p>
<p>The new license plate is now available at no additional charge for 2008 and 2009 and may be obtained at any Indiana BMV license branch as a renewal or new registration.  The plate may be displayed through 2013.</p>
<p>Stiver explained that the license plate design features a logo developed for the Lincoln Bicentennial Commission that is being used on special signage throughout the state. </p>
<p>“Too often it is forgotten that America ’s most eloquent and greatest president spent fourteen of his most formative years in Indiana ,” Stiver said.  “President Lincoln truly does ‘belong to the ages,’ and it is only fitting that Hoosiers are able to take part in celebrating the bicentennial of his birth through display of the new Lincoln license plate.”</p>
<p>On behalf of the Bicentennial Commission, Chairperson Nass added, “The Commission is proud to have worked with legislators and the Bureau of Motor Vehicles to design, develop and produce this special plate that proudly identifies Indiana as Lincoln’s Boyhood Home.”</p>
<p>The Bicentennial license plate was authorized by the Indiana State Legislature through House Bill 1202 with Representative Russ Stillwell as the House author and Senator Jim Merritt as the Senate sponsor.  The bill was signed by Governor Mitch Daniels on Marc h 3.</p>
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		<title>Indianapolis Joining U.S. Army PaYs Program</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/419</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/419#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Feb 2008 16:53:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Local News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/419</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Indianapolis is joining a program designed to offer priority hiring status to qualified soldiers returning to the civilian workforce. Mayor Greg Ballard and Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita will make the announcement today in conjunction with the U.S. Army and AAR Aircraft Services Indianapolis for the Army Partnership for Youth Services Program.
Colonel Terrence L. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Indianapolis is joining a program designed to offer priority hiring status to qualified soldiers returning to the civilian workforce. Mayor Greg Ballard and Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita will make the announcement today in conjunction with the U.S. Army and AAR Aircraft Services Indianapolis for the Army Partnership for Youth Services Program.<br />
Colonel Terrence L. Murrill Sr., Commander, U.S. Army Recruiting Battalion Indianapolis; Mr. Mickey Cohen, President and General Manager, AAR Aircraft Services — Indianapolis and the Honorable Robert Spanogle, Civilian Aide to the Secretary of the Army, State of Indiana will also be present.</p>
<p>The announcement is set to take place at 1 p.m. at the Indianapolis Airport IMC-AAR facility.</p>
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		<title>DePuy Invests in New Campus</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/418</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/418#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Feb 2008 16:52:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Local News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/418</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc. is investing $250,000 in Ivy Tech’s capital campaign to raise $2.8 million. The funding will be used for land acquisition, equipment and technology for a new campus in Warsaw.
The new campus will serve Kosciusko County and surrounding communities.
Press Release
DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc. is making a major investment in Ivy Tech Community College-Warsaw’s future [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc. is investing $250,000 in Ivy Tech’s capital campaign to raise $2.8 million. The funding will be used for land acquisition, equipment and technology for a new campus in Warsaw.<br />
The new campus will serve Kosciusko County and surrounding communities.</p>
<p>Press Release</p>
<p>DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc. is making a major investment in Ivy Tech Community College-Warsaw’s future as an educational leader in the community. DePuy U.S. President, David Floyd, said the company is investing $250,000 in Ivy Tech’s capital campaign to raise $2.8 million for land acquisition, equipment and technology for a new campus in Warsaw.</p>
<p>“Given the orthopaedic industry&#8217;s need for highly skilled, technically trained employees, DePuy is committed to supporting a career pathway for those who are interested in pursuing a degree in the manufacturing field,” said David Floyd. “DePuy’s support of Ivy Tech also enables members of our community to stay within the county to attend classes and further their education.”</p>
<p>According to Ivy Tech-Warsaw Executive Dean Randy Maxson, “The amazing generosity of DePuy is yet one more example of the commitment the Warsaw and Kosciusko County communities have to ensuring that Ivy Tech-Warsaw has a permanent home. This significant investment in Ivy Tech-Warsaw’s future will ensure that residents have continuing educational opportunities right here in the community.”</p>
<p>About the “Changing Lives…Fulfilling Dreams” Capital Campaign<br />
Ivy Tech has had a presence in the Kosciusko County community since the late 1970s, but always in a borrowed or leased space. The lease for the current main facility at 3755 Lake City Highway will end in 2012. The college has been conducting a capital campaign in response to the community’s need for a new, permanent campus in Warsaw.</p>
<p>Ivy Tech entered into a purchase agreement for land for the new campus last fall. College officials and community members are completing the process to secure state funding for the “bricks and mortar” of the new campus. The new campus will serve Kosciusko County and surrounding communities. Current plans are to fold programs at the main campus and the Ivy Tech Orthopedic and Manufacturing Training Center, which opened in October 2006 at 980 Executive Drive, into the new campus.</p>
<p>About Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana<br />
Ivy Tech Community College is the state’s second largest public post-secondary institution with over 105,000 students enrolled annually. Ivy Tech has 23 campuses throughout Indiana. It serves as the state&#8217;s engine of workforce development, offering affordable degree programs and training that are aligned with the needs of its communities, along with courses and programs that transfer to other colleges and universities in Indiana. It is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. More information about Ivy Tech can be found at www.ivytech.edu.</p>
<p>About DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc.<br />
DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc., a Johnson &#038; Johnson company, is advancing the standard of orthopaedic patient care, with a focused commitment to help surgeons achieve excellence in surgical practice. The company designs, manufactures and distributes orthopaedic devices and supplies including hip, knee, extremity, trauma, cement, orthobiologics, and operating room products. As a global leader in joint replacement products, DePuy Orthopaedics is committed to Restoring the Joy of Motion® for patients whose mobility is restricted by severe osteoarthritis or other debilitating injury.</p>
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		<title>Governor Daniels to Tout Economic Development in D.C. Speech</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/417</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/417#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 25 Feb 2008 16:50:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Local News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/417</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[ndiana Governor Mitch Daniels is expected to meet with President George Bush this morning at the White House. The session is a governor&#8217;s only meeting with the President as part of the National Governor&#8217;s Association Winter meeting. Daniels will deliver a speech this afternoon at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research. He will [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>ndiana Governor Mitch Daniels is expected to meet with President George Bush this morning at the White House. The session is a governor&#8217;s only meeting with the President as part of the National Governor&#8217;s Association Winter meeting. Daniels will deliver a speech this afternoon at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research. He will talk about Indiana&#8217;s economic development progress.<br />
He will speak about the Healthy Indiana Plan, Major Moves, telecom reform and the state&#8217;s progress in economic development.</p>
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		<title>TaJanay&#8217;s mother may avoid murder charge</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/416</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/416#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 2008 14:55:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Local News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/416</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Prosecutors have focused the blame in TaJanay Bailey&#8217;s death on her mother&#8217;s live-in boyfriend, signaling that her mother may dodge a murder charge.
But Prosecutor Carl Brizzi said Wednesday that any plea agreement reached with Charity Bailey would hold her accountable and could leave her facing decades in prison. He announced plans to seek a life [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Prosecutors have focused the blame in TaJanay Bailey&#8217;s death on her mother&#8217;s live-in boyfriend, signaling that her mother may dodge a murder charge.<br />
But Prosecutor Carl Brizzi said Wednesday that any plea agreement reached with Charity Bailey would hold her accountable and could leave her facing decades in prison. He announced plans to seek a life sentence without the possibility of parole only for Lawrence Green, whose murder case likely is headed for trial.<br />
&#8220;We determined that Mr. Green was more culpable in terms of physical abuse,&#8221; Brizzi said, with some instances going back 18 months.<br />
Bailey, 20, and Green, 21, were each charged with murder and neglect after 3-year-old TaJanay&#8217;s Nov. 27 death, a horrific killing that sparked an internal review by the state Department of Child Services.<br />
The prosecutor&#8217;s life sentence request for Green cites two aggravating circumstances: that Green tortured TaJanay before her death, and that the girl was younger than 12.<br />
Brizzi said Green repeatedly whipped TaJanay, hung her by her T-shirt on a coat hook, causing injury, and punched her in the chest.<br />
If a jury convicts Green of murder, it then would consider a life sentence.<br />
The Department of Child Services returned TaJanay and her infant half brother home for a trial visit less than one month before the girl&#8217;s death. DCS had removed TaJanay from Bailey&#8217;s care in May 2006 on suspicions of abuse and neglect.<br />
Brizzi initially said he would seek life sentences for both Bailey and Green. But Bailey has been cooperative and gave an expanded statement, Brizzi said.<br />
No plea deal has been signed, but Brizzi said he anticipated allowing Bailey to plead guilty to felony neglect instead of murder in exchange for her testimony. Class A felony neglect carries a potential penalty of 20 to 50 years in prison.<br />
&#8220;We are in plea negotiations,&#8221; said Ray Casanova, Bailey&#8217;s public defender.<br />
Mark Inman, one of Green&#8217;s attorneys, declined to comment Wednesday. His other attorney, Carolyn Rader, did not return a phone message.<br />
Brizzi said Bailey, who is about seven months pregnant, was the only eyewitness to TaJanay&#8217;s final days.<br />
&#8220;We want to make sure the person responsible for putting hands on that baby will never see the light of day,&#8221; he said.<br />
A DCS review has cited failed communication, lingering domestic violence issues in the home and a lack of urgency among everyone handling TaJanay&#8217;s case. Officials said all of those amounted to errors in judgment.<br />
Brizzi said Wednesday that prosecutors are still looking at the way DCS handled the case but so far had found no evidence of criminal violations by workers.</p>
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		<title>Casino withholds monthly tax payment to Gary</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/415</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/415#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 2008 14:38:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/415</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Majestic Star Casino owner Don Barden says the company is withholding a monthly tax payment to the city because Gary has failed to live up to its promise to build access roads to his business.
Mayor Rudy Clay said Barden&#8217;s move puts Gary in a &#8220;major financial dilemma.&#8221;
&#8220;The city was skating on thin ice anyway,&#8221; Clay [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Majestic Star Casino owner Don Barden says the company is withholding a monthly tax payment to the city because Gary has failed to live up to its promise to build access roads to his business.</p>
<p>Mayor Rudy Clay said Barden&#8217;s move puts Gary in a &#8220;major financial dilemma.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;The city was skating on thin ice anyway,&#8221; Clay said.</p>
<p>Majestic&#8217;s payments total roughly $6 million a year, depending on how much money it makes, city controller Celita Green said.</p>
<p>Barden filed complaints against the city with the American Arbitration Association and Marion County Circuit Court last week. Its complaint filed in Marion County also named the Indiana Gaming Commission as a defendant.</p>
<p>Barden said he would begin depositing 3 percent of adjusted gross receipts for each of his two casinos, Majestic Star I and II, into a &#8220;segregated account&#8221; instead of paying it to the city. He is asking the court to force the city to use that money to build the access road.<br />
Green said the payment due Feb. 12 is typically used to make state-mandated bond payments for debts dating to the construction of the city&#8217;s baseball stadium and the renovation of Gary&#8217;s public safety building. It is also used to supplement the general fund as the city makes overtime and insurance payments, Green said.</p>
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		<title>Marion startup to use $10M in bonds</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/414</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/414#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 21 Feb 2008 14:35:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Business]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/414</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Marion City Council has approved issuing up to $10 million in bonds to be used by Veriana Networks LLC to buy and equip headquarters it has said it wants to build in the Grant County community.
In October, Veriana, a startup specializing in technology, media and risk management for the entertainment industry, announced its headquarters [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Marion City Council has approved issuing up to $10 million in bonds to be used by Veriana Networks LLC to buy and equip headquarters it has said it wants to build in the Grant County community.</p>
<p>In October, Veriana, a startup specializing in technology, media and risk management for the entertainment industry, announced its headquarters plans and the intentions of hiring 280 workers over five years.</p>
<p>In addition to issuing bonds, the city will sell Veriana a building that had been used as a WorkOne Resource Center for $1, according to The Chronicle-Tribune of Marion. The startup will pay for improvement and use the building until its headquarters is finished.</p>
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		<title>Indiana Man Guilty of Massive Mortgage Fraud Scheme targeted seniors in Central Indiana</title>
		<link>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/411</link>
		<comments>http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/411#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 20 Feb 2008 17:41:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Kwanza Dickerson</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Press Release]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://diversityfocusmag.com/archives/411</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[keigleyjason1.jpg
(Danville, IN) - As a result of a partnership between Indiana Secretary
 of State Todd Rokita and Hendricks County Prosecutor Patricia Baldwin,
 Indianapolis resident Jason Keigley has been found guilty in Hendricks
 County Superior Court of swindling money from seniors through a
 fraudulent investment and mortgage scheme.
Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita and Hendricks County [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href='http://diversityfocusmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/keigleyjason1.jpg' title='keigleyjason1.jpg'>keigleyjason1.jpg</a><br />
(Danville, IN) - As a result of a partnership between Indiana Secretary<br />
 of State Todd Rokita and Hendricks County Prosecutor Patricia Baldwin,<br />
 Indianapolis resident Jason Keigley has been found guilty in Hendricks<br />
 County Superior Court of swindling money from seniors through a<br />
 fraudulent investment and mortgage scheme.</p>
<p>Indiana Secretary of State Todd Rokita and Hendricks County Prosecutor<br />
 Patricia Baldwin joined forces to file criminal charges and pursue<br />
 prosecution of Keigley for violations of the Indiana Securities Act and<br />
 Indiana Loan Broker Act. Charles Williams of Rokita&#8217;s Prosecution<br />
 Assistance Unit and Hendricks County Deputy Prosecutors Rhett Stuard conducted<br />
 the investigation. Tyler Starkey presented the State&#8217;s case at trial. A<br />
 jury found Keigley guilty on all four counts.</p>
<p>Keigley was convicted of the following charges: the offer or sale of an<br />
 unregistered security, transacting business as an unregistered Broker<br />
 Dealer, and fraud in connection with the offer or sale of a security,<br />
 all class C felonies. Keigley was also found guilty of loan broker<br />
 fraud, a class D felony. </p>
<p>Sentencing was initially set by the Court for March 17. Keigley faces a<br />
 maximum sentence of eight to 13 years for all charges.</p>
<p>&#8220;Hoosiers simply will not tolerate mortgage fraud in our state,&#8221; Rokita<br />
 said. &#8220;Indiana can reverse the ill effects of mortgage fraud by<br />
 educating and protecting home buyers from this type of damaging, criminal<br />
 activity. Every home buyer has a duty to do their homework, and my office<br />
 provides a variety of valuable investment and mortgage information<br />
 resources.&#8221; </p>
<p>Prosecutor Baldwin agreed with Rokita and echoed his sentiments.</p>
<p>&#8220;In Hendricks County, we take it seriously when unscrupulous people<br />
 attempt to defraud innocent citizens, and we will continue to vigorously<br />
 prosecute those cases,&#8221; Baldwin said.</p>
<p>Keigley worked as a loan originator for an Indiana mortgage company in<br />
 2004, and during his employment, he also operated his own business, 1st<br />
 Place Mortgage. The Secretary of State&#8217;s office found that Keigley<br />
 convinced a Hendricks County couple to invest in his company which,<br />
 unbeknownst to them, was an unregistered security. He also told them their<br />
 investment was in an interest-bearing account, available to them upon<br />
 request, while at the same time establishing a reverse mortgage for the<br />
 couple. Some time after Keigley brokered the reverse mortgage loan and<br />
 the couple had bought Keigley&#8217;s investment, the couple requested their<br />
 investment funds and only a small portion was returned.</p>
<p>No account has ever been located and Keigley could not account for any<br />
 of the missing funds. In addition, the victims were hit with<br />
 foreclosure on their home as a result of Keigley&#8217;s failure to fulfill the<br />
 obligations of the reverse mortgage. Investigator Charles Williams was able to<br />
 save the couple&#8217;s home from foreclosure through his investigative<br />
 efforts.</p>
<p>&#8220;Our Securities division is charged with protecting investors,&#8221; said<br />
 Chris Naylor, Indiana&#8217;s Securities Commissioner. &#8220;We believe a two tiered<br />
 approach can help prevent future cases of fraud. Educating Hoosiers<br />
 about prudent investing and mortgage practices coupled with bringing<br />
 enforcement actions and criminal prosecutions against companies and<br />
 individuals engaged in fraud are powerful tools to protect our citizens. This<br />
 will ultimately restore consumer confidence and promote business<br />
 development.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Secretary of State&#8217;s Prosecution Assistance Unit (PAU) initiated<br />
 this investigation and worked with Prosecutor Baldwin to file charges and<br />
 prosecute Keigley. Rokita created the PAU in 2004 to facilitate local<br />
 law enforcement&#8217;s prosecution of alleged Securities Act and Loan Broker<br />
 Act violations by creating a stronger partnership between the<br />
 Statehouse and county courthouses. Since its inception, the PAU has helped law<br />
 enforcement throughout the state file charges in 27 high-profile<br />
 investment fraud cases, earning a 26 to 1 conviction-to-dismissal record and<br />
 obtaining more than 200 years of sentenced jail time for white collar<br />
 criminals. </p>
<p>If you feel you have been the victim of investment fraud of any kind,<br />
 please contact the Secretary of State&#8217;s office at 800-223-8791.</p>
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