Ghana - An American president who has "the blood of Africa within me'' praised and scolded the continent of his ancestors Saturday, asserting forces of tyranny and corruption must yield if Africa is to achieve its promise. "Yes you can,'' Barack Obama declared, dusting off his campaign slogan and adapting it for his foreign audience. Speaking to Parliament, he called upon African societies to seize opportunities for peace, democracy and prosperity. "This is a new moment of great promise,'' he said. "To realize that promise, we must first recognize a fundamental truth that you have given life to in Ghana: Development depends upon good governance. That is the ingredient which has been missing in far too many places, for far too long.'' . . .
In Cuomo v. Clearing House Association, the U. S. Supreme Court has confirmed that America's fair lending laws should be vigorously enforced by all levels of government. . . .
Details continue to develop in the case of former Baltimore Ravens quarterback Steve McNair, who was murdered in a Nashville, Tenn., residence July 4. According to TMZ.com, assistant medical examiner Dr. Feng Li has confirmed that Sahel Kazemi, McNair's 20-year-old girlfriend, fired the gun. . . .
The original casket of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old boy whose 1955 murder helped put the civil rights movement on a national stage, was found discarded during an investigation into a scheme at an Illinois cemetery. Till remains buried at Oak Burr Cemetery in Chicago, a historically Black gravesite. But, the original casket in which he was buried was founding rusting in a dilapidated shack . . .
The Nielsen Corporation is rolling out new method to measure television viewing habits in the Portland market. New automated people meters will make it easier for participating families – and for the nation's largest sampler of viewing habits – to find out which people are watching what programs. Nielsen, the world's largest ratings company, has been using People Meters since 1987 as a more reliable method of tracking viewing habits than paper diaries. But as Nielsen could tell television networks and advertisers what was being watched, they couldn't tell them exactly who was watching. Until now. . . .
Borat, a shock comedy chronicling the misadventures of a crass journalist from Kazakhstan as he traveled across the U.S., was, in this critic's opinion, the funniest film of 2006. Its star, Sacha Baron Cohen, landed an Oscar nomination for writing that faux documentary which employed a controversial bait-and-switch casting style to dupe a series of unsuspecting straight men to unwittingly make absolute fools of themselves. . . .
Newton Knight still haunts the Piney Woods and swamps of southern Mississippi, 140 years after the Civil War. Knight, subject of the new book "The State of Jones'' by journalist Sally Jenkins and Harvard University historian John Stauffer, remains an obscure Civil War figure. To the authors and some in Jones County where Knight led a campaign against the Confederacy . . .
Senate Democrats praised Sonia Sotomayor as a Hispanic pioneer well qualified for the Supreme Court on Monday, but Republicans questioned her impartiality and President Barack Obama's views as well at the start of confirmation hearings. . . .
President Barack Obama turned to the Deep South for the next surgeon general, a rural Alabama family physician who made headlines with fierce determination to rebuild her nonprofit medical clinic in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. . . .
Sonia Sotomayor, President Barack Obama's choice to become the first Hispanic on the U.S. Supreme Court, vigorously defended herself Tuesday against charges that her speeches and rulings show racial bias. Sotomayor, almost certain to be confirmed to sit on the highest U.S. court, was responding to sharp Republican criticism of a 2001 speech in which she suggested a "wise Latina'' would usually reach better conclusions than a white man without similar experiences. "I want to state upfront, unequivocally and without doubt: I do not believe that any racial, ethnic or gender group has an advantage in sound judging. I do believe that every person has an equal opportunity to be a good and wise judge, regardless of their background or life experiences,'' Sotomayor declared. . . .