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The founding Board of Directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge as announced in 1995 were:[39]
1. Patricia Albjerg Graham
2. Barack Obama, civil rights attorney at Davis, Miner, Barnhill & Galland; lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School; member of the board of directors of the Joyce Foundation and the Woods Fund of Chicago; winner, Crain's Chicago Business 40 Under 40 award, 1993; former president of the Harvard Law Review (1990–1991); former executive director of the Developing Communities Project (June 1985–May 1988)[25][40][41][42]
3. Stanley O. Ikenberry, president of the University of Illinois (1979–1995); member of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago (1983–1995); former professor of education (1965–1971) and senior vice president (1971–1979) of Pennsylvania State University
4. Arnold R. Weber, president of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago (1995–1999); member of the board of directors of the Arie and Ida Crown Memorial and the Tribune Company; former president of Northwestern University (1985–1994) and the University of Colorado (1980–1985); professor of labor economics and friend and colleague of George P. Shultz at MIT, the University of Chicago, and in the Nixon administration[43]
5. Ray Romero, vice president and general counsel of Ameritech; Chicago School Finance Authority board member (appointed in 1992 by Governor Jim Edgar); candidate in the 1996 Democratic primary for the 5th Congressional District of Illinois; winner, Crain's Chicago Business 40 Under 40 award, 1991; former Illinois Commerce Commission commissioner (appointed in 1985 by Governor Jim Thompson); former civil rights attorney as Midwest regional director of MALDEF where he was lead counsel for Hispanic plaintiffs in the 1985 Chicago ward remap[42][44]
6. Wanda White, executive director of the Community Workshop on Economic Development; former policy director of the Women's Self-Employment Project; former deputy commissioner of economic development under Chicago Mayors Washington, Sawyer and Daley
7. Susan Crown, president of the Arie and Ida Crown Memorial; vice president of Henry Crown & Company; daughter of Lester Crown[45]
8. Handy Lindsey, Jr., executive director (1988–1997) then president (1997–2003) of the Field Foundation of Illinois; former associate director of the Chicago Community Trust (1986–1988)
The final Board of Directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge in 2001 were:[46]
1. Patricia Albjerg Graham
2. Barack Obama
3. Edward Bottum, managing director of Chase Franklin Corp.; former president and vice chairman of Continental Illinois Bank[47]
4. Connie Evans, founder and president of the Women's Self-Employment Project
5. Susan Blankenbaker Noyes, former labor attorney at Sidley & Austin; daughter of Republican former Indiana state senator Virginia Murphy Blankenbaker; goddaughter of Patricia Albjerg Graham[48]
6. Scott C. Smith, president, CEO and publisher of the Chicago Tribune; former president, CEO and publisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale; former chairman of the South Florida Annenberg Challenge
7. Nancy Searle, consultant to the Searle Funds at the Chicago Community Trust
8. Victoria Chou, dean of the College of Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago
9. John W. McCarter, Jr., president and CEO of the Field Museum
10. Jim Reynolds, Jr., co-founder, chairman and CEO of Loop Capital Services
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The founding Board of Directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge as announced in 1995 were:[39]
1. Patricia Albjerg Graham
2. Barack Obama, civil rights attorney at Davis, Miner, Barnhill & Galland; lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School; member of the board of directors of the Joyce Foundation and the Woods Fund of Chicago; winner, Crain's Chicago Business 40 Under 40 award, 1993; former president of the Harvard Law Review (1990–1991); former executive director of the Developing Communities Project (June 1985–May 1988)[25][40][41][42]
3. Stanley O. Ikenberry, president of the University of Illinois (1979–1995); member of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago (1983–1995); former professor of education (1965–1971) and senior vice president (1971–1979) of Pennsylvania State University
4. Arnold R. Weber, president of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago (1995–1999); member of the board of directors of the Arie and Ida Crown Memorial and the Tribune Company; former president of Northwestern University (1985–1994) and the University of Colorado (1980–1985); professor of labor economics and friend and colleague of George P. Shultz at MIT, the University of Chicago, and in the Nixon administration[43]
5. Ray Romero, vice president and general counsel of Ameritech; Chicago School Finance Authority board member (appointed in 1992 by Governor Jim Edgar); candidate in the 1996 Democratic primary for the 5th Congressional District of Illinois; winner, Crain's Chicago Business 40 Under 40 award, 1991; former Illinois Commerce Commission commissioner (appointed in 1985 by Governor Jim Thompson); former civil rights attorney as Midwest regional director of MALDEF where he was lead counsel for Hispanic plaintiffs in the 1985 Chicago ward remap[42][44]
6. Wanda White, executive director of the Community Workshop on Economic Development; former policy director of the Women's Self-Employment Project; former deputy commissioner of economic development under Chicago Mayors Washington, Sawyer and Daley
7. Susan Crown, president of the Arie and Ida Crown Memorial; vice president of Henry Crown & Company; daughter of Lester Crown[45]
8. Handy Lindsey, Jr., executive director (1988–1997) then president (1997–2003) of the Field Foundation of Illinois; former associate director of the Chicago Community Trust (1986–1988)
The final Board of Directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge in 2001 were:[46]
1. Patricia Albjerg Graham
2. Barack Obama
3. Edward Bottum, managing director of Chase Franklin Corp.; former president and vice chairman of Continental Illinois Bank[47]
4. Connie Evans, founder and president of the Women's Self-Employment Project
5. Susan Blankenbaker Noyes, former labor attorney at Sidley & Austin; daughter of Republican former Indiana state senator Virginia Murphy Blankenbaker; goddaughter of Patricia Albjerg Graham[48]
6. Scott C. Smith, president, CEO and publisher of the Chicago Tribune; former president, CEO and publisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale; former chairman of the South Florida Annenberg Challenge
7. Nancy Searle, consultant to the Searle Funds at the Chicago Community Trust
8. Victoria Chou, dean of the College of Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago
9. John W. McCarter, Jr., president and CEO of the Field Museum
10. Jim Reynolds, Jr., co-founder, chairman and CEO of Loop Capital Services
You can either ban yourself for a week or become a righty for one day ...
Nope F.B.N., you didn't look at my last line, which is the Wikipedia link that allows a user to post extensive text. As long as we violate no copyright laws, we can post what we want.
Nobody is questioning the Annenburg Foundation per se, nobody doubts the Annenburg was a sincere effort on the part of some people to do some good. Rather, it is the hidden association of Ayers/Dorhn and Barack Obama that makes people wonder what he has to hide. I don't see Ayers on this list. Why the hell not?? Why do you people keep hiding these longstanding associations?? So Ayers was not an officer; big deal. He still worked on the Foundation along side Barack Obama. If there is nothing untoward in these relationships then why hide them?? Why not be transparent?? What is there to be afraid of if there is nothing wrong going on?
It's gotten to point now of taunting the public. You won't come clean on the effects on the USA banking crisis by the CRA. You won't come clean on Barack Obama's history. Barack Obama denied he knew of his pastor's unseemly behavior, even though Obama attended Uncle Jeremiah's church for 20 years! What does Obama think, that everybody is stupid??? It's insulting and arrogant the way Obama thinks he doesn't have to answer to the American people the truth of who he is, what he has done in his life, and what he really wants to do.
How about Obama's stand AGAINST the family?? Obama said he will NOT sign the Defense of the Family Act, an bill that would make it clear that a family is one man and one woman and their children; nothing else. You want to make any group of people a "family"?? What's next, some people and some farm animals can make a "family"?? Another insult to the sensibilities of the vast majority of people.
Please. The unanswered questions, the deception, and the insulting stone-walling of the Obama campaign is what makes people so leary of his candidacy. He is hiding something, and maybe even a lot of somethings, just the way Bill Clinton betrayed his wife and daughter, not just over Monica Lewinsky, but over Paula Jones and dozens of other women. Lying to the public and hiding one's true identity is just plain wrong. It makes Obama someone I could never vote for, and I hope enough voters to make more than 270 electoral votes feels the same way, or America will be in big trouble, very big trouble.
//
__________________
"All that is required for evil to triumph is for good to do nothing."
The founding Board of Directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge as announced in 1995 were:[39]
1. Patricia Albjerg Graham
2. Barack Obama, civil rights attorney at Davis, Miner, Barnhill & Galland; lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School; member of the board of directors of the Joyce Foundation and the Woods Fund of Chicago; winner, Crain's Chicago Business 40 Under 40 award, 1993; former president of the Harvard Law Review (1990–1991); former executive director of the Developing Communities Project (June 1985–May 1988)[25][40][41][42]
3. Stanley O. Ikenberry, president of the University of Illinois (1979–1995); member of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago (1983–1995); former professor of education (1965–1971) and senior vice president (1971–1979) of Pennsylvania State University
4. Arnold R. Weber, president of the Civic Committee of the Commercial Club of Chicago (1995–1999); member of the board of directors of the Arie and Ida Crown Memorial and the Tribune Company; former president of Northwestern University (1985–1994) and the University of Colorado (1980–1985); professor of labor economics and friend and colleague of George P. Shultz at MIT, the University of Chicago, and in the Nixon administration[43]
5. Ray Romero, vice president and general counsel of Ameritech; Chicago School Finance Authority board member (appointed in 1992 by Governor Jim Edgar); candidate in the 1996 Democratic primary for the 5th Congressional District of Illinois; winner, Crain's Chicago Business 40 Under 40 award, 1991; former Illinois Commerce Commission commissioner (appointed in 1985 by Governor Jim Thompson); former civil rights attorney as Midwest regional director of MALDEF where he was lead counsel for Hispanic plaintiffs in the 1985 Chicago ward remap[42][44]
6. Wanda White, executive director of the Community Workshop on Economic Development; former policy director of the Women's Self-Employment Project; former deputy commissioner of economic development under Chicago Mayors Washington, Sawyer and Daley
7. Susan Crown, president of the Arie and Ida Crown Memorial; vice president of Henry Crown & Company; daughter of Lester Crown[45]
8. Handy Lindsey, Jr., executive director (1988–1997) then president (1997–2003) of the Field Foundation of Illinois; former associate director of the Chicago Community Trust (1986–1988)
The final Board of Directors of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge in 2001 were:[46]
1. Patricia Albjerg Graham
2. Barack Obama
3. Edward Bottum, managing director of Chase Franklin Corp.; former president and vice chairman of Continental Illinois Bank[47]
4. Connie Evans, founder and president of the Women's Self-Employment Project
5. Susan Blankenbaker Noyes, former labor attorney at Sidley & Austin; daughter of Republican former Indiana state senator Virginia Murphy Blankenbaker; goddaughter of Patricia Albjerg Graham[48]
6. Scott C. Smith, president, CEO and publisher of the Chicago Tribune; former president, CEO and publisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale; former chairman of the South Florida Annenberg Challenge
7. Nancy Searle, consultant to the Searle Funds at the Chicago Community Trust
8. Victoria Chou, dean of the College of Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago
9. John W. McCarter, Jr., president and CEO of the Field Museum
10. Jim Reynolds, Jr., co-founder, chairman and CEO of Loop Capital Services
I don't see Ayers on this list. Why the hell not?? Why do you people keep hiding these longstanding associations?? //
Here we go again, this is the Board the make policy decisions and decide the coarse of the agency.. Ayers was on the implementation end.. it is not all that difficult to understand, as it has been explained at least 20 times..
This does not list the people who implemented the grant.. just the board.. comprende???
If you want to do some splaining.. splaine this one..
What is Obama hiding and why is he hiding it??? Who cares about this board??? It means NOTHING!!! Why does everyone hide Obama's association with William Ayers, the unrepentant terrorist who built bombs to destroy U.S. tax-payer property, as his wife Bernadette Dorhn killed a cop??? Why don't you come clean??? Americans are sick of the stone-walling.
//
__________________
"All that is required for evil to triumph is for good to do nothing."
What is Obama hiding and why is he hiding it??? Who cares about this board??? It means NOTHING!!! Why does everyone hide Obama's association with William Ayers, the unrepentant terrorist who built bombs to destroy U.S. tax-payer property, as his wife Bernadette Dorhn killed a cop??? Why don't you come clean??? Americans are sick of the stone-walling.
//
Grab a straw Fog because you suck at reality . This notion of BO being terrorist is non-sense. Its all pablum for the dumbest people to feed on