washington informer - august 2, 2012
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Washington Informer - August 2, 2012TRANSCRIPT
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• C e l e b r a t i n g 4 7 Ye a r s o f S e r v i c e •Serving More Than 50,000 African American Readers Throughout The Metropolitan Area / Vol. 47, No. 42 Aug. 2 - Aug. 8, 2012
Edelman Discusses
the Quality of
Education
See Page 23
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and on DCTV 95 & 96
Visit us online for daily updates and much more @ www.washingtoninformer.com.
One-on-One with E.U.’s Sugar Bear Page 33
William Raspberry RememberedPage 9
HIV Cases Among Youth on the Rise Page 20
No sooNer Does maN DisCoVer iNTeLLiGeNCe ThaN he Tries To iNVoLVe iT iN his owN sTupiDiTy. –JaCques yVes CosTeau
See SCHOOLS on Page 8
lighten the crowd about her five-year plan for the beleaguered system.
But what Henderson obvious-ly didn’t expect right off the bat, was to be besieged with a torrent of questions and criticisms sur-rounding the firing of Michael Johnson, the former principal at Phelps Architecture, Con-
By Dorothy RowleyWI Staff Writer
District of Columbia Public Schools Chancellor Kaya Hen-derson strode into the packed cafeteria at Luke C. Moore High School in Northeast on July 24, flashing an infectious smile that reflected her eagerness to en-
struction and Engineering High School in Northeast – and when he might be reinstated.
“I was very upset that Michael Johnson was fired, and this new man they hired has some very big shoes to fill,” said Keisha Warner, 45, whose daughter will be attending Phelps this fall. “I’m concerned about the
change of leadership, and I want to know if the objectives are the same. I want to feel more com-fortable with what’s going on – and what are the long-term goals for Phelps,” Warner said.
“They even went all the way to New York to pull this man out of retirement, so for him to be fired like that, with no ex-
planation is unacceptable,” said Warner. “As taxpayers, we pay the chancellor’s salary and every-body who works for her, so we demand to know what happened because it’s our right.”
Johnson, whose leadership mirrored the no-nonsense prin-
Henderson on Hot Seat during Ward 5 ForumD.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson faced a disgruntled group of parents during a July 24 forum titled, “State of Schools: Ward 5” at Luke C. Moore High School in Northeast. /Photo by Khalid Naji-Allah
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2 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
By “Mickey” Thompson
Content provided and photos owned by Social Sightings • www.SocialSightings.com
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“Congratulations” on a Successful Fundraiser Drs.. James “Brownfox” Jones shown here with Dr. Lonnie G. Bunch III (Founding Dir. of the Smithsonian’s National African American History & Culture Museum)hosted a successful fundraiser at his fabulous museum type DC home with his lovly wife Dr. Bernie James (More on this event in the Social Sightings-The MagaZine)
The CoLumn
August 4
”HAPPY BIRTHDAY MR. PRESIDENT” Barack Hussein Obama II 44th President of the United States
Happy Retirement! Moving O
n Up! Engagem
ent News! Condolences. Promotions! C
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Above: “Belated Happy Birthday” Chinyere Hubbard Dir. of Communications Events DC July 21
“Congratulations!” NBA President Elect Atty. Patricia Rosiers Elected to this positon at the National Bar Association Conference this year in Las Vegas, NV
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www.washingtoninformer.com The Washington Informer Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 3
8/2/2012-8/8/2012AROUNDTHEREGIONBlackFactsPage6BUSINESSWilliamReed’sBusinessExchangePage17COMMENTARIESPages22-23RELIGIONLyndiaGrant’sReligionColumnPage37SPORTSPages40-41
Visitusonthewebatwww.washingtoninformer.comA Union solider [portrayed by Marquett Milton] accompanies President Abraham Lincoln after the president visited the former site of Camp Barker on the grounds of Garrison Elementary School on S Street in Northwest. The July 29 reenactment was sponsored by the African American Civil War Museum./Photo by Khalid Naji-Allah
LIFELINE Did you know? You may qualify for assistance in paying your home phone bill. Discounts for basic telephone service are available to eligible District of Columbia low-income residents.
Verizon Washington, D.C. Lifeline Plans: Verizon Washington, D.C.’s Lifeline service, known as “Economy II,” offers reduced rates on Verizon’s monthly telephone bill and one-time discounts on the cost of installing phone service. Additionally, toll blocking is available to Economy II customers at no charge.
Economy II Service*: $3.00 per month for unlimited local calling. Value-added services are not included (e.g., Call Waiting, Caller ID). No connection charges apply. Also, customers will not be charged for the federal subscriber line charge. Economy II customers who are 65 years of age or older can have this service at a further reduced rate of $1.00 per month. * Full terms and rates for these services, including terms of eligibility, are as set forth in federal and in Verizon’s tariffs on file with the Public Service Commission of the District of Columbia. Rates as stated here are effective as of September 1, 2011. But, the rates and other terms are subject to change in the future.
Restrictions:
No other working telephone service at the same location No additional phone lines No Foreign Exchange or Foreign Zone service No bundles or packages No outstanding unpaid final bills Bill name must match eligible participant No separate Lifeline discount on cellular or wireless phone service Business lines are not eligible Phone number must match eligible
participant Must be a current customer or establish
new service with Verizon
Contact DDOE at 311 to apply
To learn more about the Lifeline program, visit www.lifelinesupport.org.
Eligibility:
District residents who have been certified by the District Department of the Environment’s Energy Office (DDOE) as income eligible may apply for the Economy II program this program. To apply, schedule an appointment with DDOE by calling 311. Households in which one or more individuals are receiving benefits from one of the following public assistance programs may be income eligible.
Food Stamps Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) Supplemental Security Income Public Assistance to Adults Temporary Disability Assistance Program
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4 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
Arts and Entertainment:When Rap Lyrics Stand TrialTorrence Hatch, the Baton Rouge, La., rapper better known to fans as ‘Lil Boosie,’ faced the trial of his life in May. Charged with first-degree murder in the 2009 shooting death of Terry Boyd, ‘Lil Boosie’ stood accused of paying his friend Mike ‘Marlo Mike’ Loudon $2,800 to carry out the hit.
Health: Keeping Watch over HepatitisViral hepatitis is the leading cause of liver cancer and cirrhosis worldwide. Approximately 1 in 12 persons, or around 500 million people, have chronic viral hepatitis and most of them do not know they’re infected.
National:What Happened When a Police Officer Threatened Michelle ObamaNeither the White House nor the mainstream media seem alarmed about the recent threat against the first lady. Even the Secret Service is playing it down, treating it as a terrible joke. But we can’t help but wonder if it would have been a laughing matter had it been Laura Bush or Barbara Bush caught in the crosshairs of a cop.
International:Latest Ebola Outbreak in Uganda Kills 14The rare disease, named after a small river in the Congo, strikes again after having killed 37 people in western Uganda in 2007 and claimed the lives of at least 170 people in northern Uganda in 2000.
around the region
We represent victims of majormedical malpractice such ascerebral palsy.All 5 lawyers were again elected“Best Lawyers in America” 2012Karen Evans is a nurse/attorneyAttorney/PediatricianRobert Chabon, M.D., J.D. is
Of Counsel.
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Harlow Case Karen Evans Melissa Rhea
4 / May 15 - 21, 2008 The Washington Informer / www.washingtoninformer.com
The Washington Informer NewspaperIn Memoriam
Dr. Calvin W. Rolark, Sr. Wilhelmina J. Rolark
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“ “
We have to stop being passive-aggressive with poor
children about domestic violence. I plan to take these
policies to Congress andimplore them to change our
laws. I will not stop untilthese policies are passed.
L.Y. Marlow
Women Break the Cycle ofDomestic ViolenceBy Tia Carol JonesWI Staff Writer
When L.Y. Marlow's 23-year-old daughter told her the fatherof her daughter threatened herlife, and the life of their child,she knew something had to bedone. Out of her frustrationwith law enforcement's handlingof the situation, she decided tostart the Saving Promise cam-paign.
“It seems to be a vicious cyclethat won't turn my familyloose,” Marlow said. Marlowshared her story with the audi-ence at the District HeightsDomestic Violence Symposiumon May 7 at the District HeightsMunicipal Center. The sympo-sium was sponsored by theFamily and Youth ServicesCenter of the city of DistrictHeights and the National Hook-Up of Black Women.
Marlow has written a book,“Color Me Butterfly,” which is astory about four generations ofdomestic violence. The book isinspired by her own experiences,and those of her grandmother,her mother and her daughter.She said every time she readsexcerpts from her book, she stillcan not believe the words camefrom her. “Color Me Butterfly”won the 2007 National “BestBooks” Award.
“I was just 16-years-old whenmy eye first blackened and mylips bled,” Marlow said.
Elaine Davis-Nickens, presi-dent of the National Hook-Upof Black Women, said there is noconsistency in the way domesticviolence issues are dealt with by
law enforcement. She said theyhad come together to bring asense of uniformity in the waydomestic violence victims andsurvivors are treated.
“She's using her own personalstory, her own personal pain topush forward,” Davis-Nickenssaid about Marlow.
Davis-Nickens said anyonewho reads Marlow's book will“get it.” She said she “puts thecase in such a way, the averageperson can get it.” She said at theend of the day, the book willhelp people begin to have a dia-logue about domestic violence.
Also present at the event wasMildred Muhammad, the ex-wife of John Allen Muhammad,who was sentenced to six consec-utive life terms without paroleby a Maryland jury for his role inthe Beltway Sniper attacks in2002. Mildred Muhammad isthe founder of After the Trauma,an organization that helps thesurvivors of domestic violenceand their children.
“I lived in fear for six years. Sixyears in fear is a long time. It isnot an easy thing to come outof,” she said.
Mildred Muhammad saidpeople who want to help adomestic violence victim mustbe careful of how they go intothe victim's life, and understandthat she may be in “survivalmode”.
“Before you get to 'I'm goingto kill you,' it started as a verbal
threat,” she said.Among the programs Marlow
wants to see implemented arestricter restraining order policies,more rights for victim's familiesto intervene on behalf of a vic-tim, a domestic violence assess-ment unit coupled with furthertraining for law enforcementagencies, a Child's Life Protec-tion Act and mandatory counsel-ing for batterers.
“If we are ever going to eradi-cate domestic violence, we mustlook at both sides of the coin.We need to address both the vic-tim and the batterer,” Marlowsaid.
Marlow would also like to seeprograms designed to raiseawareness among children inpublic and private schools. Shefeels children need to be educat-ed about domestic violence.
“We have to stop being pas-sive-aggressive with poor chil-dren about domestic violence,”Marlow said.
Marlow has worked to breakthe cycle of abuse in her family,and is confident the policies sheis pushing for will start thatprocess.
“I plan to take these policies toCongress and implore them tochange our laws,” Marlow said.“I will not stop until these poli-cies are passed.”
Tia Carol Jones can be reachedat [email protected]
WI
PUBLISHERDenise Rolark Barnes
STAFF
Denise W. Barnes, Editor
Shantella Y. Sherman, Assistant Editor
Ron Burke, Advertising/ Marketing Director
Victor Holt, Photo Editor
Lafayette Barnes, IV, Assistant Photo Editor
John E. De Freitas, Sports Photo Editor
Dorothy Rowley, Online Editor
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Brian Young, Design & Layout
AssureTech /www.scsworks.com, Webmaster
Mable Neville, Bookkeeper
Mickey Thompson, Social Sightings columnist
Stacey Palmer, Social Media Specialist
REPORTERS
Misty Brown, Eve Ferguson, Joy Freeman-Coulbary, Gale Horton Gay, Barrington Salmon, Stacey Palmer , Charles E. Sutton ,James Wright, Joseph Young
PHOTOGRAPHERS
John E. De Freitas, Victor Holt, Roy Lewis, Khalid Naji-Allah, Shevry Lassiter
THE WASHINGTON INFORMER NEWSPAPER (ISSN#0741-9414) is published weekly on each Thursday. Periodicals postage paid at Washing-ton, D.C. and additional mailing of-fices. News and advertising deadline is Monday prior to publication. An-nouncements must be received two weeks prior to event. Copyright 2010 by The Washington Informer. All rights reserved. POSTMASTER: Send change of addresses to The Wash-ington Informer, 3117 Martin Luther King, Jr. Ave., S.E. Washington, D.C. 20032. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written permis-sion from the publisher. The Informer Newspaper cannot guarantee the return of photographs. Subscription rates are $45 per year, two years $60. Papers will be received not more than a week after publication. Make checks payable to:
THE WASHINGTON INFORMER3117 Martin Luther King, Jr. Ave., S.EWashington, D.C. 20032Phone: 202 561-4100Fax: 202 [email protected]
In MemoriamDr. Calvin W. Rolark, Sr.
Wilhelmina J. Rolark
Washingtoninformer.comSOME HIgHLIgHTS Of THIS WEEK
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Results from last week’s Poll Question:
Is the District Doing Enough to Lower Incidences of HIV/AIDS in its Own Backyard?
33 YES 33 NO
7 UNDECIDED
4% UNDECIDED
14% UNDECIDED
73.4% YES
20.1% NO
6.5% UNDECIDED
6.5% UNDECIDED
49% YES 49% NO
0% UNSURE
75 percent YES15 percent THEY'RE RIGHT ON TARGET10 percent NOT SURE
21%
NOT SURE
30%
Never H
eard o
f It20% NO
23% YES
77% NO
18% UNSURE
This Week’s Top Article:Parents of D.C. students grilled
Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson during a July 24 “State of the Schools: Ward
5” public meeting at Luke C. Moore High School in
Northeast. WI Staff Reporter Dorothy Rowley talks with
disgruntled parents and education advocates about recent developments taking
place in D.C. public schools and what parents say are their
priorities.
Did you feel cheated by NBC’s decision not to stream opening ceremonies for the Summer Olympics? Go to Washingtoninformer.com to cast your vote!
New Poll Question:
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brary Board of Trustees. He’s the president of the Congress Heights Community Association and works as the executive director of the Anacostia Coordinating Council in Southeast.
Over the years, Pannell has served as an adviser – on a formal and informal basis – for candidates vying for various political offices throughout the District. He re-mains one of the city’s most well-known gay activists.
Pannell said that his single status and the fact that he doesn’t have children shouldn’t be a deterrent for residents who would otherwise vote for him.
“I worked to revive Ballou Se-nior High School’s PTSA which was defunct at one point” he said. “I raised $7,000 for the school and became treasurer of the PTSA for five years. I worked to see that the Anacostia Coordinating Council serves as the fiduciary agent for Ballou’s marching band.”
Pannell said that “public educa-tion affects us all and we as parents, students, teachers, [and] commu-nity members need to do what we can to help.”
“I will bring the same type of energy and commitment to the State Board of Education that I have brought to the community,” he said.
Alexander, Dismissive Regarding Moten
D.C. Council member Yvette Al-exander (D-Ward 7), who faces Re-publican Ron Moten in the Ward 7 D.C. Council member general elec-tion on November 6, isn’t excited about debating her opponent.
“What debate?” Alexander, 51, said during a Tuesday, July 24 rib-bon cutting at the Nannie Helen Burroughs Great Streets Project in Northeast. “Ward 7 is 98 percent Democratic.”
D.C. Political RoundupHowever, Moten said he will be
glad to take Alexander on.“She has a past to explain to
the voters,” said Moten, 42. “In the Democratic primary, she had 5 candidates to go against and the issues never got addressed.”
Alexander and Moten have had a tense relationship. A few years ago, in the D.C. Council chambers, Moten criticized Alexander’s per-formance as a legislator during a hearing and the council member responded by walking out of the room and summarily dismissing him with a wave of her hand.
At the grand opening of the Deanwood Recreation Center in Northeast in 2010, Alexander en-couraged District residents to sup-port then D.C. Council Chairman Vincent Gray for mayor. When Moten pointed out that the en-dorsement at that venue may have been a violation of the Hatch Act, which prohibits District employ-ees from engaging in politics while participating in city business, she responded with one word: “what-ever.”
Alexander handily defeated five challengers in the Tuesday, April 3 Democratic primary but polled only 41 percent. Moten easily de-feated Don Folden Sr. in the Re-publican contest with 56 percent of the vote.
Moten said that the heavy Dem-ocratic numbers in the ward don’t discourage him.
“I am a better candidate than she is,” he said. “I would like to have the chance to explain to the people of Ward 7 why they should not have a problem voting for a civil rights Republican. We need a pub-lic debate in front of the people, not just on television.”
Alexander will stand her ground. “If there is a debate, let me
know,” she said. “Bring it on.”wi
By James WrightWI Staff Writer
Pannell Will Run for Ward 8 State Board of Education Seat
Ward 8 political activist Philip Pannell said recently that he’s a definite contender for his ward’s seat on the D.C. State Board of Education. The election will take place on Tuesday, Nov. 6.
“I am running because overall Ward 8 collectively can improve education,” said Pannell, 61. “You have heard the saying that it takes a ‘village to raise a child.’ Our village is not engaged.”
Pannell ran for the vacant Ward 8 position in the special election that took place on Tuesday, April 26, 2011 due to the death of Board of Education member William Lockridge earlier that year. He fin-ished second to Trayon White in a field of nine candidates.
White, 28, said that he intends to run for re-election.
Nonetheless, Pannell cited an example of low engagement in the ward regarding education. He not-ed the “appalling low attendance” for the ward’s PTA meetings and said that the ward’s recent town hall meeting on education that featured D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson had a dismal turnout.
“I noted that on the flyer for the town hall meeting that the chancel-lor and the Ward 8 D.C. Council member [Marion Barry] were listed as the sponsors but the Ward 8 Board of Education member was not listed as a sponsor,” he said. “This is an example of not hav-ing people actively engaged. I have a history of involvement of three decades in this city and I can really get people involved.”
Pannell has been elected presi-dent of the Ward 8 Democrats five times and is a former member of the District of Columbia Li-
Council member Yvette Alexander (D-Ward 7), handily defeated five challengers in theTuesday, April 3 Democratic primary but polled only 41 percent. /Courtesy Photo
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6 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
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around the region
August 61861 - The congressional con-
fiscation bill freed slaves who were forced to fight against the United States government, or to work in support of the rebellion.
1989 - Congressman George Thomas “Mickey” Leland, mem-bers of his congressional staff, and State Department officials die in a plane crash near Gam-bela, Ethiopia.
1962 - Jamaica proclaimed in-dependent.
1965 - President signed Voting Rights Bill which authorized the suspension of literacy tests and the sending of federal examiners into South.
1967 - Sir Alexander Busta-mante, Jamaica’s first prime min-ister dies.
August 71948 - Alice Coachman, be-
comes the first African Ameri-can woman to win an Olympic gold medal in the high jump during the Summer Games in London.
1954 - Charles H. Mahoney was confirmed by the Senate and became the first Black to serve as a full delegate to the United
Nations.1960 - Black and white students
staged kneel-in d e m o n s t r a -tions in Atlanta churches.
1970 - An-gela Davis who was im-plicated in a shootout during an attempted escape in a San Rafael, California, courthouse, went into hiding to avoid arrest.
August 41901 - Louis Armstrong was
born.1931 - Pioneer in surgery, Dr.
Daniel Hale Williams dies.1936 - Olympic gold medal
in the 800-meter run went to “Long” John Woodruff.
1953 - Movement of Black families into Trumbull Park housing project in Chicago trig-gered virtually continuous riot which lasted more than three years and required assignment of more than one thousand po-licemen to keep order.
August 51892 - Harriet Tubman re-
ceives a pension from Congress for her work as a nurse, spy, and scout during the Civil War.
1900 - Death of James Augus-tine Healy.
1962 - Patrick Ewing was born.
1968 - Senator Edward Brooke named temporary chair-man of Republican National Convention, Miami, Florida.
1984 - Evelyn Ashford wins a gold medal in the 100-meter race and Edwin Moses wins a gold medal in the 400 meter hurdles in the Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles.
Davis was acquitted of all charg-es on June 4, 1972.
August 81805 - The African Baptist
Church is organized in Boston, Massachusetts.
1865 - Explorer Matthew A Henson was born.
1907 - Saxophonist Benny Carter was born.
August 91987 - Beatrice Foods is ac-
quired by Reginald Lewis. It is the largest business acquisition ever by an African American.
1936 - Jesse Owens won four gold medals at Olympics, in Ber-lin.
1963 - Whitney Houston was born in East Orange, New Jer-sey.
1961 - James B. Parsons be-came first Black appointed to Federal District Court in the United States.
August 101948 - Singer Patti Austin was
born. 1981 - The Coca-Cola Bot-
tling Company agreed to pump $34 million into Black businesses and the Black community, end-ing a national boycott called by PUSH.
August 111873 - Actor and co-composer
of “Lift Every Voice and Sing”, J. Rosamond Johnson was born.
1921 - Author of “Roots”, Alex Haley was born.
1925 - Carl Thomas Rowan was born.
1949 - Peter Marray Mar-shall of New York appointed to American Medical Association’s House of Delegates.
1965 - U.S. Senate confirmed nomination of Thurgood Mar-shal as U.S. solicitor general.
Black FactsWEEkOFAUG2TOAUG8
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around the regionaround the regionaround the region
Kevin Rouse, Washington, D.C.
I think that they came down really fair. It could have been a little harsher, but it was just due. We should be held accountable for our actions. Children, at that early age, are innocent. The incident killed their innocence; they had no choice it in. It was a fair judgment. This needs to stop.
Chrystal WilliamsWashington, D.C.
I don’t think it’s fair. I think the school should be punished, not the players. Maybe the players were threatened that if they opened their mouths that things would be revoked and taken away from them. I don’t think it’s fair. That’s my personal opinion.
John ReedSilver Spring, Md.
I thought they were fair. There was collusion in relation to the people not providing the proper attention to the incident. I thought that it was unfair that they hid it and they didn’t take swift action and left the perpetrators to stay in place and continue to do what they were doing.
INTERVIEWSANDPHOTOSBYELTONJ.HAYES
DOYOUTHINkTHATTHEPENALTIESLEVIEDONPENNSTATEBYTHENCAAFORCOVERINGUPCOACHJERRYSANDUSkY’SSEXUALABUSEOFYOUNGBOYSWERETOOSEVERE?VIEWP INT
Shelia CopelandWashington, D.C.
I thought that they could have just punished the institution, coaches and all of the people who were in charge [of the sexual abuse cover up] instead of the [football players], who were just as innocent as the babies who were dreadfully harmed during that time.
Sandra JuliusLanham, Md.
I most definitely think that they were fair. Unfortunately, the kids were exploited and the people at the college took advantage of them. They were not protected. The whole educational system is here to bring our youth up, educate them and it’s unfortunate that they were victimized in that way. The college lost sight of its priorities.
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8 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
around the region
President Teresa Sullivan in June following a heated public outcry.
“There’s a lot we need to do, but No. 1 is that we need Princi-pal Johnson back at Phelps,” said Rucker, who suggested that John-son’s departure might after all, be a “personal rather than person-nel” matter.
“The reason I say that,” Rucker told Henderson, “is because a member of your staff came up to me during graduation and she said, ‘I work in the chancellor’s office, and I know what Principal Johnson did not do for my grand-son.’ So I took that to mean that it was her vendetta to make sure that Principal Johnson got out of there.”
Rucker, like a couple other speakers, also made reference to another issue that held Hender-son to the hot seat. Currently, 64 percent of schools in Ward 5 have no librarian, and Rucker said efforts to further scale back or to completely eliminate them could be disastrous for students.
“It would be a shame for [chil-dren] in this city not to have ac-cess to 21st century learning, [as] librarians are the ones to facilitate that,” said Rucker. “It’s around that time when [inner-city] chil-dren reach third grade that it’s being determined how many jail cells need to be built [and] our children need to be reading long before the second and third grade. If we don’t have a level playing field where librarians are contributing to their education, something is terribly wrong in Washington, D.C.”
Henderson, a Ward 5 resident admitted that over the past 40 years, the District has become one of the worst places in the country to be educated. But she said that she didn’t want parents and students to feel a lack of con-fidence in officials or that they weren’t getting all they deserved from the school system.
In saying so, she touched upon expectations outlined in her stra-tegic plan, “A Capital Commit-ment,” that is set for full imple-mentation by 2017.
Henderson said the plan, which
focuses on five goals – including continued improvement in read-ing and math scores and increased graduation rates – will not only strengthen Ward 5 schools, but all 122 District schools.
Meanwhile, Henderson went onto acknowledge several in-stances of achievement that have occurred at Ward 5 schools since she’s been at the helm.
They include a 14 percent drop in the truancy rate at Moore; that two students at Dunbar Senior High School recently won first-and second-place in a regional competition that involved their peers from Northern Virginia and Maryland; the planetarium at Thurgood Marshall Middle School has been reopened for the first time in 20 years; as part of their Science, Technology, Engineering and Math [STEM] curriculum, students at Spingarn Senior High School are learning to create video games; and that science students at the Langley Education Campus have been engaged in dissecting – tasks, that in the past, normally start at the high school level.
While Henderson offered little feedback on the library issue, overall she listened intently to the speakers’ concerns.
She said she was sensitive to the need for librarians, like she was over the dozens of school clos-ings that took place in 2008 – and for which Ward 5 took the most hits. Henderson also expressed concern that District schools were not utilizing resources as best they could, and that more of the District’s public schools have yet to be exposed to better cur-riculums such as STEM.
“I think there is a unique op-portunity here to not just build new schools and to build [and promote] new programs, but to engage the community [more] and to think differently about how we can do this work togeth-er,” Henderson said. “This will be challenging and require that we have further collaborations, and that we continue [these forums]with the community.” wi
cipal in the acclaimed 1987 movie “Lean on Me,” was given the boot in May. But much to the chagrin of parents like Warner and oth-ers, Henderson has been guarded in her comments, citing the mat-ter as a personnel issue.
On the other hand, Hender-son, 42, who remained poised and confident throughout the three-hour forum titled, “State of Schools: Ward 5,” and which was largely attended by whites, also took a verbal beat-down for not meeting with parents in the first place. Her camp apparently got the message, because just days later, her office announced that Henderson had scheduled a meeting on August 1 at the state-of-the-art high school on 26thStreet with the Phelps com-munity.
Meanwhile, during the forum that was attended by Phelps’ new administrator Willie Jackson and principals from several other Dis-trict public schools, Henderson who just over a year ago, suc-ceeded her controversial prede-cessor Michelle Rhee, sought to assure the standing-room-only crowd that all would be well at Phelps. She said that while she was aware of how difficult it was for the community to embrace her decision, it was not Johnson’s leadership alone that charted the school’s new course of achieve-ment, but that parents, teachers and the community also figured prominently in Phelps’ academic makeover.
“I want to work with you and I don’t have a personal issue at all with Mr. Johnson,” Henderson told her attentive audience. “But there are confidential personnel issues that can’t be discussed out loud … We will work with the Phelps community to make fu-ture transitions easier.”
Nevertheless, Henderson was repeatedly reminded that John-son’s ouster was not a done deal.
“This is a UVA moment,” shouted Elysia Rucker, who re-ferred to the immediate reinstate-ment of University of Virginia
SCHOOLS continued from Page 1
Parents challenged D.C. Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson’s decision to terminate Michael John-son, the former principal at Phelps Architecture, Construction and En-gineering High School during a “State of Schools: Ward 5” forum on July 24 at Luke C. Moore High School in Northeast.
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tic story of civil rights in the 1960s, and for 40 years told that story [with stark accuracy].”
Graham went on to say that Raspberry was a “scathing crit-ic” of his profession and that through him, many of his Post colleagues “learned how to think, write and listen.”
Jordan, who serves as senior counsel for the Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Field law group in Northwest, remembered his friend for his quiet, moral lead-ership and fierce commitment to educating people – young and old.
“Education was very impor-tant to Bill. He was a brave and intrepid pioneer,” said Jordan. “He had a gift for the subtle ser-mon. His writings were always provocative but seldom predict-able,” he said. “[His wife] Sondra loved him and he had the good sense to love her back.”
Gilliam reflected on Raspber-ry’s knack for loosening things up in the newsroom.
“He was cool, relaxed and ac-cessible to everyone,” said Gil-liam, director of Prime Movers Media at George Washington University. “He had a big influ-ence on people in the newsroom [where] he was dedicated to im-proving quality,” Gilliam said, adding that she was impressed by both Raspberry’s prowess as a writer and prowess in the news-room.
Raspberry’s four grown chil-dren recalled the lessons he’d
Raspberry Remembered for Loving His Family, City and Profession
taught them. While Patricia, his oldest
daughter, described her father as a “magician” who could make the moon change to any color she wanted, and that he instilled in her that “being smart was a pretty special thing.”
His youngest son Mark, re-called countless conversations with his dad at home, “down in the man-cave.” Mark described him as “beautiful, wise and in-spirational.”
Angela, hailed her father as a “remarkable and phenomenal” man who got one of his best ideas for a column from her. It involved a story she told him about elephants in South Af-rica that he later paralleled with inner-city black males, she said.
“It was one of his most pow-erful pieces and he never gave me the credit,” Angela joked, triggering a hearty round of laughter in the sanctuary.
Oldest son Reggie, who said Raspberry was “a great propo-nent of education,” credited him with helping to turn his life around after he veered off course during his younger days, by returning to college.
“I was like the prodigal son,” he said, adding that at both par-ents’ urging, he had to take “baby steps” to get back on track.
“I’ll always love you for that,” Reggie said, looking directly at his father’s closed coffin.wi
By Dorothy RowleyWI Staff Writer
Renowned Washington Post columnist and Pulitzer Prize winner William J. Raspberry, 76, was remembered for his gener-ous spirit and strong journalistic voice during his funeral service at the National Cathedral in Northwest on July 26.
During the two-hour service, which was attended by thou-sands, Washington Post chair-man Donald Graham, Vernon Jordan, a close friend of Rasp-berry, Dorothy Gilliam who worked alongside him at The Washington Post, and his chil-dren described the pioneering journalist as a family man who loved his city and his profession.
“Generosity was at the heart of Bill Raspberry,” said Graham, who noted that his colleague had won his Pulitzer 25 years later than he should have.
“But that was one of the least important [accomplishments] for him,” Graham said. “He had a strong voice at The Washing-ton Post … He believed journal-ists should root for the success of their city. No one ever told him what to say, and he never modified an opinion to please his boss.”
Further alluding to Raspber-ry’s passion for reporting racial injustices that frequently took place in the South where he was born and raised, Graham added that, “He walked into the gigan-
Pallbearers carry the casket of William Raspberry out of the Washington National Cathedral in Northwest on Thursday, July 26. More than 2,000 people attended the funeral services. /Photo by Khalid Naji-Allah
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around the regionlimbs back to their home at Douglass Dwellings in South-east.
“That’s how we would make our little change,” said Dun-more, a retired business owner and Ward 8 resident.
Dunmore, 65, returned to his old stomping grounds and re-lived memories of his youth on Saturday, July 28 when St. Eliz-abeths East Campus opened its gates to District residents for its Season of Discovery cel-ebration. The event attracted a diverse group of longtime Ward 8 residents and new gen-trifiers, along with former St. Elizabeths’ patients and em-ployees who took advantage of the beautiful summer day and headed to the iconic landmark to participate in a host of fun-filled activities.
D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray, Victor Hoskins, deputy mayor of Planning and Economic De-velopment and Council mem-ber Marion Barry (D-Ward 8), kicked off the celebration with opening remarks before the three blended seamlessly into the crowd to mingle with guests in between stops at the numerous vendor stands lo-cated throughout the grounds.
Vendors from the Ward 8 Farmers’ Market, McCleaf ’s Orchard and the Rainbow Hill Farm lined tables with an as-sortment of shiny and suc-culent red tomatoes, emerald green zucchini and pints of plump blueberries, among
A Season of Discovery at St. Elizabeths A Fun-Filled Day Draws Crowds to the Southeast Landmark
other fresh and organic fruits, vegetables and meats. Some customers filled shopping bags with the tasty treats to enjoy later, while others seized the moment, and quickly peeled the skins off of Navel oranges and popped the juicy slices into their mouths.
Farmers weren’t the only ones on-hand to hawk their wares.
Proud St. Elizabeths’ pa-tients beamed as they displayed their artwork which consisted of watercolors and charcoal drawings, still photographs of area landmarks and hand-woven bracelets and necklaces that caught both the eye of seasoned art collectors and novices during the festival.
But, the fun didn’t stop there. Children enjoyed a variety of
By Elton J. HayesWI Staff Writer
As a teenager, Drew Dun-more recalls scaling the tower-ing black iron rod fence that runs along the perimeter of the 183-acre east campus at St. Elizabeths Psychiatric Hospital with his brothers. Each week,
the boys would climb the fence and comb the property, chock full of mighty Oaks, in search of firewood.
The Dunmore brothers would empty their weekly bounties into a Radio Flyer wagon, which they strategically placed on the other side of the fortress, and together they’d haul the branches and broken
Melvin Deal’s African Heritage Dancers wow the crowd with their steps during the Season of Discovery festival on the grounds of St. Elizabeths in Southeast on July 28. /Photo by Roy Lewis
Patricia Allen, watches her niece Kyrsten Wallace, create a work of art dur-ing St. Elizabeths Season of Discovery festival on the grounds of the historic hospital in Southeast on Saturday, July 28. /Photo by Roy Lewis
activities that included games and arts and crafts. Balloon artists helped youngsters cre-ate animals and light sabres, while classically trained artists used young, supple cheeks as their canvasses, daubing an as-sortment of tangerine orange, black, white, gray, brown and yellow water-soluble paint on their faces and transforming their tiny visages into lions, rabbits and tigers.
Carla Merritt brought her young son and his friend to the event. The two Olympic-bound fencers engaged in an intense sword fight using bal-loons as their foils. Touché!
“It’s a play date,” said the Southeast resident, with a
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See CELEBRATION on Page 11
METROPOLITANWASHINGTONAIRPORTSAUTHORITYDULLESCORRIDORMETRORAILPROJECTPHASE2FEDERALDISADVANTAGEDBUSINESSENTERPRISE(DBE)GOAL
TheMetropolitanWashingtonAirportsAuthorityisseekingpubliccommentonitsproposedoverallDBEparticipationgoalof25percentofthedollarvalueofcontractsonPhase2oftheDullesCorridorMetrorailProjectthatarefundedinwholeorinpartbyU.S.DepartmentofTransportationfinancialassistance.ThisproposedgoalappliestofirmsmeetingtheDBEcertificationcriteriadefinedin49CFRPart26.TheproposedgoalanditsmethodologymaybereviewedduringnormalbusinesshoursattheMetropolitanWashingtonAirportsAuthority’sEqualOpportunityProgramsDepartmentthroughAugust31,2012.Foranappointmenttoinspectthisinformation,contactCynthiaLipscomborShanelleFranklinat(703)417-8625.WrittencommentsconcerningtheproposedgoalwillbeacceptedthroughWednesday,September5,2012,andmaybesentto:RichardGordon,Manager,EqualOpportunityPrograms,MA-410,MetropolitanWashingtonAirportsAuthority,1AviationCircle,Washington,DC20001-6000.
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around the region
laugh, as she watched the make-believe sword fight unfold.
Patricia Allen knew that she would be babysitting her niece, Kyrsten on Saturday. So, she de-cided to bring her to the Season of Discovery celebration. And, judging by the looks of it, Al-len made the right decision. The little girl appeared mesmerized with her paintbrush in hand and a bucket of scarlet red paint by her side. She created her very own masterpiece on a gigantic canvas that was specifically set up for young, aspiring artists to hone their craft.
“I saw the advertisement from an email I got from a list-serv,” Allen said. “It looked like it would be a good activity,” the Southeast resident said.
Later during the afternoon, visitors enjoyed a unique musi-cal experience. The shuttered hospital’s red brick buildings served as the backdrop for a stage where an array of singers and musicians showcased their talents before an appreciative audience. But, a spirited per-formance by the African Heri-tage Drummers and Dancers brought the crowd to its feet. A group of young men ages eight to 20, jammed on djem-bes – African hand drums – which reverberated throughout the campus and compelled the crowd to clap their hands to the rhythm of the drums.
Public access to St. Elizabeths East Campus has been restricted
in the past, however, organizers used the event to showcase the development of the property to the community on Saturday. The District, sought to drum up local support to revitalize the facility which is set to welcome 4,400 U.S. Coast Guard employ-ees in 2013.
Gray, Hoskins and potential developers hope to transform the grounds into a multi-pur-pose property with residential, commercial and possibly an educational facility.
A number of Ward 8 resi-dents said that they also hope the development project will give the ward a whole new look and feel.
Merritt, who has lived in Ward 8 for many years, remains optimistic about the ward’s fu-ture. She said that the Season of Discovery event on the grounds of St. Elizabeths, counts among many of the interest-ing locales, breathtaking vistas, art museums and historic land-marks that Ward 8 has to offer. She fully expects that similar festivals and special events will prompt tourists and District residents alike to cross the An-acostia River to learn about the area’s rich and storied past.
“I think that it’s going to [spark interest] and grow,” she said, referring to the rede-velopment of St. Elizabeths’ grounds and the surrounding neighborhoods. “I’m hoping that it will. Anything that they can do to attract people to this side of the river is good.” wi
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international
the D.C. program for the past two years, said the students – who will be traveling under the banner of the Global Gateways Program – will work with 15 Haitian counterparts on a film project with the Cine Institute.
“They will collaborate to cre-ate a film from the Haitian per-spective of life after the earth-quake, poverty, employment, reconstruction, health care, sanitation and other issues that are so important to people,” he said. “The video will be used to inform and educate.”
While there, they will also be immersed in Haiti’s rich and vi-brant culture and political his-tory, and learn about different dimensions of the Haitian econ-omy.
The program offers young people the opportunity to ex-amine global issues and create change through peer education, social action, digital media, and service projects.
The Haiti trip is the culmina-tion of the Global Gateways Summer Institute, a six-week program in which 25 District students spent four weeks at Howard University’s Bunche International Affairs Center, exploring international and do-
D.C. Youth Immerse Themselves in Haitian Life
mestic policy issues. Students visited the U.S. State Depart-ment, the World Bank, and KPMG, where they learned about forensic auditing. And they toured other companies
and agencies linked to issues they discussed in classes.
This part of the institute, Mandhry said, is designed to in-troduce them to a range of inter-national careers and options.
“We’re exposing them to role models in places of pow-er and the private sector,” said Mandhry, 36. The key part is making sure that they’re pre-pared about what they’re going to encounter and make them aware of what they’ll see.”
Global Gateways was launched in the summer of 2011 through a partnership between Global Kids and Kimberly McClure, a Foreign Service Officer with the U.S. Department of State.
In 1791, Haiti became the world’s first black republic and the first independent nation in the Western Hemisphere after it won independence in 1804 in a revolt of enslaved Africans against Emperor Napoleon, France and other European powers.
The country, one of the poor-est in the region, suffered a dev-astating earthquake on January 12, 2010. More than 300,000 died, more than half a million people were left homeless and about 75 percent of Port- au-Prince was leveled. Estimates of the total cost of the devastation
By Barrington M. SalmonWI Staff Writer
Neither Javien Davison nor Kierra Adkins has ever trav-eled overseas before but that all changes when they fly out of Washington, D.C. headed to Haiti.
The pair and 13 of their com-panions comprise a group of D.C. youngsters who will be in Jacmel near Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince for two weeks as part of the Washington Program for Global Kids. They left the Dis-trict on July 30 and are set to re-turn August 11.
“It’s my first time abroad and I’m excited, scared and nervous. I want to take in the whole cul-ture,” said Kierra, a 17-year-old junior at Bell Multicultural High School in Northwest. “I want to be a journalist and I think this will help me in that career.”
Kierra, a Southeast resident who was introduced to the pro-gram by her teacher Elizabeth Hill, said she is interested in youth education, and while in the Caribbean, hopes to learn about how much access people have to jobs and to learn to what extent that access is gender-based.
Eddie Mandhry, director of
runs between $8 billion and $10 billion and about 635,000 men, women and children still live in tent cities as the national gov-ernment under President Michel Martelly struggles to restore a semblance of normalcy more than two years after the natural disaster.
Mandhry said the program here is an off-shoot of one founded in New York City 21 years ago.
“We take underserved kids from D.C. and New York City and work with them during the school year in after-school projects and interactive activi-ties around human rights, social justice, environmental issues and child labor. We introduce them to the world, getting them to understand their place in the world and how the U.S. operates. They’re inherently curious about the world anyway.”
Mandhry said it’s no accident that the program is based in two of the nation’s most vibrant cit-ies, one of which serves as the seat of the national government and the crossroads of inter-national affairs, and the other which rivals the District with the United Nations, lobbying groups
Fifteen students from the District will travel to Haiti for two weeks as part of the Washington Program for Global Kids. While there, they will work with 15 Haitian students on a film project with the Cine Institute. /Courtesy Photo
See KIDS on Page 13
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and a range of international or-ganizations headquartered in New York City.
“Students don’t necessarily have the exposure. We’re getting them to understand their place in the world. They’re really excited. This is the first experience for many of them and we’re walk-ing them through the process of [getting] passports and visas.”
Javien, 18, an incoming fresh-man at George Mason Univer-sity, said he is attracted to human rights issues particularly as it per-tains to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer commu-nities around the world. Another area of interest is women’s poli-cy issues, he said.
“It’s my first time traveling overseas and I’m ready,”said the Northeast resident, who recently graduated from the Columbia Heights Education Center. “I was hoping to go abroad to get
experience and a better under-standing of Haiti’s culture, lan-guage and day-to-day-living. I’ll be stepping into a whole new environment and culture. I hope to get a better understanding of the world.”
Javien, who has a declared ma-jor of global affairs and a minor in conflict analysis and resolu-tion, said he looks forward to be-ing taught about Haitian values and is eager to see how people live their daily lives.
Mandhry knows that his charges will connect the dots.
“I’m really motivated by see-ing young people generate in-sights they didn’t have before, such as the relationship between the mineral coltran and their cell phones and computers, and chocolates and child labor in the Ivory Coast,” said Mandhry, who has worked with the pro-gram for 10 years. “Seeing them make these connections and the role they can play in advocating for change is the most enjoyable part of the job.” wi
Haiti suffered a devastating earthquake on January 12, 2010. More than 300,000 died, and more than half a million people were left homeless. About 75 percent of Port-au-Prince was leveled during the natural disaster. /Courtesy Photo
international
By Carla Labat
I received many calls from my article in the June Homeownership Supplement asking what does it really takes to purchase a home. The simple answer is this; you must have good credit and a steady stream of income in order to get pre-approved for a loan. Income can come in many forms such as disability, child support, rental income, part-time job with a two year history, military benefits, a financial gift (not borrowed) from a relative and alimony. Cash from stocks and bonds, and a 401K can also be used towards your down payment. However, in order to prevent some of the past errors and lending practices that put many into financial ruin, a steady salary with documented income is really what is needed to qualify. Those who are self-employed or retired may have challenges obtaining a loan unless they can show sufficient reserves or the ability to put 20% down. Twenty percent of the purchase price is a large chunk of change and not an option for most people. This is why government programs are in place, to help make homeownership a bit earlier. Still in order to qualify for a low down payment or a government program, the bank will only consider you a good candidate if you have the following:
Sufficient Income to Support your Monthly Payments Although programs like HPAP and NACA offer grants that allow you to purchase a home with little-to-
no money out of pocket, you still need to show that you can afford to pay your monthly mortgage note or what is referred to PITI. This consists of your principle payment, interest, taxes and insurance. The bank considers all of your current monthly expenses and divides them against your monthly income. This is your debt-to-income ratio. If your debt to income ratio is within the 33%-38% range, you may be a good candidate for a loan. However, if you are carrying large credit card bills and only making the minimum monthly payment, along with other monthly expenses or liabilities, in other words, spending more than you make, you may not have sufficient income to qualify. So if your goal is to buy a home, it may be best to get your financial house in order first.
Good Credit History
We hear about the importance of having good credit, but how do you get it? Simple; by paying your bills every month and on time. Lines of credit that are reported to the credit bureau monthly may come from utility, cable, phone, national and store credit cards bills. If you do not have a credit history or have established lines of credit, it may be near impossible for you to qualify for a loan, even with the aid of government programs. A good way to establish credit is to open a store charge account. Don’t go hog wild on the spending; remember credit cards are our friend. Just make a couple of purchases and then pay them off, on time. By doing this for 6 months or more, you will have established a consistent payment history and it is likely that the bank will feel confident that you will pay your house note on time as well.
So, my best advice for preparing to purchase your first home is to put aside as much as you can for your cash reserves. Whether you need it for down payment, closing cost, cosmetic upgrades, repairs or new appliances, you should never purchase a house without extra change in your pocket.
If you need assistance in assessing your financial ability to purchase and maintain a home, contact me so I can direct you to the right resources.
Carla Labat is a full-time real estate agent with Long and Foster, Realtors. To see how she can help you purchase your first home or sell your existing one, contact her at 202.361.8538, [email protected], www.capitolhomesd.com.
202.361.8538 Cellular 202.363.9700 Office
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C A R L A L A B A T D C / M D R E A L E S T A T E
What does it take to really buy a house?
KIDS continued from Page 12
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120-day notice provision, which he decided to forgo along with a $125,000 severance package – an amount equal to six months’ salary – in exchange for an early release. His official last day as su-perintendent will be September 30.
School board members expect to name an interim superinten-dent by mid-August.
Verjeana M. Jacobs, chairman of the Board of Education, said she wanted to assure parents that “the progress we have made will continue” and school officials “have a continuous process to get the schools open. We got this, but we need your help.”
The board is currently review-ing proposals from individuals and executive search firms to conduct a national search for a new superintendent. The board specified it’s seeking a firm with experience in the recruitment
Process Begins to Find New Superintendent
of superintendents of school districts “with 100,000-plus stu-dents” and “characteristics of an urban school district.”
The timeline released by the school system indicates a search firm should be selected in early August and the search for a su-perintendent should be launched by fall. They want to secure a candidate who can start work no later than June 2013.
Community meetings are ten-tatively scheduled for Novem-ber, December and January.
Several parents said they hope the search leads to a new super-intendent who will take Prince George’s schools and students in the right direction.
Elizabeth Corney, 37, of Lau-rel is both a mother with a child in Prince George’s public school and a teacher in the district. Her son, Nicholas Neal, will be en-tering the first grade this month.
She said she’s saddened to see Hite leave because of the loss of continuity.
However as a seventh grade teacher at Samuel P. Massie Academy in Forestville, Corney said she hopes that with a new superintendent will come an op-
portunity for teachers such as herself to have contracts. She said she has been without one for three years since joining the Prince George’s school system.
“There have been so many [budget] constraints,” Corney said. “Maybe with a new super-intendent we can get some ame-nities back.”
Corney hopes the board chooses someone to fill the su-perintendent’s post who has ex-perience leading a large, diverse school district.
“It’s important to realize with-in the whole district it’s made up of different diversities. We need somebody who can work to bring the community together,” Corney said.
She said the school system is in good hands with the interim leadership, and she isn’t worried about the year delay in bring-ing in a new superintendent. It’s important to “take the time to get the right person rather than someone [who will be] gone in another year.”
Landover resident Linda Wil-son, whose 6-year daughter Aa-liyah will be starting first grade at Thomas G. Pullen School,
By Gale Horton GayWI Staff Writer
A new chapter in Prince George’s County Public Schools [PGCPS] has started long before the bell officially rings to open the 2012-2013 school year.
The county’s public schools are now under somewhat new – although temporary –
leadership with two veteran school administrators assist-ing Superintendent William R. Hite Jr., who is leaving Prince George’s County to head the Philadelphia public school sys-tem – one of the largest in the nation. Hite selected Monica Goldson, PGCPS’s chief operat-ing officer, and A. Duane Arbo-gast, acting deputy superinten-dent of academics, to assist him in the transition for the next two months.
Hite’s contract contained a
said she wants a superintendent willing to work with teachers, to “get their perspective of what’s going on in individual schools, someone who is going to be understanding, compassionate, get the job done and make sure these kids are reading, learning, prepared for college and ready for work.”
In a statement issued by the Prince George’s County Pub-lic School Board of Education, transparency and community in-put are stressed.
“We know that this is a criti-cal juncture for Prince George’s County and we are committed to selecting a superintendent who not only represents our com-munity’s interests, but can best respond to its needs,” they said.
“The search process will be transparent with meaningful op-portunities for community en-gagement. You will hear from your elected representatives on this board at every stage of the process. That is our promise to you. Nothing less than our chil-dren’s education, their future and the county’s progress are at stake.” wi
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By Freddie AllenSpecial to the Informer
Nearly 6 million former prison-ers –1 million of them Black – will not be able to vote in the Novem-ber presidential election because of state laws that continue to punish them even after they have completed their sentences, accord-ing to a recent report by the Sen-tencing Project.
The report said 5.85 million citizens who were formerly in-carcerated will be prevented from voting. That’s five times the entire population of Rhode Island and more than the adult population (18-65 years old) of Virginia.
“The most telling indicator of citizenship in the United States is that ability to cast a vote,” stated Desmond Meade, president of the Florida Rights Restoration Coali-tion, a non-profit group focused on restoring the civil rights of ex-offenders. “If you don’t have a voice you might as well be a slave.”
He explained, “Everyday a per-son is being disenfranchised in the minority community that weakens that community’s political voice.”
Eleven states disenfranchise ex-offenders after they have com-pleted their sentences: Alabama, Arizona, Delaware, Florida, Ken-tucky, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, Tennessee, Virginia and Wyoming. Those 11 states ac-count for 45 percent of the entire disenfranchised population.
The report also found that Blacks lose their right to vote at a rate that is four times higher than non-Blacks. If the presidential election were held today, more than 20 percent of Blacks living in Florida, Kentucky, and Virginia wouldn’t be able to vote.
Meade, a Florida native, served a prison sentence from 2001-2004 for multiple crimes, the most seri-ous being an ex-felon in posses-sion of a firearm. He won’t be able to vote in this year’s presiden-tial election and maybe the next, because Florida has some of the toughest felon disenfranchisement laws on the books. Meade said that Florida’s disenfranchisement laws basically amount to a lifetime ban from the polling booth for many ex-offenders.
According to the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition, in Florida, an ex-felon automatically loses his or her civil rights and must ap-ply to have those rights restored through the Board of Executive Clemency. That board consists of the governor, attorney general,
chief financial officer and com-missioner of agriculture and con-sumer services.
The governor and two cabinet members must sign an execu-tive order for an ex-felon to ul-timately have his or her rights re-stored. Advocates such as Meade liken the ban to a lifetime ban, because of the arduous process it takes for citizens to have their rights restored once they’ve been taken away.
Disenfranchisement laws first rose to prominence shortly after the passage of the 15th amend-ment in 1870 that outlawed disenfranchisement based on race and past enslavement. But southern states with large Black populations found ways to cir-cumvent the constitution.
Georgia, for example, passed the poll tax in 1871 that limited voter turnout among Blacks and poor Whites. By 1904 every state in the Deep South had amended their state constitution to limit Black voter participation.
“In some respects, disen-franchisement policies go back to the time of the founding of the country; the country was founded as a great experiment in democracy — of course it was a very limited experiment,” said Marc Mauer, executive director of the Sentencing Project.
The Sentencing Project was one of the first groups in the late 1990s to study the impact of the disenfranchisement restrictions facing citizens flowing through the criminal justice pipeline. Once the information from the studies started getting out, momentum to change the laws began to build.
In 2007, Maryland lifted the lifetime voting ban on ex-felons and Maine and Vermont al-low prisoners to vote. In Iowa, however, Republican Governor Terry Branstad overturned an executive order that restored voting rights to ex-felons, an ex-ecutive order signed into law by the former Governor [now Sec-retary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture] Tom Vilsack, a Democrat. Florida’s Republican Governor Rick Scott reinstated a
five-year waiting period for non-violent ex-offenders before they could apply to regain their voting privileges.
According to Barbara Arnwine, executive director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, is not surprised by the move to disenfranchise ex-offenders.
She said, “I predicted [in 2000] that we were seeing a new movement where people would attempt to win elections by de-stroying the opportunity to vote
for people who would not vote in their favor.”
Arnwine said that ex-offenders, need to organize and see their fight for voting rights as a larger challenge facing the community.
“Most states that have done away with the permanent bans did it through their state legislature,” said Arnwine. “People need to be looking at their House members and the state senators. They need to make sure those people are with them.”
Courtney Stewart, chairman of The Reentry Network for Re-turning Citizen, said that many ex-offenders don’t understand the voting process and how crucial the right to vote is when it comes to reclaiming their rights.
“United States is about politics,” said Stewart “So we have to get in-volved in the political process. If you’re saying that you’re a return-ing citizen and you want your citi-zenship and you want all of your rights returned to you, the best thing that you can do is [vote].”
The Reentry Network for Re-turning Citizens assists ex-offend-ers in their transition back into their communities. wi
For more information, on voting rights call the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law hotline 1-866-OUR-VOTE (1-866-687-8683) Monday-Friday 9am-5pm EST.
Millions of ex-offenders are unable to vote, having compromised their citizenship with incarceration. / Courtesy photo
Millions of Ex-offenders Given a Voting ‘Death Sentence’
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By Gale Horton GayWI Staff Writer
The controversial issue of gam-ing expansion in Maryland will be the focus of a special session of the Maryland Legislature. The session, announced by Gov. Martin O’Malley last Friday, is set to begin August 9.
This follows weeks of point and counterpoint ads on TV, religious and community leaders voicing their concern as well as plenty of behind-the-scene discussions and negotia-tions. It’s all part of the still-up-in-air debate over expansion of gaming in Maryland.
At issue is whether a sixth casino site at National Harbor will be sanc-tioned, if live table games will be approved and whether changes will be made to the current tax structure that casinos pay to the state. Voters would have the final say on any gam-ing expansions, possibly as soon as November.
“The addition of a sixth site in Prince George’s County, along with table games, will produce hundreds of millions of dollars in new revenue and thousands of jobs for the state of Maryland,” said Prince George’s County Executive Rushern L. Baker III. “I look forward to seeing the governor’s legislation and have confi-dence that the General Assembly will pass a bill empowering the citizens of the state to have the final say on this issue.’’
Not everyone is pleased that gam-ing expansion is still up for debate.
David Cordish, chairman of The Cordish Companies, developer and owner of Maryland Live! Casino, a $500 million investment, has been vehemently opposed to the expan-sion of gaming. The casino opened June 6 and is the third largest casino in the country.
Robert Hannon, president and CEO of Anne Arundel Economic Development Corp., said approval of an additional gaming facility would have a negative economic impact on the Maryland Live! Casino and the surrounding businesses.
The special session announce-ment came one day after Maryland Live! Casino opened a new portion of the casino with 531 additional slot machines and electronic games. This brings the total number of slots at the facility to 3,731.
In early July, Maryland Live! re-ported paying more than $19 million in gaming taxes to the state for its first partial month of operation.
Gaming Battle Lines Drawn
The taxes were based on the state’s 67 percent portion of approximately $28.4 million in gaming revenue gen-erated by the facility, according to ca-sino officials.
“The results are right in line with projections,” said Joe Weinberg, man-aging partner of The Cordish Com-panies. “Approximately 500,000 peo-ple visited the casino during its first 24 days of operation. Critically, they came from a very wide geographic area, with roughly half of our visitors coming from the District of Colum-bia, the Maryland counties surround-ing D.C., and Virginia. It is clear that if we are going to continue to meet the state’s expectations, we have to be able to continue to draw visitors from these areas.”
National Harbor’s developer the Peterson Companies and MGM Re-sorts International have agreed to develop a “world-class destination resort casino at National Harbor” contingent on a reduction in the ca-sino tax rate and approval of a sixth casino license.
Douglas Edwards, pastor and founder of Mission of Love Out-reach Ministries, Inc. in Capitol Heights, was one of a reported 20-30 individuals including religious and civic leaders who held a press con-ference outside of Prince George’s County offices in Upper Marlboro on July 20.
Edwards said he’s opposed to the possibility of a casino in Prince George’s County because of its prox-imity to the poor.
“It’s made too convenient for the poorest of the poor to get to the ca-sino,” said Edwards, adding the many people use the casino to “supplement their already small income and end up losing their entire paycheck.”
“If you go to West Virginia or Delaware, you’ll see automobiles like Lincolns and Cadillacs, and if you go inside you see seniors, people who can afford to be gambling.”
“Too many families [are] being de-stroyed as a result of people thinking they can supplement their income.”
Edwards said he wasn’t opposing gaming on religious grounds. “I don’t know if it’s sinful or not.”
“I am fully aware of the ills of gambling,” said Edwards, 75, who admits to having had a gambling and alcohol addiction.
Asked how he overcame those ad-dictions, he said, “I was delivered by God.” wi
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Business exchange
Is Gaining Wealth an “Impossible Dream”?
The wealthiest Americans live in gated communities that pro-tect them from the masses. A new poll reveals that many Americans are questioning their prospects for “upward mobility.” The high level of pessimism is reflected among re-spondents in a recent poll conduct-ed by The Hill newspaper that found half [47 percent] of likely voters be-lieve it’s impossible for them to be-come wealthy during the course of their lifetime. The survey, conducted as the heated political presidential campaign becomes more acrimoni-ous over the interests of the haves and the have-nots, found that fewer than 2 in 5 likely voters [37 percent] think they can ever become rich.
This presidential election will have more to do with the economy and voters personal well-being than ever before. The Hill newspaper’s survey findings suggest pessimism about the possibility of upward mobility as economic growth remains weak and jobs scarce. The national debate over wealth is intensifying as it cre-ates economic divisions across the country’s population segments. Al-though the economy will improve a bit in the second half of 2012, it will be another disappointing year of slow growth capping the worst three years of economic growth, outside of a recession. Between 2005 and 2010 the median net worth of Amer-icans under 35 fell 37 percent, and the wealth gap between the young and the old in America is wider than it’s ever been. The percentage of the workforce under age 25 has dropped 13.2 percent since 2008, and the U.S. unemployment rate is 12 percent for those age 18 to 29 because this age group’s parents aren’t retiring.
The wealth – more specifically, the median net worth – of house-holds in the United States is varied in relation to race, education, geo-graphic location and gender. Wealth in the U.S. is unevenly distributed, with the wealthiest 25 percent of U.S. households owning 87 percent of the total wealth.
The median wealth of White households is 20 times that of Black households. And, Blacks vote more on emotion than economic well-being. For Black Americans the an-nual median household income in 2010 was $29,328. It was $35,856 among all races. While Blacks make 62 cents of every dollar of income
that Whites make, they only have 10 cents for every dollar of wealth that Whites have.
In The Hill poll almost 40 percent of people said that the threshold to being wealthy was a $500,000 annual income, and 20 percent put the bar above $1 million. Thirty-one per-cent of people said a family earning $250,000 a year is wealthy, 19 percent said $100,000 was the threshold, and 7 percent said $50,000.
Each day, America is comprised more and more of economic haves and have-nots. Since the 2007 reces-sion the share of total wealth owned by the nation’s wealthiest one per-cent grew to 37.1 percent and that owned by the top 20 percent grew to 87.7 percent. The 2007 recession, and aftermath, also increased the wealth gap between the 1 percent and the 99 percent.
According to a CBS News/New York Times poll, a majority of reg-istered voters believe that Mitt Rom-ney’s policies favor the rich. Fifty-three percent say Romney’s policies favor the wealthy. Eleven percent says his policies favor the middle class, while two percent say they favor the poor. Thirty percent say Romney’s policies treat all groups equally. Of the social segments that favor President Barack Obama’s poli-cies, 21 percent say his policies favor the rich, while 22 percent say they fa-vor the middle class and 24 percent say they favor the poor. Twenty-five percent say Obama’s policies treat all groups equally.
What are your views? The Hill poll’s respondents’ views differed based on income levels, with vot-ers earning between $40,000 and $75,000 strongly preferring Romney over Obama. Among people earn-ing between $40,000 and $60,000, 48 percent trust Romney more compared to 39 percent for Obama. People earning between $60,000 and $75,000 trust Romney more than Obama by a 34-point margin, 61 percent to 27 percent.wi
(William Reed is available for speaking/seminar projects via the Bailey Group.org)
By William Reed
Business
Passion for travel: Exploring the world within your budget By Michelle Thornhill
My first trip out of the U.S. spawned my passion for travel. At 17, I had the opportunity to study abroad in Finland as part of the Youth for Understanding program. While I’d traveled to Disney World and lots of other road trips growing up, my trip to Finland was not only my first time traveling abroad but also my very first time on an airplane.
In Finland, I was initially out of my comfort zone because there were not many people who looked or talked like me. However, being fully immersed in a culture that was different from anything I’d been exposed to turned out to be a transformative experience. I was among others who shared a common passion: We all wanted to learn more about the world outside of what we knew.
It can be expensive to travel, and funding can sometimes seem out of reach. Still, planning your budget with room for a vacation can be very rewarding—and sometimes necessary, given the daily demands we all face. While you might be unable to travel abroad, or outside of driving distance, there are ways to make affordable travel a realistic possibility.
Like many things in life, sometimes there must be tradeoffs. One of my biggest tradeoffs is spending less on depreciable assets (like cars and clothing) so that I can direct more money toward travel.
My children also like to travel, and we’ve been fortunate to have them explore the world with us—but not without tradeoffs. Throughout the year, they sacrifice toys, video games and other “extras” for the promise of a vacation.
While I continue to learn new things about where to travel, how to get the best deals, when to travel and the best places to travel with kids, here are a few tips I have gleaned from experience:
zz Compile a list of places that you would like to visit, and determine what you want to get out of each experience (such as learn a new language). Also, consider developing two lists, one for domestic/local travel and another for international. This way you can make decisions based on your current financial situation.
zz Obtain a passport for everyone in your household well in advance of travel to avoid rush fees. Children’s passports are valid for five years, and adults’ passports are valid for 10.
zz Start a travel fund or vacation account (such as a savings or investment account). Birthday gifts, tax refunds, or bonuses are a great way to grow this account. Also consider setting up a regular automatic transfer from your main account to your vacation account.
zz Establish a budget for what you will spend on travel for the year, including: travel costs, accommodations, meals, excursions and shopping. After travel, apply any unused funds to your vacation savings account.
zz Monitor your spending while on vacation by keeping an itemized list of all expenses to ensure you stay within your budget. Mobile banking tools are a great way to track expenses on the go.
zz Research your travel options early, but do not book your travel too far in advance. Some of the best travel deals are available a few months before your planned travel dates. For deeper discounts, you should also be prepared to pay for your travel in full (and be sure to consider purchasing travel insurance if you do).
If your financial situation doesn’t allow you to travel outside of your local area, take advantage of other options that expose you to the world, like day trips, TV programs (I love HGTV House Hunters International), books, magazines and museums.
Michelle Thornhill is senior vice president, Diverse Segments for Wells Fargo & Company. Visit www.wellsfargo.com for more information.
This article has been prepared for informational purposes only. The accuracy and completeness of this information is not guaranteed and is subject to change. Since each individual’s financial situation is unique, you need to review your financial objectives to determine which approaches might work best for you.
© 2012 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. All rights reserved.
Aspirations
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18 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
health
been very beneficial to them.” McCoy, 70, has been leading
classes [deep water, aqua thera-py and high/low impact water aerobics] at Prince George’s public pools and Prince George’s Community College for 12 years.
She’s gratified when students “come to me and tell me they have progressed.”
Working against gravity is what makes the wet workouts so therapeutic, she said.
Hortense Simmons, 54, of Upper Marlboro, who was di-agnosed with multiple sclerosis [MS] in 1998 and suffered a stroke in 2007, said the classes have helped improve her mo-bility and balance.
“I like it because it gets you up and moving. In the water you can actually do anything,” Simmons said. “In spite of your disability, in spite of your weight, in spite of your handi-cap, you can do anything in the water.”
Water Workouts Attract Loyal Following
She’s been tak-ing the classes for four years and her husband Miles tags along.
“This is a fun type of class,” said Miles Simmons, who was asked by the instructor to lead the final stretch exercises in the pool during a recent ses-sion. “I keep them motivated,” he said with a smile.
Recently, McCoy started her 8:30 a.m., 40-minute class by having the 16 partici-pants march from one end of the pool to the other repeat-edly. Using long colorful foam “noodles” they performed a se-ries of movements while famil-iar upbeat tunes such as “Walk-ing to New Orleans” “Mama Said” and “All the Way” blared over the sound system. Mean-while, McCoy led the group in
By Gale Horton GayWI Staff Writer
Olympic dreams are not on the minds of the faithful who come to the Wayne K. Curry Sports and Learning Center in Landover, Md. every day. They don’t covet ribbons or medals or have visions of achieving personal bests in tournaments.
They practice passionately for what they say is a far more important goal: their health.
Welcome to Aqua Arthritis, one of many water exercise classes held throughout Prince George’s County through the Prince George’s County Parks and Recreation Department.
The Aqua Arthritis class at-tracts people with a range of ailments and conditions – re-placed joints, lupus, multiple sclerosis and arthritis, to name a few.
“They move a lot better,” said instructor Sharon McCoy of her students. “The water has
Miles Simmons, center, marches to the end of the pool with other aqua exercise partici-pants. /Photo courtesy of Gale Horton Gay
gaged in during her battle with the disease. Recently, a cardi-ologist told her she has an en-larged heart and needs to lose weight. He suggested water therapy, so she returned to the pool.
Jones said the activity helps to strengthen her limbs and shed some pounds.
Pool manager Harold Eaton, 76, a retired research chemist, served as a life guard during McCoy’s July 26 class, keep-ing an eye out for anyone who looked fatigued or listless. He recalled once having to jump into the water and rescue a man who pushed too hard dur-ing the workout and became dizzy. People with diabetes are particularly prone to such side effects if they over-exert them-selves, Eaton said.
“When you do exercises in [the] water the benefits are better than on dry land,” Ea-ton said. “You get about one and a half times more calories burned than on dry land be-cause of the resistance of the water.”
While McCoy said exercis-ing in water has helped many people avoid surgery and re-duce their weight and be taken off medication, she added that consistency is the key to achiev-ing such results. She stresses the importance of continuing workouts from one season to the next and said she teaches throughout the year. wi
The next session of Aqua Arthritis classes will begin in September at the Wayne K. Curry Sports and Learning Center in Landover, the Rollingcrest-Chillum Splash Pool in Chillum and the Theresa Banks Memorial Aquatics Center in Glenarden.
the water, shouting commands, “Take it out. Pull it back.” “Put your hand in front of you, push. That’s where you get that resistance.”
Participants don’t have to know how to swim because they workout in water that’s about 4 feet deep.
Latoya Kidd, 32, of Upper Marlboro said that she’s a stu-dent at Prince George’s Com-munity College and has had seizures brought on by stress.
“I come down here to relieve the tension,” said Kidd, after a morning workout last week. “It helps my seizures.”
For 68-year-old retiree Rufus Horton of Landover, the class-es put him in a better mood.
He said he was initially ap-prehensive about aqua class when a friend suggested it.
“I thought water aerobics was kind [of] wimpy,” said Horton.
However, once he took the first class, he was hooked. Hor-ton said he’s never missed any of the sessions during the past four years.
“It’s so therapeutic,” said Horton, who described his health as “good.”
“This is not torture. It’s plea-surable to me.”
For 59-year-old Vanessa Gantt of Clinton, who has double hip replacements and MS, the water workouts help her tremendously. Gantt said she benefits mentally, physi-cally and spiritually.
“It keeps me on my feet basi-cally and not being depressed,” she said.
Cancer survivor Vera Jones, 59, said she was familiar with water aerobics, which she en-
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health
HIV Cases among Youth on the RisePrograms Promote Testing and TreatmentBy Dorothy RowleyWI Staff Writer
At age 16, Christopher Barn-hill exemplified the typical teen-ager – struggling with his iden-tity, pondering his future – even getting ready for the prom.
“I had it all figured out about the prom,” said Barnhill, who’s now 25. “I looked forward to going and had selected a white tux to wear.”
But Barnhill’s care-free world soon changed. During a visit to a health fare he agreed to be tested for HIV. As fate would have it, he tested positive.
“When I found out that I was HIV-positive, I was like ‘Oh my God,’ and I said ‘I guess it’s time to start planning a funer-al,” Barnhill, an award-winning HIV/AIDS youth advocate and public speaker, said during an interview. “I had it all [fig-ured out] that I was going to be buried in my white prom outfit since I wasn’t going to be going to the prom.”
Barnhill contracted HIV from
his late mother. She died from AIDS in 1989, and Barnhill, who has worked with DC Metro TeenAIDS in Southeast for the past four years, recalled that no one in his home or his teachers at Bladensburg High School had
talked much about HIV.“When I revealed to my
guardian that I was HIV-posi-tive, that’s when she disclosed to me that my mom died of AIDS,” he said. “So knowing that, and not finding out I was HIV-positive until I was 16, I felt I had to get the message out to my peers on how to take [preventative] action.”
Like Barnhill, most young people feel that when it comes to contracting diseases like HIV/AIDS, they’re immune. But just like anyone else – in-cluding their parents and grand-parents – they’re also at risk.
To that end, local health of-ficials have joined forces with Mayor Vincent Gray to step up preventative measures aimed at youth. In doing so, they’re look-ing to significantly lower the number of cases with ongoing HIV prevention outreach and education efforts, which include programs on abstinence and getting youth to realize the im-portance of delaying their first sexual encounter.
“The incidences of HIV/AIDS has been significant among young people,” said Dr. Gregory Pappas, head of the District’s HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis, STD and TB Administration. “The District [is on course] to help reduce the number of cases through [initia-tives] centered around testing and education,” he said, referencing the city’s 2011 HIV/AIDS, Hep-atitis, STD, and TB Epidemiology Report.
“My [main] message in fight-ing the virus is to get tested and get treated.”
As of December 2011, an
estimated 1 in 20 District resi-dents tested positive for HIV, meaning that at 11 times the national average, the city has the dubious distinction of hav-ing one of the highest rates of infections in the nation. At the same time, studies show that new cases of youth between the ages of 15 and 24 who have contracted the disease, doubled over the past five years.
“The vast majority of these new infections are through het-erosexual transmission,” said Tyler Spencer, founder and president of The Grassroot Project in Northwest. The Proj-ect, which was launched in 2009 and partners with the District of Columbia Public School sys-tem, teams area college athletes with at-risk youth to educate them about HIV/AIDS aware-ness and prevention.
“We were shocked when we learned what the city’s statistics were,” said Spencer, who added that while the current number of HIV-infected youth in D.C. is “relatively low,” the Project’s goal is to prevent infections be-fore youth reach adulthood.
The Project, which offers an eight-week curriculum, targets youth ages 12 to 13 by going into the city’s middle schools where Grassroot mentors pro-vide instruction during physical education and health classes, Spencer said.
“We teach HIV basics about transmission and prevention, but also about general life skills,” said Spencer, 26. He said having college athletes reach out to the students helps because they feel more comfortable discussing
HIV with the athletes than with their teachers.
“The athletes fill an impor-tant niche because they’re cool-er than their parents and teach-ers but less judgmental than their peers,” said Spencer.
Meanwhile, Pappas noted that up to 5,000 people with HIV – including a large number of African-American teens – in D.C. are unaware of their status.
“By being tested, you pro-tect your health,” Pappas said. “[Teens] also preserve the health of [their] friends, loved ones and community, because by being on medication and knowing [their] status, they’re less likely to spread the disease.”
Overall, the prevalence of HIV among District adults and youth now stands at 2.7 per-cent, according to the District’s health report findings that were released in late June.
Today, Barnhill’s work fo-cuses on reaching students in the District’s public and charter schools where he ensures they receive “quality information” through a curriculum called “Making Proud Choices.”
“For the most part, young people are definitely listening and are getting the message loud and clear,” Barnhill said. “But we’re still concerned about those who don’t really want to hear what we have to say by boasting that they already know everything there is to know about HIV/AIDS.” wi
Christopher Barnhill learned that he was HIV-positive nine years ago, at age 16. Since then he has used his experience with the disease and how he acquired it to educate other youth on the importance of being tested and getting treatment. /Photo by Khalid Naji-Allah
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Make Smart Busi-ness Moves
Your article, “Getting Smart on Surety Bonds,” by Rhonda Taylor, July 26, 2012, is exactly the kind of article that piques my interest and I enjoy reading. I can only imagine how many small businesses have faced this same situation and didn’t know where to turn.
The most important fact about the article is a person like myself, who doesn’t own a small busi-ness but who might know some-one who does, and who needs this type of information, and I can share it with them. What a gem of an article!
Bobby LangstonWashington, D.C.
Prayer Works! It’s true, prayer can solve so
many of the problems we have in our everyday lives. So many of us think we have to fall down on our knees to pray; we don’t. All we have to do is take a moment and thank the Almighty for what we have, and ask for the help we
need – that’s it. The article in the July 26, 2012
Informer, “Stress – The True Gateway Drug” is another exam-ple of how prayer works. When we’re dealing with stress, we can’t think our way through problems and challenging situations. It can make us sick and ruin personal relationships. Stress makes it seem as if you’re all alone with no help in sight. Prayer works. When you pray, you can talk to someone who is always there to listen to your every need. When you pray, there’s someone who will always share your heavy load and never get tired. Just try it; I think you will like it.
Barbara WilsonFort Washington, Md.
Readers' MailboxThe Washington Informer welcomes letters to the editor about articles we publish or issues affecting the community. Write to: [email protected] or send to: 3117 Martin Luther King Jr Ave., SE, Washington, D.C. 20032. Please note that we are unable to publish letters that do not include a full name, address and phone number. We look forward to hearing from you.
EditorialD.C.’s Last Frontier
Big changes are coming to Ward 8 and residents need to get prepared.Government contractors are gearing up. More than 200 of them showed
up at a pre-solicitation workshop at the Lincoln Theatre on Friday, July 27 to hear about millions of dollars in real estate development projects com-ing to the District this year. Four of them are coming to Ward 8.
In addition to the massive development in Ward 8 on the West Campus of St. Elizabeths Hospital where Homeland Security and the Coast Guard are building new headquarters, the East Campus is opening up to vast pos-sibilities for redevelopment for what the D.C. Office of Planning is calling a well-planned, mixed-use, mixed-income, walkable, livable community.
Residents from across the District are gearing up, as well. Lured by last Saturday’s Summer Celebration that included walking tours, hundreds pa-tronized the new farmers’ market, now open on weekends, and got a hint of what’s to come once the gates surrounding St. Elizabeths East come down. A pavilion will soon be built to provide residents with a visual of the development as it takes place.
Two long abandoned historic homes and a former liquor store on a large parcel on Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue in Ward 8 are on the schedule for development, too. And, Barry Farm, which presently houses more than 500 low-income residents, is slated for redevelopment aimed at attracting new homeowners from the thousands of employees and contractors of Home-land Security who will be able to live close to where they work.
Victor Hoskins, deputy mayor for economic development, stated in a press release that, “We [District officials] know that quality development, particularly on once-vacant or federally controlled parcels, must be done with proper engagement of our residents, the development community, and with well-thought out planning that can create viable spaces where the District’s residents can live, work and play in new commercial, office, residential and cultural offerings.”
Undoubtedly, Ward 8 is about to go through a metamorphosis of un-foreseen proportions. This is the last frontier for the District’s widening economic development program and developers are chopping at the bit for a piece of the action.
Hoskins’ vision is shared by many … but mainly by those who know what is yet to come. Just as some agency heads are clearly stating that all of the District’s new developments must include Certified Business Enter-prises (CBEs) and that all contractors must adhere to the District’s First Source program, it will be incumbent upon Council member Marion Barry, Mayor Gray, related agency heads and the local media to keep the residents informed and engaged. The new developments should create jobs and bet-ter housing but with lack of knowledge, the benefits will only impact a few.
Better Approaches Wanted
The community conversations taking place across the city concerning the IFF study released in January of school locations and performance is continuing to raise major concerns among parents and residents in neighborhoods where a high number of Tier 3 and Tier 4 low-performing schools are located.
The report, commissioned by D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray, suggests that in order to raise the performance and success of D.C. public and public charter school students, many students may need to be moved to higher performing schools which mean leaving their neighborhood school.
The report also recommends turning around or in the worst case, closing more than 30 schools that have historically proven to be Tier 4 or failing schools. Closing schools never sits well with D.C. residents who have tradi-tionally supported neighborhood schools.
Many parents who are attending the community conversations are leery of the report and unconvinced that moving students or closing schools is the best solution for improving classroom performance, especially when the report is based upon standardized test results, for example, the DC Comprehensive Assessment System (DC-CAS). This report may not lead to the result it recommends, but parents must stay actively engaged in these discussions to help direct the future of D.C. public and charter schools.
oPinions/editorials
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By Bill Fletcher, Jr.
You may have missed this in the news but over the last sev-eral months the West African nation of Mali has been unravel-ing. There is very little attention in the mainstream media and the situation seems to move from bad to worse to insane.
The gist of the situation is that a revolt broke out in the north-ern part of Mali among the eth-nic group known as the Touareg or Azawad. They are a Berber
people who live in the Saharan region of Africa. There has been a long-standing ethnic tension in Mali (going back to when Mali became independent of France) and in the aftermath of the over-throw of Col. Qaddafi in Libya, guns began flowing very freely into northern Mali. The gov-ernment of Mali attempted to stop the rebellion, but suffered a series of military defeats. This, ultimately, led to a military coup against the government of Mali. In the aftermath of ths coup, the country has, in effect, become a
Mali and the Collapse of Nation-States
See FLETCHER on Page 45
Guest Columnist
divided land with the northern part in the hands of various reb-el groups and the southern part under a military dictatorship.
The fact that the rebellion has resulted in various rebel groups operating in the northern part of Mali–rather than a unified move-ment–set the stage for chaos and a retreat into Muslim fundamen-talist irrationalism on the part of some of the forces. For instance, the historic city of Timbuktu has been occupied by fundamental-ists who have proceeded, much like the Taliban did in Afghani-
stan in 2001, to destroy historic sites. Muslim burial grounds, for instance, that date back to the 14th century have been de-stroyed by these forces allegedly because they represent some-thing contrary to Islam.
While some people will focus on the problem of Muslim fun-damentalism in Mali, the major problems revolve around 1) the inability of states created as a re-sult of European colonialism to survive in the current era with-out an economy that they con-trol and that serves the needs
By Julianne Malveaux
hospitalized after a drive-by? We mourn some deaths and ignore others, which suggests that some life is valued and some life is cheap.
Does it have anything to do with media attention? In Tusca-loosa, Ala., a crazed man walked into a bar looking for “a Black man”. He shot a man who did not know him, and with whom he had no beef. He also wound-ed 17 other people. Why has this story received only limited national attention?
If we spend a minute watch-ing any news, we have heard about Veronica Moser, the 6- year-old who was massacred in Aurora. We’ve seen pictures of her smiling face and of her play-ing. Certainly we can all mourn the tragedy of her young life be-ing snuffed out by a madman. Still, some young lives are val-ued, while others are not. One of the young deaths that rocked my soul was the 2004 murder of Chelsea Cromartie, who sat in her grandmother’s window play-
ing with her dolls when she was killed by a stray bullet. She wrote, in a classroom exercise, that she was an “amazing girl”. We don’t have to go back to 2004 to find a child’s death. Two weeks ago, Heaven Sutter, who had just had her hair styled for a trip to Dis-ney World, was shot. Again the culprit was a stray bullet.
Details of the lives of those who are killed humanizes them and tugs at our heartstrings. In Aurora, we have learned about a man whose wife just gave birth,
about another who died sav-ing his girlfriend, of a young woman who missed a Toronto mass murder by a few seconds, aspired to be a sports journalist, and was killed in Aurora. Rarely do we hear about the lives of those who are killed in the inner city, about the lives of Chelsea Cromartie and Heaven Sutter.
The disproportionality of death commentary hits home when one remembers the sto-
Valuing Some Lives over Others
See MALVEAux on Page 45
The national support for the victims of the recent Colorado shootings is great. However, if we believe in the equivalency of life, what about the lives of young men in Chicago, where there have been more deaths than in Afghanistan so far this year. While the hospitals in Au-rora say they will cover hospital bills for those without insurance (one in three in Colorado), who will cover bills for those who are
Guest Columnist
Guest Columnist
Blacks Allow Obama to Disrespect Them
NAACP, the nation’s oldest civil rights organization. It’s troubling how many so-called Black lead-ers almost tripped over one another apologizing for the president’s behavior. Ben Jeal-ous, president and CEO of the NAACP, said on TV that, “they (NAACP) will give the president a pass because they were told he had a scheduling conflict.”
Scheduling conflict? That’s the oldest trick in the book. It’s such a lame excuse that whenever the term “scheduling conflict” is mentioned in Washington –
which is pretty often – people laugh openly. In most cases, it’s not a scheduling conflict, it’s a case of people scheduling a con-flict.
But, once again, Obama has concluded that there is no price to pay for such presidential dis-respect. Unfortunately, he is correct. Obama believes that pretending that he is not Black will make people believe he is not Black. As one “public intel-lectual” put it, Obama run from Black people like Black people run from cops.
I am amazed at the silence from the Black community on these snubs. Blacks seem to have accepted this insulting treatment. The silence in the Black community is deafening. Blacks get exactly what they de-serve from Obama—nothing!
Ben Jealous is not the only prominent Black person to make excuses for the inexcusable.
Consider what Congressional Black Caucus Chairman, Eman-uel Cleaver (D-Mo.) said last year on “Meet The Press.” With no sense of shame he said, “If [for-
mer President] Bill Clinton had been in the White House and had failed to address this prob-lem [the high unemployment rate in the Black community], we probably would be marching on the White House…There is a less-volatile reaction in the CBC because nobody wants to do anything that would empower the people who hate the presi-dent.”
How about empowering the people who put him in office?
See JACKSON on Page 45
By Raynard Jackson
While watching Mitt Rom-ney’s speech before the NAACP in Houston, it dawned on me how Romney and President Obama are out of touch with the needs of Black community. Last week, I dealt with Romney. This week, it’s Obama’s turn to be scrutinized.
Much has been made of Obama’s decision not to address the annual convention of the
of their people; 2) The lack of popular democracy, and 3) An inability and/or unwillingness to resolve long-standing eth-nic issues. With regard to eth-nic conflict, there is the specific problem faced by the Touareg. They are found not only in Mali but in several countries in that region. They have raised de-mands for national equality and national sovereignty. Yet, as with many other ethnic groups, these demands have largely been ig-
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On July 24, Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Board of Gov-ernors of the Federal Reserve System, gave a video keynote speech to 3,200 community and youth leaders attending the Chil-dren’s Defense Fund’s National Conference in Cincinnati. The speech wasn’t on the details of national fiscal policy, but on the crucial importance of effective early childhood supports and public education to the success of our economy. His remarks
were strongly reinforced by a very distinguished panel of leading scholars, educators and education activists who spoke about the national imperative of preparing all children for school and building a public education system that prepares all children and our nation for the future. Here is most of what Bernanke said:
“At the Federal Reserve, we spend a lot of time looking at economic data, such as produc-tion and employment. In doing so, we try never to forget that
these seemingly sterile numbers are in fact reflections of the eco-nomic aspirations, opportuni-ties, and well-being of millions of Americans. When individu-als are denied opportunities to reach their maximum potential, it harms not only those individu-als, of course, but also the larger economy, which depends vitally on having a skilled productive workforce. As a result, we all have a stake in the essential work that you are doing for our chil-dren.
“The Federal Reserve has
long supported increasing educa-tional opportunity for children, including the youngest. Federal Reserve banks have published articles and convened commu-nity forums on early childhood issues. For school-age children, we sponsor financial literacy and economic education programs, and for these programs, we make a special effort to reach schools with high proportions of minor-ities and lower income children. …I hope we will one day achieve the Children’s Defense Fund’s goal of a level educational play-
ing field for all children.”“Another strong plea for early
childhood and education invest-ment at the conference came from former Proctor and Gam-ble chairman John Pepper who said: “I truly believe that…en-suring a level playing field for all children is the social justice issue of our time. It borders on be-ing criminal to me to fail to give children and families who most need our help, childhood sup-port that we know from experi-
See EDELMAN on Page 46
By Marian Wright Edelman
No Substitute for a Quality EducationChild Watch©
It is like Nero sitting down with his fiddle while Rome was burn-ing away. Is Obama our Nero? Let’s take a look.
God has blessed our country with natural energy resources such as oil, natural gas and coal. Maybe that’s why he is mad about it – God has blessed us. He is attacking the life blood of our energy needs. He wants us to stop using these products but has no clear solution or even a hint about how we can do with-out them. Our tariff free trad-ing partner Canada has immense
reserves of oil and would love to ship vast amounts via the Keystone Pipeline. Everyone but environmental extremists is cheering for this to happen. What’s the big problem? Our president is one of those envi-ronmental extremists. He wants to decrease oil quantities regard-less of the negative affect it has on our economy (prices, jobs, business growth, etc.). Let us suffer; he has a “fiddle” to play.
The process of fracturing, a/k/a fracking, has opened vast new reserves of natural gas for
our nation. We now have more natural gas than any other nation on earth. That makes most of us happy but it depresses our president. He has his Environ-mental Protection Agency (EPA) trying to find ways to slow down the process and, at times, to shut it down. We need more natural gas in a desperate way but he would rather play that “fiddle”.
Then there is our abundant quantity of coal. This is the cheapest form of energy and many of our utility companies rely on it. The harvesting of coal
is a serious job creator in states such as Pennsylvania, West Vir-ginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Illinois. Our president doesn’t want to slow this down; he wants to kill it! His henchman, the EPA, has issued the Utility MACT Rule, which requires new mercury air standards that most utility plants cannot possibly meet. The result will be about 32 utility facilities shutting down. That is a tremendous amount of jobs (in this recession) and utility
The American Dream is start-ing to fade away and that is very scary. The saddest thing about this is the recent behavior or attitude of President Barack Obama. He has abandoned leading us and has gone on full campaign mode with more than four months to go before the na-tional election. He seems to be delirious in his character attacks against candidate Mitt Romney.
See MuHAMMAD on Page 46
Why Haven’t We Had a Requiem Yet?
cipients of several self-inflicted wooden-stakes-in-the-heart, and yet they are still roaming around casting blame instead of shar-ing it, over this country and the world teetering on the brink of financial ruin. The solution to our problem is to trust all the decisions and leave them in the hands of rich White people. They will always know the right thing to do, and we can trust they will always do it. Right.
Rather than pitch in and see the country succeed under this president, these GOP leaders
would rather permit most peo-ple to suffer for another year, than to let this president claim credit for any improvement in the economy which those same Bush-era plutocrats pillaged be-fore President Barack Obama even took office.
Their attacks on the power-less are unprincipled and im-moral, even from their fringes, even from those who are not even among the favored group – White, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant [WASP] males. Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.) is African American. He
claims that at least 80 members of the U.S. House of Represen-tatives are Communists. Rep. West said they are all members of the Congressional Progres-sive Caucus.
There’s not even one single Green Party member of the House or the Senate. A Com-munist U.S. Congress member in 2012? Absurd. Not just one, 80 Communists! Count them. West insists that Black people in this country who do not agree with his way of thinking are still “on the plantation” slaving for noth-
ing, for the Democratic Party. No one however, has bothered to tell West that his privileges to utter such inanities in public are under review, and those privileg-es can be revoked!
Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) and four other members of Congress have gone. West “another-further” [so to speak], is declaring that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s deputy chief of staff Huma Abedin is a card-carrying member of the
Why haven’t we had a requi-em for the kind of xenophobic thinking which dominates what passes for intelligent leadership of the Republican Party? If lib-erals were devouring their young the way White Republicans are doing nowadays, we would have already proclaimed a wooden-stake-in-the-heart death of so-cialism in America, for now and forever.
But Republicans are the re-
By Askia Muhammad
By Harry C. Alford
Obama is ‘Fiddling’ His Way to Failure
Beyond The Rhetoric
See ALFORD on Page 46
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Trap, an event performed one evening only in the Washington metropolitan area.
The piece he had originally intended to be performed in alternate spaces and museums for close friends only, morphed into something bigger.
The mini-tour of Story/Time will take the dance company to Europe, later this year, Jones said.
Jones has been described as many things, including artis-tic outsider, controversial, and iconoclast.
He laughed at the latter char-acterization in a recent inter-view.
“Iconoclastic means to break icons, break things. In a world where everything seems broken, that is a hollow job descrip-
Still Here tion,” he said. “I have been very, very vulnerable in public. I have a sense of honor and outrage expressed. I believe in beauty, community, love, change. I’m coming out to you: I believe things will change.”
As an artist, Jones said what’s most important to him is main-taining the integrity of every-thing he produces. An earlier interview captures the essence of what informs his work.
“[To] take what you do and try to make something that may have value in the culture and not lose your pride doing it. That’s one thing commercial theater is,” he said. “Belief that an artist can be a popular artist and still be doing something that will hit people in all the proper places.”
“… Many people think of me
as an artist. I am at the bottom of it, a formal person. I live in a world of ideas [and] how and why you’ll make the best work.”
Jones said he is driven by a fear of disappointing his par-ents, his family, his lover and his companion, which may account for the fact that he has created almost 150 works for his Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Com-pany and has been chosen to commission dances for a range of ballet companies, including Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Berlin Opera Ballet, Lyon Opera Ballet and Boston Ballet.
While he has gained a repu-tation as a perfectionist and a stern taskmaster, Jones ac-knowledges that there are some things he cannot control. When
By Barrington M. SalmonWI Staff Writer
Now retired from the physi-cal rigor and demands of be-ing a dancer, renowned theater director, writer and choreogra-pher Bill T. Jones continues to produce a varied, thought-pro-voking and staggering array of work.
In addition to being com-missioned to create, he has in recent years tackled subjects from President Abraham Lin-coln to Nigerian musician and political gadfly Fela Anikulapo Kuti, a musical he co-conceived, co-wrote, directed and choreo-graphed.
This past Tuesday, Jones headlined the debut of his lat-est creation, Story/Time at Wolf
asked if it mattered much what people say about his work, he was philosophical.
“It matters but I can’t control it. It is a very important reality for every artist,” he said. “Hol-lywood tries to do that with story, character, etcetera.”
Art often bumps up against realities such as being commer-cially successful and this fact of life is one Jones said he jostles with with varying degrees of success. No artist can realisti-cally ignore what he called “the business of art.” The trade-off, Jones said, is the freedom that commercial success provides for him and his dance company to immerse themselves in the art. The business of art and the
See JONES on Page 25
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Bill T. Jones:
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feeling. There were people there who’d never seen my work. The Spirit lifted me up. That was a sacred moment for me and my community of family. I think it was good for me and my fam-ily.”
Jones, winner of two Tony awards and a 1994 MacArthur “Genius” Award, said the gath-ering served as a reminder of what’s important.
“At the family reunion I want them to remember uncle as a guy who got down on the floor and showed position of feet, encouraged them to dance,” he said. Jones said he has come to terms with aging and accepts the changes that come with it.
“I’m not ashamed to be ag-ing, of being gay. My body is changing.”
He laughed long and hard when asked about what makes him tick.
“A good dose of insanity,” he said. “I have demons and I’m obsessed with failing my par-ents, lover, companion. And a good dose of love. As a small boy I would make a picture of someone with open arms. Ulti-mately, I want to love and have the space to love.”
He acknowledged that despite his body of work and a frenetic schedule, he has not done this by himself.
“I sleep but for better or worse, my mind is always awake,” he said. “Bjorn Amelan, my partner, made the omelette I’m eating while I talk to you,” he said to a reporter, while laughing. “I have a sophisti-cated collaborator Janet Wong, who has been with me since 1995. She is a brilliant maker of movement and an honest, elegant woman.”
Jones also singled out Jean Davison who he said “tussles over how we make the budget.”
“You can’t be Bill T. Jones all on your own.”
But even someone as formi-dable as Bill T. Jones needs af-firmation from time-to-time.
Which is what makes winning the MacArthur Award so plea-surable.
“I was in a rehearsal in Bos-ton at the Majestic Theatre on a Saturday morning,” Jones recalled. “A trustee called and said, ‘don’t say anything but you’re getting a prize.’ I thought it was a joke. I thought my work was controversial, not mature enough. I jumped up and down with my companion and we began thinking about ways to spend the money.”
“It’s a big time validation. That’s probably the most im-portant effect of the award.” wi
hunger of his young dancers are factors that push creativity, he added.
Jones said what he creates is informed by a need to be im-mersed in the creative process and is also rooted in a desire to share his unique artistic vision and reality.
While at a family reunion in Bunnell, Fla., in late July, Jones said he realized that many of his family members had never seen him perform and had likely only read about him in Jet, Ebony Magazine and other publica-tions.
“It was a huge group. People were doing the Electric Slide, barbequing and taking part in a talent show – the runway version of Tyra Banks. Then I started wondering what am I going to do in this little com-munity room in Bunnell,” Jones said.
Jones said a cousin, Johnny Lee, began singing.
“He has an old-fashioned way of singing, makes you cry,” said Jones of his cousin who performed in the ’70s with Al Green and Wilson Pickett. “I took off my shoes and I was just dancing to his message and
JONES continued from Page 24
“I have demons and I’m obsessed with failing my parents, lover, companion. And a good dose of love. As a small boy I would make a picture of someone with open arms. Ultimately, I want to love and have the space to love.”
– Bill T. Jones
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CTMTHEBREAkOUT!Dancers from the EnKore Dance Company perform a piece called, “Dance with My Father” during their annual dance extravaganza at Laurel Senior High School in Laurel, Md., on Saturday, July 28./Photo by Khalid Naji-Allah
AMARCHFORPEACETrayon White, Sr. is joined by Council member Marion Barry (D-Ward 8) and members of the Tarheels Pop Warner football team as a group of around 50 march along Alabama Avenue in Southeast during the “Peace-
makers Not Peace Breakers March” on Saturday, July 28. /Photo by Roy Lewis
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sue of nose and lips circulate around Jaden and Willow Smith? Julian Fuego Patton-Thicke? How about Nahla Ariela Aubrey-Berry? Memory fails to bring to bear any calumny towards these babies. Why, then, Blue Ivy?
Blue Ivy’s parents have managed themselves well in the world of en-tertainment. In the intense scrutiny of entertainers, they are the haute-couture of celebrities. There has yet to be a scandal published about them. We have feasted on their tal-ents, and across the board, their performances have been worth the price of the ticket.
When Blue Ivy was born, her fa-ther blessed her with a song entitled, Glory!, a voiced emotion that church congregants holler when the Holy Spirit has visited them. On February 10, 2012, Beyonce and Jay-Z shared Blue Ivy Carter with us to join them in welcoming her into this/our world. Joy can be seen in Jay-Z’s eyes as laughter spills from his bountiful lips in pictures carrying his daugh-ter. He demonstrates the honor of fatherhood and that of a husband at this point in time of his life.
We, in turn, insult them, especially her father. It is safe to hazard that technological advances bear much of the blame. What we spoke in the privacy of the aforementioned venues among each other we somehow knew that we didn’t mean it. It just was the shuck and the jive of the talk.
The advent of cyber social spaces such as Twitter, however, has compro-mised that particular aspect of privacy. A comment removed from the pro-tection of the private space and takes on a life of its own once released. Plus, the post in cyberspace is immediate. This compromise is what R&B singer Gladys Knight meant in her com-ment on Paris Jackson’s tweets about
Ruminations on the Carter Family
the family: “[…] people read into whatever they want to read into, that’s how they get the drama.” (http://tinyurl.com/cz55ybt). Now there is a link entitled Twitter Files: The Jackson Family Drama According to Paris that can be accessed and left up to interpretation by anyone.
What I am saying here is this: The comments made about Blue Ivy now are part of the public’s legacy to her. The remarks have been archived, and this legacy will touch her or someone will remind her of it. We have broken the rule. Our talk has moved out of those old school spheres and journeyed to the superhighway of the internet.
The same public that facilitated the making of her parents the awe-inspir-ing entertainers they are today has cast aspersions on them and their off-spring. Some are waiting for this Afri-can American baby to grow up not in anticipation of her healthy integration into society; rather, in an extreme anxi-ety over whether or not she will carry her mother’s features and not those of her father’s.
We all know the saying, “It takes a village to raise a child.” Beyonce and Jay-Z introduced Blue Ivy to a diverse community; some members blessed her while others chose to malign her facial features. Such is the curse of the standard of beauty in this country, “probably the most destructive ideas in the history of human thought” according the nar-rator in Toni Morrison’s novel, The Bluest Eye. We all must wonder, then, once Blue Ivy comes of age, in her awareness of the world around her, will she look on us and smile?wi
Dr. Kwakiutl Dreher is Associate Pro-fessor of English and Ethnic Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
By Dr. Kwakiutl L. DreherSpecial to the Informer
It used to be that disparaging things said about people transpired in select places. We have talked about Mrs. Jen-kins’s crooked wig in the church park-ing lot or Sunday’s boring sermon at the dinner table. The most scathing comments made about current events, entertainers, athletes, politicians and other public notables occur in the special venues of the barber/beauty shops and even on the street corner.
Usually, debates held in these ven-ues stayed there. That was the rule. Filmmakers have dramatized this cul-ture of talk in films such as Shaft, The Mack, Do the Right Thing, Barber Shop 1&2 and Beauty Shop. The audience is privy to the conversations; yet, it is un-derstood that these acts of talk are ex-clusive to the community represented within the cinematic frame.
Now, the rule has been broken. In the context of our use of privileged spaces, it is quite disturbing to know that the slander directed towards the developing facial features of a 6 month old African American baby named Blue Ivy Carter, the newest ad-dition to the family of Shawn Corey “Jay-Z” Carter and Beyoncé Giselle Knowles, has escaped.
The appalling comments center on fear that as she develops, nature will curse Blue Ivy with the full and broad facial features of her own father rath-er than the European features of her mother. Of course this reaction to Blue Ivy has caused an avalanche of responses from the African American community, with right conclusions that the installed standard of beau-ty—blond, blue-eyed; thin lips and keen nose—and racial hatred within the community are as robust as ever.
I am perplexed, though. Did the is-
Americans have become fascinated by the Cater Family, speculating often about the facial features of Jay-Z and Beyonce’s daughter, Blue Ivy. / Courtesy photo.
Dr. Kwakiutl Dreher
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30 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
ARIES Hidden resentments could surface and you’ll want to be able to gracefully back away from arguments this week. Appreci-ate the good vibrations and ignore the negative. You’ll be doing
the universe’s work! Soul Affirmation: What I’ve been waiting for has been here all along. Lucky Numbers: 15, 16, 36
TAURUS Charming, simply charming is what you are this week! Use your sparkle to set a few dreams in motion by meeting with those who can help you move forward. Wow! Have you got it go-
ing on! Keep your spontaneous side in check this week. Soul Affirmation: I know that enjoyment is a state of mind this week. Lucky Numbers: 9, 42, 51
GEMINI Think things through before you act. Concentrate on small details. They will make the difference between success and failure in your endeavors this week. Don’t go for the gusto just
yet, your ideas need to be massaged a bit more before you present them openly. Call that special someone that has been on your mind. Soul Affirma-tion: True friendship is a mirror into which I look to see the beauty of my inner self. Lucky Numbers: 2, 17, 41
CANCER Your financial constraints will soon come to an end. Meanwhile, make a game of spending less. See how long you can go without letting lose a dime and you will be in a better position
to make decisions about bigger ticket items soon. Start thinking about where you would like to take a short excursion. Soul Affirmation: I paint my world in colors of the rainbow. Lucky Numbers: 12, 19, 32
LEO For the past two weeks you have been playing it safe. Now you can live on the edge a little. Luck is back with you again. You’ll be aware of love prospects lingering around you. You’ll see
that your career is full of bright possibilities. Now is a good time to take a chance. Soul Affirmation: Self-confidence is the key to my success this week. Lucky Numbers: 13, 27, 53
VIRGO Flexibility is the word for this week. Don’t insist on be-ing right, even if you think you are. You will gain more this week if you allow others the freedom to have their way rather than
insisting that people do things your way. Soul Affirmation: He who doesn’t ask will remain a fool forever. Lucky Numbers: 20, 36, 55
LIBRA You don’t have to worry about being alone in the journey that you have undertaken. You are on this path because someone guided you. Take the memory of their guidance as comfort and
keep on trucking. Soul Affirmation: Things are as I know them to be. Lucky Numbers: 13, 47, 49
SCORPIO Commit to a way this week, lucky archers! You are de-veloping your craft by practice and more practice. Accept recogni-tion gracefully, and keep on task. You are investing in your art this
week. Soul Affirmation: Goodness is its own reward. Lucky Numbers: 18, 32, 45
SAGITTARIUS Your word this week is “Persistence.” Keep at the task of persuading others that your idea or vision is as remark-able as you know it is. You just need to get the word out, and you
need to be persistent in your efforts. Make a game out of it and have fun! Soul Affirmation: Often it’s not what I say but the way I say it that gets the message across. Lucky Numbers: 1, 4, 37
CAPRICORN Results that seemed like they would never show up may arrive this week, and it will make you very happy. Keep the feeling this week in mind so that you’ll remember and benefit
from it next time you are impatiently waiting for an outcome. Everything is working to your good. Soul Affirmation: I give thanks for the chance to give. Lucky Numbers: 17, 29, 33
AQUARIUS Your exciting and adventurous self will want to come out and play. You’ll be happiest if you are exploring something, and then topping it off with a visit to a restaurant that
serves something you’ve never tried before. Live it up at the banquet of life this week! Soul Affirmation: When I am clear about who I am, the world becomes clearer. Lucky Numbers: 4, 26, 42
PISCES Watch for that item you’ve been wanting to be on sale at a good price this week. While you are feeling pretty confident with money, you don’t want to splurge or overspend just yet. Keep
your eye out for bargains for a little while longer! Soul Affirmation: This week I find joy in the gifts that life has already given me. Lucky Numbers: 23, 48, 50
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Griot“the last Hunger season”by roger thurowc.2012, Public affairs
$26.99 / $30.00 Canada 273 pages
By Terri SchlichenmeyerWI Contributing Writer
You probably shouldn’t have ordered the super-size fries.
That’s what you were thinking after you finished the last of your double cheeseburger-add-bacon. When you ordered, fries sounded good – although maybe not so many. And your soda, well, the word “small” needs redefining.
Nothing worse than cold fries, so you wadded them up with your sandwich wrapper, slurped the rest of your drink, and threw ev-erything away.
You’ll think twice about that next time, once you’ve read “The Last Hunger Season” by Rog-er Thurow.
Andrew Youn is a man with seemingly unlimited energy.
Journalist Roger Thurow met the “skinny, bespectacled… geek from Minnesota” during a snow-storm in Chicago, where Youn told Thurow about the farmers he’d met in Kenya in the early 2000s. Youn explained that Ke-nya’s use of ancient farming tradi-tions led to wanjala [hunger time] and starvation because of lack of access to modern methods of planting.
Youn, an MBA student, had been pondering this, and he had an idea. Thus was born One Acre, a non-profit program that helps sub-Saharan farmers reap higher yields from their shambas through education, seeds, and fertilizer.
Thurow, who’d also seen pov-erty and starvation in Africa, was intrigued. He asked Youn if he might follow four farmers for a year, through wanjala and beyond.
As a village elder, Leonida Wan-yama needed to set a good ex-ample for others, which is why she joined One Acre. She was amazed the first year at the bounty she reaped, but it wasn’t enough. Her husband, Peter, was ill and their son, Gabriel was away at school. School was very expensive: $255 a year.
Rasoa Wasike was so pleased with One Acre that she inspired several others to join. But that wasn’t Rosoa’s only endeavor; she was lucky to find other employ-ment so her wanjala wasn’t quite so severe.
Zipporah Bikiti had jeered at neighbors who used the One Acre methods, until she saw their lush, bountiful maize fields. She was de-termined that this wanjala – a par-ticularly long, terrible one – would be her family’s last.
Francis Mamati and his wife had a vision. They had three acres and their son, who owned a near-by café, had a small plot, too. A shamba like that, properly farmed, could create dreams.
So why, you’re asking, should you read a book about a bunch of miniature farms half a world away? Maybe you won’t want to … but I was blown away by it.
“The Last Hunger Season” is, indeed, about four Kenyan farm-ers and the last time each had little more than tea to feed their families from January through June. But in telling their stories, the politics be-hind fixing what’s wrong, and the triumph of success, author Roger Thurow also gives his readers a huge lesson in gratitude: chances are you have food, and this book never lets you forget that.
I think you’re going to like “The Last Hunger Season,” just don’t be surprised if it makes you a little uncomfortable. Still, if you want something that’s sobering, glori-ous, and thought-provoking, this book is super-sized.wi
Join The Fight for Educational Reform
Advisory Neighborhood Commission 7A (ANC 7A) is joining in the fight for education reform in DC. During the June 5th monthly meeting ANC 7A was asked by the Deputy Mayor for Education’s (DME) office to be one of the lead organizations for the Community Engagement Initiative in Ward 7. ANC 7A is excited to be a part of this effort which presents a unique opportunity to ensure education reform positively affects Ward 7 students.
What is the Deputy Mayor for Education’s Community Engagement Initiative? This initiative will provide a thoughtful community input process to help provide information that will inform the improvement and legitimacy of new measures to ensure that all DC Public School and DC public charter school students have access to quality education opportunities. The initiative will include community-wide conversations, “Community Conversations”, in five different wards of DC that will bring together a diverse representation of parents, teachers, school administrators, community residents, elected and appointed officials, and various organizations to identify, discuss and move to action around ways that will improve access and quality of education for DC students. To carry out this initiative, the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Education is partnering with Public Agenda, a national non-profit, non-partisan research and public engagement organization. Conversations will be held in Wards 1, 4, 5, 7, and 8 throughout the months of July and August. These Wards are home to the ten neighbor-hood clusters identified as having a high-need for additional quality-seats in grades K-12. Community-based organizations in each Ward have agreed to organize and host each individual Conversation. These lead organizations are recruiting a diverse set of stakeholders to assist in planning and facilitating the engagement events which will each include between 80-100 participants. Current dates for Community Conversations are as follows:Clusters 31, 33, & 34/Ward 7 - Lead Organization: Advisory Neighborhood Commission 7A
Community Conversation – Saturday, August 11th (Tentative)Visit www.anc7a.com for the location of the meeting.
What are Community Conversations? Community Conversations are carefully constructed problem-solving dialogues that bring diverse stakeholders and community members to-gether to discuss an important public issue. Such conversations are frequently a first step in a larger process of community engagement, collaboration and action and have been put to good use in hundreds of communities nationwide. The Community Conversations in the District will focus on how parents, schools, communities and the city can work together to ensure access to high-quality education opportunities for all children in Washington DC.
What are the Results of Community Conversations? For Washington DC, a Community Conversation can have a range of concrete impacts, including:
• identifying the top community priorities for programs that support quality education options• building community awareness of and support for new or existing programs• informing current or newly developed district and government policies and practices• strengthening or building community relationships and partnerships Following the Community Conversations, the Deputy Mayor for Education will release a brief report that includes summary notes from each Conversation. The Deputy Mayor will use these community suggestions to inform a list of recommendations to DCPS, the Public Charter School Board, and charter LEAs as to how they can increase the number of quality-seats in high-needs neighborhood clusters. This report will be released in Fall of 2012.
How can you get involved? ANC 7A welcomes anyone interested in being a participant, co-organizer, or co-host in the Community Conversation scheduled for August 11.
Next Planning WorkshopJuly 9th @5:30 PMCapitol View Library – 5001 Central Ave SE
Please contact Kellie Broussard at 202.534.6673 or via email at [email protected] or Lorelle Langhorne at [email protected] or Villar-eal Johnson at [email protected] or 202.304.3450. More information on the Community Conversation is available in the Initiatives section of the ANC 7A website at www.anc7a.com.
Next Planning WorkshopAugust 6th @5:30 PMCapitol View Library – 5001 Central Ave SE
Community Conversation – Saturday, August 11thKelley Miller Middle School – 301 49th St NE Washington Dc 20019
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32 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
fast as its name suggests. Rather than being speedy and agile, the Mitsubishi Outlander Sport feels underpowered and has a loud continuously variable transmission (CVT).
It is not that I was remorse-ful for something else the week I drove this vehicle. No, not at all. My first few days involved driv-ing two teenagers, my son and his buddy, on a college tour of D.C. area universities. The ride from Marymount University in Arling-ton, to American in upper North-west with brief stops at Howard and G.W., did not disappoint.
There were no complaints about the Outlander Sport from the six foot, four inch 17-year-old who preferred to sit in the back directly behind my son who is about 2 inches shorter. As far as they were concerned, the sitting arrangements in the car were fine, it was the cold lunch served at a “so-called prestigious District” university that charges upward of $55k plus a year and the not so im-pressive basketball program at the Arlington school that were threat-ening to be deal breakers.
As I drove around the city in the next few days, I became more and more convinced that just be-cause the 2012 Outlander Sport is small does not mean it is nec-essarily a compromised vehicle. It’s designed for city folk looking for a higher view of the road. At a length of 169.1 inches, the Out-lander Sport is really not meant to compete with class leaders like the Honda CR-V and Ford Escape, nor is it any good at off-roading.
Mitsubishi’s approach to the Outlander is rather simple: pro-
vide a range of SUVs and cross-overs meeting a variety of needs. Whereas the Outlander is a sev-en-passenger SUV serving larger families who need to carry much stuff, the Outlander Sport sits five and is targeted at first-time buyers who want style with their utility.
Because there are so many choices available to the serious shopper looking to buy a vehicle in this class, one ought to consider first what they would want from a compact SUV. If you are tight on cash and can only spend less than $20,000, this car may fit the bill. It offers sleek and distinctive styling, a wide array of welcome standard amenities and an exemplary de-gree of fuel-efficiency.
Powered by a 148 horsepower DOHC 2.0-liter four-cylinder en-gine equipped with Mitsubishi’s advanced MIVEC variable valve-timing technology, the 2012 Out-lander Sport garners an impressive EPA fuel mileage rating of 31 mpg highway.
In addition to its highly-effi-cient powerplant, Mitsubishi of-fers Bluetooth, USB audio inputs, a tilting and telescoping steering wheel, air conditioning, power everything, and Fuse, a Ford Sync-like voice-control technology. Safety features include standard all-disc anti-lock brakes, an elec-tronic stability system, traction control, and seven airbags, a driv-er’s-knee airbag and side curtains for both rows.
Price Range: $19,495 - $23,295/ Fuel: Unleaded wi
By Njuguna Kabugi Special to the WI
“What’s in a name?” This ques-tion posed in William Shake-speare’s famous work Romeo and Juliet has seared itself into our psyches, even in situations that do not involve young love and trag-edy as happens in Shakespeare’s play. Whether one is a Montague or a Capulet, is involved in a for-bidden romance, likes roses or not, we are all quite aware that a name is incredibly important and that we make countless judgments based on our perception of what’s implied in a name.
I was reminded of this fact when Mitsubishi, the manufactur-er of today’s featured vehicle, de-livered the Outlander Sport SUV to my house. Looking out on the driveway, I was sure someone had made a mistake. I had expected a heftier version of the seven-pas-senger Mitsubishi Outlander SUV that I drove a few years ago.
I did not get what I expected. Sure, the vehicle sitting in the driveway had a badge that said Outlander Sport, but it was short and stubby compared to its sibling. The joke was on me as Mitsubishi, an adept student of Shakespeare, demonstrated that irony plots quite well when replayed through mistaken identities and prejudice.
This vehicle is neither an out-lander – which means a person who comes from a foreign coun-try or someone who does not owe allegiance to your country – be-cause it is made in the USA. It is also disappointing to speed jocks because it’s not even remotely as
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Mitsubishi’s Small Fuel Efficient SuV is Aimed at Value Shoppers
Starting well under $20k for the base model, the Outlander Sport is compact enough for city driving, provides good gas mileage stands out as an overall good deal – especially if you can overlook its weak engine. /Photos courtesy of Mitsubishi North America
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Washington Informer: Ex-perience Unlimited (E.U.) is one of the early pioneers of Go-Go music, but your roots are in rock. How has the band’s sound changed over the years?
Sugar Bear: Well, I will always keep my rock flavors and incor-porate them most of the time, but you know of course, the sound has got to change because the times have changed. You got to stay commercial so to speak, but I still have my rock flavors in the middle of what I do.
Washington Informer: Can you describe the early Go-Go scene for me?
Sugar Bear: The greatest scene on Earth - great musicians, bands playing music, it was a very festive atmosphere - very
positive. Back in the day most bands played their own original music but now all the bands are playing cover tunes. It’s definite-ly changed.
Washington Informer: What was the importance of the Oc-tober 1987 Go-Go Live at the Capital Centre performance?
Sugar Bear: That was the first time we did a live Go-Go concert with all the bands be-cause most concerts that came through the city – Earth, Wind & Fire, Maze, featuring Frankie Beverly or whatever - they would add a Go-Go band to sell tickets. We knew we could sell tickets, so we just decided to do it on a larger scale and it worked. We had over 16,000 people at Go-Go Live and that was a great
By Stacey Palmer and John RichardsWI Staff Writers
At the height of the Go-Go scene in the late 1980’s bands included Experience Unlimited (E.U.), Rare Essence (R.E.) Chuck Brown and Trouble Funk. Few teens in D.C. could pass up an opportunity to see these homegrown bands -- made up of their neighbors, school friends and even family members—hit the stage. Fully clad in bamboo earrings (a least two pair), Sergio Tacchini sweat suits, AJ coveralls, and with their hair in box Phillies and asymmetric hairstyles, teenagers flocked by the thousands to places like Crystal Skates, The Black Hole, Triples, and Wilmer’s Park several times a week to dance and sweat into the wee hours of the morning. Sometimes getting there was a mission – sneaking out, getting to the club, getting in the club and of course, getting home. In 1988 the nation’s love of Go-Go caught up with DC’s when Spike Lee’s film “School Daze” showcased E.U. and their song “Da Butt.” The song reached Number 1 on the Billboard R&B charts and remains a show stopper. As the 25th anniversary of “Da Butt” approaches, The Washington Informer sat with E.U.’s leader Gregory “Sugar Bear” Ellis to discuss the anni-versary, the Go-Go scene, both past and present, and the future of EU.
experience. Chuck Brown, E.U., Rare Essence, Little Benny and the Masters, Hot & Cold Sweat and Junk Yard [Band], were all there. So it definitely worked.
Washington Informer: We are also coming up on the 25th anniversary of the song “Da Butt”. What do you remember about the making of this song?
Sugar Bear: I knew it was something different. It had Go-Go elements all in it, but I never thought it was going to be as big as it was. Never in my wildest dreams did I think it would get that big.
Washington Informer: How did E.U. connect with Spike Lee?
Photo by Thomas Sayers Ellis (TSE)
See SuGAR BEAR on Page 34
E.u.’s Sugar BearThe Informer InTervIew
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34 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
liFestyle
later. The reason why I think it [Go-Go] has not remained in popular mainstream is because nobody has even come close to duplicating that “Da Butt” or taking it to another level. That’s my goal, I guess, to do it again. It’s out there to be had.
Washington Informer: We recently lost Chuck Brown, the “Godfather of Go-Go”. Can you tell me what Chuck meant to you and Go-Go music?
Sugar Bear: He is the “God-father,” he is the blueprint for Go-Go. He was definitely an important element in my life because he inspired me to trans-form from my rock style [laughs] to the Go-Go style, you know? That’s real. Black people didn’t like rock back then, especially when I was coming up. I liked it, [but] it wasn’t selling tickets. It wasn’t bringing anybody through the door. Once we transferred our style of music to Go-Go, the love was there. And that’s when E.U. blew up -- that’s when Sug-ar Bear blew up. Chuck Brown definitely had a great impact on my life.
Washington Informer: You have new release coming out called, “Brick House”. How did that come together?
Sugar Bear: Bo Sampson, my manager, thought it’d be a great idea. From his marketing expe-rience and being around various artists he thought that’d be a per-fect record for us, so I said let’s go. “Brick House” is in memory of Don Cornelius, to keep that legacy going on, you know? In
the meantime, we are trying to shop this record and an album is definitely being worked on as we speak. We gotta do it again. Nobody else wants to do it, so we gotta do it ourselves.
Washington Informer: E.U. has been together since 1976; you guys have broken up and re-united several times. What keeps bringing you back to the music? What keeps you going?
Sugar Bear: I never left the mu-sic. I love music, I love what I do. I think that [music is] my calling. I bring people together to party, to release that stress. To release those hard times that you may face on jobs or in relationships. Come out and have a party. I think that’s my calling.
Washington Informer: Mu-sic changes, it evolves. Do you think Bounce Beat is just the natural progression of Go-Go or is it a whole new sound?
Sugar Bear: No, that [Bounce Beat] shows you a lack of musi-cianship. It’s definitely creative [and] if the young generation likes it, then so be it, let them have it; however, the ‘old school’ rules. That’s the name of the game.
EU is managed by Bo Sampson for Bodacious One Entertainment. Boda-cious One Presents E.U. (feat. Sugar Bear and Michael Bivins) is available on http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/eufea-turingsugarbear wi
Sugar Bear: It was pretty much being at the right place at the right time. We were at the 9:30 Club and Spike stopped by while promoting his movie She’s Got-ta Have It. He approached us right after the show and said he wanted us to perform this song “Da Butt” in his movie. So that’s where it came from.
Washington Informer: Be-sides working with Spike Lee on the School Daze soundtrack, you’ve worked with Kurtis Blow (“Party Time”), Grace Jones (“Slave to the Rhythm”), and Salt-N-Pepa (“Shake Your Thang”). Do you feel that some artists cashed in on a “hot” sound at the time without giving back to the Go-Go scene?
Sugar Bear: Oh, yeah, definitely. Because “Slave to the Rhythm”, all the Go-Go elements with Grace Jones, we never really got credit for our instrumentation. She was the mega star, you know. We knew, but nobody else on our side knew. Salt-N-Pepa gave us credit, and Kid-N-Play gave credit you know. Kurtis Blow mentioned “I’m rocking on the Go-Go scene. It’s not much but least he did mention it.
Washington Informer: In your opinion why hasn’t Go-Go ever gone national?
Sugar Bear: I took it national. Chuck Brown took it national. “Da Butt” is still being played nationally right now 25 years
Photo by Gerald Barnes
SuGAR BEAR continued from Page 33
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36 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
funded by a $1-million grant from the Walt Disney Co. The Micro Loan Program supplies low-interest rate loans of $2,000 to $20,000 to minority entrepreneurs in the area including day-care centers, trans-portation companies, restaurants, a medical billings business, cosmet-ics companies and a manufactur-ing firm. We deal with people who won’t qualify for a bank loan,” said Mark Whitlock, executive director of the Renaissance Program.
“We don’t mind if you have a couple of bad nicks on your credit. We don’t mind if you’re a brand new business that has never received a business loan before,” according to Black Enterprise.
Today, more and more partner-ships are growing between govern-ment, business and church com-munities. While the lines continue to be drawn to separate church and state, the lines are just becoming a little faded. But with all of the ills that exist within our society, can that fade be all bad? Sometimes the bad behavior of government needs a lit-tle “God” in it. Understanding that the church, outside of government, is the most powerful institution in the world as it relates to impact and influence provides the oppor-tunity for the church to engage in economic development while never losing its values and relationship with God.
As an example of the fading of the line of separation of church and state, in 1992, the United States Congress passed into law “Chari-table Choice Legislation,” which gave rise to the establishment of the federal Office of Faith-based and Community Initiatives, according to Urbanham. This growing interest at
‘The Church,’ Community and Economic Impact
the federal level in providing public funding for the secular activities of faith-based institutions, while con-troversial, raises numerous possibili-ties for increased public and private sector funding.
This also appears to be an ad-mission by government that “the Church represents a vast, untapped resource that can more effectively address some social and economic aspects of Urban Community and Economic Revitalization better than it can” said the Rev. Gerald Austin Sr., founder and CEO of the Center for Urban Missions.
As African Americans have gained in the areas of politics and job advancements, the economic disparities continue to widen as many in the Black Church failed to tackle the issue of community and economic development, according to Austin. As the economy contin-ues to struggle and families suffer through unemployment, programs encouraging entrepreneurship can be powerful, empowering and up-lifting to the spirit of someone who has been turned down for jobs time and time again. The power of mega-churches to simply encourage members to network and do busi-ness with each other is a start in the right direction.
Just as the church was called on to play a major role in the civil rights movement, it is now being called on to play a major role in the “new civil rights movement” of economic development. Stay with us during this impactful series and learn more about the impressive ministers mak-ing a difference in the Mid-south.wi
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For many years, African-Amer-
ican churches have been the cata-lysts of change in society. Churches have pushed the envelope as it re-lates to spiritual and social issues. Given their collective money, po-litical power and expertise, churches continue to be in a unique position to impact the community from an economic perspective.
The challenge of determining where the church begins versus the business venture may forever exist. Nonetheless, the economic devel-opment benefit that the community gains is invaluable. According to the New York Times, Bishop T.D. Jakes of Potters House in Dallas participated in the development of Capella Park, a community of 266 homes. And the relocation of Dr. Stacy L. Spencer’s New Direction Christian Church to the old Service Merchandise Building in Memphis is an example of the power and ca-pability of the “mega-churches” in the marketplace.
Additionally, after the 1992 ri-ots in Los Angeles, mega-church First African Methodist Episcopal (FAME) Church of Los Angeles rose to meet the challenge. As an economic lifeline for the devastated community, the church created the FAME Renaissance Program to fund community services, business and economic development pro-grams through private and public funding sources.
An example of a “private sec-tor/church collaboration is the Renaissance Program which has a Micro Loan Program component
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www.washingtoninformer.com The Washington Informer Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 37
religion
“Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.”
– Philippians 4:6 This scripture reminds us
that we are to send up our pe-tition by way of prayer, but we must have faith that our prayers will become a reality, and begin to thank God in advance, that’s called faith and belief in what it is you’re praying about.
For example: I need a new car, I’m working and saving my money, but I’m sending out my prayer and petition to ask for God’s help; and I’m thanking him each time I pray for my new car; my prayer would be some-thing like this:
“Dear Lord, I thank you for waking me up this morning, with a reasonable portion of life, health and strength; I thank you for a home; for a job; for my children; I thank you for food to eat; and a car to drive. And Lord, I also thank you for the new car that I have already in the near future.” The scripture tells us to pray and make our petition with thanksgiving when we make our requests to God.
Many of us pray and we don’t believe; we don’t have faith that our prayers will be answered. We pray. We wish. And, we hope. That simply means we are trust-ing in ourselves and not God.
The power of God is that He has the ability to do whatever He wills. God’s will is limited by His nature, and He therefore cannot do anything contrary to His na-
Be Anxious for Nothing
ture as God, such as to ignore sin, He has never sinned and He never will, nor will He do any-thing selfish, or contradictory to His Word.
God is not controlled by His power, but has complete control over His power. This means that if God says something will hap-pen, He has the power to make sure that it happens, and you can count on it. Therefore, when He promises eternal life to those who believe in Christ, He has the power to grant it.
You certainly can trust God. Take a look at these scriptures, as proof that He is able to grant our requests; and He will do whatever it is He said He would do. Take a look …
“But Jesus beheld them, and said unto them, With men this is impos-sible; but with God all things are pos-sible.” Matthew 19:26
“Ah Lord God! behold, thou hast made the heaven and the earth by thy great power and stretched out arm, and there is nothing too hard for thee: Behold, I am the Lord, the God of all flesh: is there anything too hard for me?” Jeremiah 32:17, 27
“For with God nothing shall be im-possible.” Luke 1:37
Do not be anxious for any-thing. God alone has the power to conquer sin and death. Per-sonally, I have decided to follow Jesus. I will rely on God’s power when Satan tries to tempt me, and I encourage you to do the same. I call upon the name of Jesus often, asking Him to pro-vide me with the protection and the peace He promises to those who call upon Him, because He
is powerful enough to keep that promise.
Next time you’re feeling anx-ious, stop and pray immediately, but be sure that you are pray-ing in faith and you believe that whatever you say, you shall have. Then, wait and listen until you hear from God. He will defi-nitely speak to you.
The final scripture that I’ll cite in this column is another one of my favorites, Mark 11:24 which says: “Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.”wi
Lyndia Grant is an inspiration-al speaker; a columnist and radio talk show host of “Think on These Things” 1340-AM Spirit Radio, WYCB. Listen every Friday at 6:00 p.m. Visit her website at www.lyn-diagrant.com; send emails to [email protected]
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38 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
religion
ReverendDarylk.kearney.•Pastor
2568MLkJr.,Ave.,S.E.Washington,D.C.20020
(202)889-3877(o)•(202)678-1291(fax)
ServicesandTimes7:45a.m.&10:45a.m.
SmallGroups/ChurchSchool:9:00a.m.SmallGroupBibleStudy
Tuesday7:00p.m.WednesdayNoon
Thursday7:39p.m.
GodourFather,ChristourRedeemer,HumankindoneFamily
www.otfmall.com/[email protected]
CampbellAfricanMethodistEpiscopalChurch
AllenChapelA.M.E.Church
Rev.Dr.MichaelE.Bell,Sr.,•Pastor
2498AlabamaAve.,SE•WashingtonD.C.20020Office:(202)889-7296Fax:(202)889-2198•www.acamec.org
2008:TheYearofNewBeginnings“ExpecttheExtraordinary”
SundayWorshipServices:8:00a.m.and11:00a.m.SundayChurchSchool-9:15a.m.&SundayAdultForumBible
Study-10:30a.m.2nd&4thMondayWomen’sBibleStudy-6:30p.m.
TuesdayJr./Sr.BibleStudy-10:00a.m.TuesdayTopicalBibleStudy-6:30p.m.
TuesdayNewBeginningsBibleStudy-6:30p.m.WednesdayPastoralBibleStudy-6:30p.m.
WednesdayChildren’sBibleStudy-6:30p.m.ThursdayMen’sBibleStudy-6:30p.m.
Fridaybefore1stSundayPraise&WorshipService-6:30p.m.SaturdayAdultBibleStudy-10:00a.m.
“TheAmazing,Awesome,AudaciousAllenChapelA.M.E.Church”
PastorGeraldLMartinSeniorMinister
3204BrothersPlaceS.E.Washington,D.C.20032
202-373-5566or202-373-5567
Service&TimeSundayWorship7:45A.M&11A.M
CommunionService2ndSunday11A.MPrayerServiceTuesday7:00P.M
BibleStudyTuesday8:00P.MSundayChurchSchool10:00A.MSunday
“AchurchreachingandwinningourcommunityforChrist”
MorningStarBaptistChurch
Rev.JohnW.Davis,Pastor
510114thStreet,N.W.Washington,DC20011
202-726-2220/202-726-9089
SundayWorshipService8:00amand11:00amSundaySchool9:15am
HolyCommunion4thSunday10:00amPrayerandBibleStudy
Wednesday7;00pm
TVMinistry–Channel6Wednesday10:00pm
Mt.ZionBaptistChurch
Rev.CherylJ.Sanders,Th.D.SeniorPastor
1204ThirdStreet,NWWashington,DC20001202.347.5889office202.638.1803fax
SundaySchool:9:30a.m.SundayWorship:11:00a.m.
PrayerMeetingandBibleStudy:Wed.7:30p.m.
“AmbassadorsforChristtotheNation’sCapital”
www.thirdstreet.org
ThirdStreetChurchofGod
LanierC.Twyman,Sr.StateOverseer
5757TempleHillRoad,TempleHills,MD20748Office301-899-8885–fax301-899-2555
SundayEarlyMorningWorship-7:45a.m.ChurchSchool-9:30a.m.
SundayMorningWorship–10:45a.m.Tuesday–Thursday-kingdomBuildingBibleInstitute
–7:30p.m.Wednesday–Prayer/Praise/BibleStudy–7:30p.m.
Baptism&CommunionService-4thSunday–10:30amRadioBroadcastWYCB-1340AM-Sunday-6:00pm
T.V.Broadcast-Channel190–Sunday-4:00pm/Tuesday7:00am
“WeareoneintheSpirit”www.ssbc5757.org
e-mail:[email protected]
St.StephenBaptistChurch
african methodist episcopalBaptist
Rev.Dr.AltonW.Jordan,Pastor800IStreet,NE
Washington,DC20002202-548-0707
FaxNo.202-548-0703
SundayMorningWorship11:00amHolyCommunion–1stSunday
SundaySchool-9:45amMen’sMondayBibleStudy–7:00pm
WednesdayNightBibleStudy–7:00pmWomen’sMinistryBibleStudy3rdFriday-7:00pm
ComputerClasses-AnnouncedFamilyandMaritalCounselingbyappointmentE-mail:[email protected]
www.CrusadersBaptistChurch.org
“GodisLove”
ReverendDr.CalvinL.Matthews•SeniorPastor1200IsleofPatmosPlaza,Northeast
Washington,DC20018Office:(202)529-6767Fax:(202)526-1661
SundayWorshipServices:7:30a.m.and10:30a.m.HolyCommunion:2ndSundayat7:30a.m.and10:30a.m.
SundayChurchSchool:9:20a.m.SeniorsBibleStudy:Tuesdaysat10:30a.m.NoonDayPrayerService:TuesdaysatNoon
BibleStudy:Tuesdaysat7p.m.Motto:“AMinistryofReconciliationWhereEverybodyis
Somebody!”Website:http://isleofpatmosbc.org
ChurchEmail:[email protected]
CrusaderBaptistChurch
IsleofPatmosBaptistChurch
Drs.DennisW.andChristineY.Wiley,Pastors
3845SouthCapitolStreetWashington,DC20032
(202)562-5576(Office)(202)562-4219(Fax)
SERVICESANDTIMES:SUNDAYS:
8:00AMand10:45AMWorshipServicesBIBLESTUDY:WonderfulWednesdaysinWorship
andtheWordBibleStudyWednesdays12:00Noon;6:30PM(dinner@5:30PM)SUNDAYSCHOOL:9:45AM–HourofPower
“Aninclusiveministrywhereallarewelcomedandaffirmed.”
www.covenantbaptistdc.org
CovenantBaptistUnitedChurchofChrist
Rev.JamesManionSupplyPriest
FoggyBottom•Foundedin186772823rdStreet,NW•Washington,DC20037
Churchoffice:202-333-3985•Fax:202-338-4958
WorshipServicesSundays:10a.m.HolyEucharist
withMusicandHymnsWednesdays:12:10p.m.-HolyEucharist
www.stmarysfoggybottom.orgEmail:[email protected]
AllarewelcometoSt.Mary’stoLearn,Worship,andGrow.
HistoricSt.Mary’sEpiscopalChurch
Joseph N. Evans, Ph.DSenior Pastor
901 Third Street N.W.Washington, DC. 20001Phone (202) 842-3411Fax (202) 682-9423
Sunday Church School : 9: 30am Sunday Morning Worship: 10:
45am Bible Study Tuesday: 6: 00pm
Prayer Service Tuesday: 7:00pm Holy Communion: 3rd Sunday
10: 45am themcbc.org
MountCarmelBaptistChurch
We are proud to provide the trophies forthe Washington Informer Spelling Bee
52 Years of ExpertEngraving Services
STMarksBaptist
Come Worship with us...
St.Mark'sBaptistChurch
624UnderwoodStreet,NW
Washington,dc20011
Dr.RaymondT.Matthews,
PastorandFirstLadyMarciaMatthews
SundaySchool9:am
WorshipService10:am
Wed.NoonDayprayerservice
Thur.Prayerservice6:45pm
Thur.BibleStudy7:15pm
BishopAlfredA.Owens,Jr.;SeniorBishop&EvangelistSusieC.Owens–Co-Pastor
610RhodeIslandAvenue,NEWashington,DC20002
(202)529-4547office•(202)529-4495fax
SundayWorshipService:8AMand10:45AMSundayYouthWorshipServices:
1st&4th10:45AM;804R.I.Ave.,NE5th8AM&10:45AM;MainChurch
PrayerServicesTuesday–Noon,Wednesday6AM&6:30PM
CalvaryBibleInstitute:Year-RoundContactChurch
CommunionEvery3rdSundayTheChurchinTheHoodthatwilldoyouGood!
GreaterMt.CalvaryHolyChurch
Dr.DekonteeL.&Dr.AyeleA.JohnsonPastors
400114thStreet,NWWashington,DC20011(202)265-6147Office
1-800576-1047Voicemail/Fax
ScheduleofServices:SundaySchool–9:30AM
SundayMorningWorshipService–11:00AMCommunionService–FirstSunday
PrayerService/BibleStudy–Tuesday,6:30PM
www.blessedwordoflifechurch.orge-mail:[email protected]
BlessedWordofLifeChurch
PilgrimBaptistChurch
700 I. Street, NEWashington, D.C. 20002
Pastor Louis B. Jones, II and Pilgrim invite
you to join us during our July and August Summer schedule! Attire is
Christian casual.
Worship: Sundays@ 7:30 A.M. & 10:00 A.M.
3rd Sunday Holy Communion/Baptism/Consecration
Prayer & Praise: Wednesdays @12:00 Noon
@ 6:30 P.M. – One Hour of Power!(202) 547-8849 www.
pilgrimbaptistdc.org
ChurchofLivingWaters
Rev.PaulCarretteSeniorPastorHaroldAndrew,AssistantPastor
4915WheelerRoadOxonHill,MD20745
301-894-6464
ScheduleofServiceSundayService:8:30AM&11:00AM
BibleStudy:Wednesday7:30PMCommunionService:FirstSunday
www.livingwatersmd.org
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www.washingtoninformer.com The Washington Informer Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 39
Advertiseyourchurch
serviceshere
callRonBurkeat
religion
900DelawareAvenue,SWWashington,DC20020
(202)488-7417(202)484-2242
Rev.Dr.J.MichaelLittlePastor
SunrisePrayer:6:00AMSundaySchool:9:30AM
MorningWorship11:00AMHolyCommunion:3rdSunday-11:00AM
www.friendshipbaptistdc.org
Email:[email protected]
FriendshipBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.H.B.Sampson,IIIPastor
2914BladensburgRoad,NEWash.,DC20018Office:(202)529-3180
Fax:(202)529-7738OrderofServices
WorshipService:7:30a.m.SundaySchool:9:00a.m.WorshipService:10:30a.m.
HolyCommunion:4thSunday7:30a.m.&10:30a.m.PrayerServices:
Tuesday7:30p.m.Wednesday12Noon
Email:[email protected]:www.mthoreb.org
Forfurtherinformation,pleasecontactmeat(202)529-3180.
Mt.HorebBaptistChurch
Dr.LuciusM.Dalton,SeniorPastor
1636EastCapitolStreet,NEWashington,DC20003
Telephone:202-544-5588Fax:202-544-2964
SundayWorshipServices:7:45amand10:45amHolyCommunion:1stSundaysat7:45amand
10:45amSundaySchool:9:30am
Prayer&PraiseService:Tuesdaysat12noonand6:30pm
BibleStudy:Tuesdaysat1pmand7pmYouthBibleStudy:Fridaysat7pm
Web:www.mountmoriahchurch.orgEmail:[email protected]
MountMoriahBaptistChurch
Rev.TerryD.StreeterPastor
215RhodeIslandAve.N.W.•WD.C.20001(202)332-5748
EarlyMorningWorship:7:45a.m.SundaySchool:9:15a.m.
MorningWorship:10:45a.m.HolyCommunion:
4thSunday7:45a.m.&10:45a.m.C.T.U.Sunday:2:45p.m.
BibleStudy:Wednesday11:00a.m.&7:00p.m.
PrayerService:Wednesday8:00p.m.NoonDayPrayerService:
Mondays12p.m.
MountPleasantBaptistChurch
Rev.StephenE.TuckerPastorandOverseer
625ParkRd,NW•WDC20010P:202291-5711•F:202291-5666
SundayWorshipService-11amSundaySchool-9:45am
BibleStudy&PrayerWed.-7pmSubstanceAbuseCounseling-
7pm(Mon&Fri)JobsPartnership-7pm(Mon&Wed)Sat.EnrichmentExperience-9:30am
“AChurchWhereLoveIsEssentialandPraiseisIntentional”
NewCommandmentBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.MichaelT.Bell
71218thStreet,NEWashington,DC20002
Phone202-399-3450/Fax202-398-8836
SundayMorningWorshipService7:15am&10:50am
SundaySchool9:30amSundayMorningWorshipService10:50am
WednesdayPrayer&TestimoniesService7:30pmWednesdaySchooloftheBible8:00pmWednesday-MidweekPrayerService-
12:00pm-1:00pm
“TheLovingChurchofthelivinglord“[email protected]
PeaceBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.JamesColemanPastor
2001NorthCapitolSt,N.E.•Washington,DC20002Phone(202)832-9591
SundayChurchSchool–9:30AMSundayWorshipService–11:00AM
HolyCommunion–1stSundayat11:00AMPrayer–Wednesdays,6:00PM
BibleStudy–Wednesdays,7:00PMChristianEducation
SchoolofBiblicalknowledgeSaturdays,9:30AM–11:00AM,
CallforRegistration
Website:www.allnationsbaptistchurch.comAllNationsBaptistChurch–AChurchofStandards
AllNationsBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.ClintonW.AustinPastor
2409AingerPl.,SE–WDC20020(202)678-0884–Office(202)678-0885–Fax
“ComeGrowWithUsandEstablishaBlessedFamily”SundayWorship
7:30am&10:45amBaptism/HolyCommunion
3rdSundayFamilyBibleStudyTuesdays–6:30pm
PrayerServiceTuesdays–8:00pm
www.emmanuelbaptistchurchdc.org
EmmanuelBaptistChurch
Dr.EarlD.TrentSeniorPastor
623FloridaAve..NW•WDC.20001Church(202)667-3409•Study(202)265-0836
HomeStudy(301)464-8211•Fax(202)483-4009
SundayWorshipServices:10:00a.m.SundayChurchSchool:8:45–9:45a.m.
HolyCommunion:EveryFirstSundayIntercessoryPrayer:
Monday–7:00-8:00p.m.Pastor’sBibleStudy:
Wednesday–7:45p.m.MidweekPrayer:
Wednesday–7:00p.m.NoondayPrayerEveryThursday
FloridaAvenueBaptistChurch
HolyTrinityUnitedBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.GeorgeC.GilbertSR.Pastor
4504GaultPlace,N.E.Washington,D.C20019202-397-7775–7184
9:30AM.SundayChurchSchool11:00Am.SundayWorshipService
TheLord’sSupper1stSundayWednesday7:00pmPrayer&PraiseServices
7:30pm.BibleStudySaturdaybefore4thSundayMen,Women,
YouthDiscipleshipMinistries10:30amAChristCenteredChurch
Rev.keithW.Byrd,Sr.Pastor
4850BlagdonAve,NW•WashingtonD.C20011Phone(202)722-4940•Fax(202)291-3773
SundayWorshipService10:15AM-PraiseandWorshipServices
SundaySchool9:00amMonday:NoonBibleSchoolWednesday:Noon&7PM:
Pastor’sBibleStudyOrdinanceofBaptism2ndHolyCommunion4thSunday
MissionZionBaptistChurchShall;EnlistSinners,EducateStudents,EmpowertheSuffer-
ing,EncouragetheSaints,andExaltOurSavior.(Acts2:41-47)
www.zionbaptistchurchdc.org
ZionBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.MorrisLShearin,Sr.Pastor
1251SaratogaAve.,NEWashington,DC20018
(202)269-0288
SundayWorshipService:10:00A.M.
SundaySchool:8:30A.M.HolyCommunion1stSunday:
10:00A.M.
PrayerService:Wednesdayat6:30P.M.
BibleStudy:Wednesdayat7:00P.M.
IsraelBaptistChurch
Dr.C.MatthewHudson,Jr,Pastor
2616MLkAve.,SE•Washington,DC20020Office202-889-3709•Fax202-678-3304
EarlyWorshipService7:30a.mWorshipService10:45a.m.
NewMembersClass9:30a.m.HolyCommunion:1stSunday-10:45a.m
ChurchSchool9:30a.m.Prayer,PraiseandBibleStudy:
Wednesday7p.mBibleStudy:Saturday:11a.m.
Baptism:4thSunday–10:45a.m“EmpoweredtoloveandChallengedtoLeada
MultitudeofSoulstoChrist”
MatthewsMemorialBaptistChurch
Rev.R.VincentPalmerPastor
621AlabamaAvenue,S.E.•Washington,D.C.20032P:(202)561-1111F:(202)561-1112
SundayService:10amSundaySchoolforallages:8:30am
1stSundayBaptism:10:am2ndSundayHolyCommunion:10am
Tuesday:BibleStudy:6:30pm
PrayerMeeting:7:45pm
Motto:GodFirst
RehobothBaptistChurch
Baptist
Rev.Dr.BobbyL.Livingston,Sr.Pastor
75RhodeIslandAve.NW•Washington,DC20001(202)667-4448
SunrisePrayerService6:00A.M.SundayChurchSchool8:30A.M.
Pre-WorshipDevotionals9:45A.M.MorningWorshipServices10:00A.M.
HolyCommunion1stSundayWorshipServicesBibleStudyTuesdays,6:00P.M.
Thursdays,1:00P.M.PrayerMeetingsTuesdays,7:00P.M.
Thursdays,12:00P.M.
Mt.BethelBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.kendrickE.CurryPastor
3000PennsylvaniaAve..S.EWashington,DC20020
202581-1500
SundayChurchSchool:9:30A.M.SundayWorshipService:11:00A.M.MondayAdultBibleStudy:7:00P.M.
WednesdayYouth&AdultActivities:
6:30P.M.
PrayerServiceBibleStudy
PennsylvaniaAve.BaptistChurch
Rev.AlonzoHartPastor
917NSt.NW•Washington,DC20001(202)232-4294
TheChurchWhereGODIsWorking....AndWeAreWorkingWithGOD
SundayMorningPrayerService:8:00a.m.SundayChurchSchool:9:15a.m.
SundayMorningWorship:10:40a.m.ThirdSunday-
Baptismal&HolyCommunion:10:30a.m.Tuesday-
ChurchAtStudyPrayer&Praise:6:30p.m.
SalemBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.WallaceCharlesSmithPastor
9th&PStreet,N.W.•W.D.C.20001(202)232-4200
SunrisePrayerServices-Sunday7:00a.m.
MorningWorship:8:00a.mChurchSchool:9:30a.m.
MorningWorship:10:55a.m.BibleStudy,Thursday:6:30p.m.
PrayerMeeting,Thursday:7:30p.m.
ShilohBaptistChurch
Rev.AubreyC.LewisPastor
1415GallatinStreet,NWWashington,DC20011-3851
P:(202)726-5940
SundayWorship:11:00a.m.
SundaySchool:9:15a.m.HolyCommunion:11:00a.m.,3rdSun.
BibleStudy:Monday-7:00p.m.
PrayerMeeting:Thursday-7:00p.m.
St.LukeBaptistChurch
Rev.Dr.MaxwellM.WashingtonPastor
1105NewJerseyAve,S.E•Washington,DC20003202488-7298
OrderofServicesSundayWorshipServices:9:05A.M.
SundaySchool:8:00A.M.HolyCommunion3rdSundayMorningPrayerMeeting:7:00P.M.(Tuesday)
BibleStudy:7:30P.M.(Tuesday)
Theme:“StrivingtobemorelikeJesus-“stewardship”.
Philippians3:12-14;Malachi3:8-10and2Corinthians9:7
Email:[email protected]:www.stmatthewsbaptist.com
St.MatthewsBaptistChurch
602NStreetNW•Washington,D.C.20001Office:(202)289-4480Fax:(202)289-4595
SundayWorshipServices:7:45am&11:00amSundayschoolForAllAges9:30am
PrayerServicesWednesday11:30am&6:45pm
BibleInstituteWednesdayatNoon&7:45pm
“ChangingLivesOnPurpose“
Email:[email protected]:www.firstrising.org
FirstRisingMt.ZionBaptistChurch
Advertiseyourchurch
serviceshere
callRonBurkeat
Advertiseyourchurch
serviceshere
callRonBurkeat
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40 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
sPorts
View
View
Sports Photos by John De Freitas
at:
Washington Redskins Training
Camp Highlights
Executive vice president and head coach Mike Shanahan looks on as rookie quarterback Robert Griffin III participates in passing drills on Thursday, July 26 at Redskins Park in Ashburn, Va.
/Photo by John E. De Freitas
Redskins offensive coordinator Kyle Shanahan and rookie quarterback Robert Griffin III chat after the first session of quarterback drills on Thursday, July 26 at Redskins Park in Ashburn, Va. /Photo By John E. De Freitas
The Redskins’ defense participated in man-on-man drills, a fan favorite, before cheering fans on Thursday, July 26 at Redskins Park in Ashburn,Va. /Photo by John E. De Freitas
The Washington Redskins training camp [July 26- Aug. 14] opened to the public on Thursday, July 26 at Redskins Park in Ashburn, Va. A total of 13 practices will be open to fans and will be highlighted by Fan Appreciation Day on Saturday, August 4 at noon. In this photo, fans wait for the arrival of the players. /Photo by John E. De Freitas
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www.washingtoninformer.com The Washington Informer Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 41
sPorts
D.C. United midfielder Chris Pontius and Paris Saint-Germain defender Christophe Jallet race toward a loose ball in the second half of a World Football Challenge Interna-tional friendly soccer game on Saturday, July 28, at RFK Stadium in Southeast. /Photo by John E. De Freitas
D.C. United forward Maicon Santos rides the back of Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Clement Chantome in the second half of a World Football Challenge International friendly soccer game on Saturday, July 28, at RFK Stadium in Southeast. /Photo by John E. De Freitas
D.C. united 1, Paris Saint-Germain FC 1
Newly acquired D.C. United forward Long Tan tries to get around Paris Saint-Germain midfielder Marco Verratti in the first half of a World Football Challenge Interna-tional friendly soccer game on Saturday, July 28, at RFK Stadium in Southeast. /Photo by John E. De Freitas
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42 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
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SUPERIOR COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIAProbate DivisionWashington, D.C. 20001-2131
Administration No. 2012 ADM 648
Blondeen S. GravelyDecedent
Joel L. Parker, EsquireP.O. Box 4626Upper Marlboro, MD 20775Attorney
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT, NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Brenda D. Perry, whose address is 3107 Good Hope Avenue #307, Temple Hills, MD 20748, was appointed personal representative of the estate of Blondeen S. Gravely, who died on May 28, 2012 without a Will, and will serve without Court supervision. All unknown heirs and heirs whose whereabouts are unknown shall enter their appearance in this proceeding. Objections to such appointment shall be filed with the Register of Wills, D.C., 515 5th Street, N.W. Third Floor Washington, D.C. 20001, on or before January 26, 2013. Claims against the decedent shall be presented to the undersigned with a copy to the Register of Wills or filed with the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned, on or before January 26, 2013, or be forever barred. Persons believed to be heirs or legatees of the decedent who do not receive a copy of this notice by mail within 25 days of its first publication shall so inform the Register of Wills, including name, address and relationship.
Date of first publication:July 26, 2012
Brenda D. PerryPersonal Representative
TRUE TEST COPY
Anne MeisterRegister of WillsWashington Informer
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIAProbate DivisionWashington, D.C. 20001-2131
Administration No. 2012 ADM 654
Hattie Gertrude PattersonDecedent
James Larry Frazier, Esq.918 Maryland Avenue, NEWashington, DC 20002Attorney
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT, NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Jerome Patterson, whose address is 4420 18th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20011, was appointed personal representative of the estate of Hattie Gertrude Patterson, who died on June 19, 2012 with a Will, and will serve without Court supervision. All unknown heirs and heirs whose whereabouts are unknown shall enter their appearance in this proceeding. Objections to such appointment (or to the probate of decedent’s will) shall be filed with the Register of Wills, D.C., 515 5th Street, N.W. Third Floor Washington, D.C. 20001, on or before January 26, 2013. Claims against the decedent shall be presented to the undersigned with a copy to the Register of Wills or filed with the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned, on or before January 26, 2013, or be forever barred. Persons believed to be heirs or legatees of the decedent who do not receive a copy of this notice by mail within 25 days of its first publication shall so inform the Register of Wills, including name, address and relationship.
Date of first publication:July 26, 2012
Jerome PattersonPersonal Representative
TRUE TEST COPY
Anne MeisterRegister of WillsWashington Informer
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SUPERIOR COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIAProbate DivisionWashington, D.C. 20001-2131
Administration No. 2012 ADM 647
John W. GravelyDecedent
Joel L. Parker, EsquireP.O. Box 4626Upper Marlboro, MD 20775Attorney
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT, NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND NOTICE TO UNKNOWN HEIRS
Brenda D. Perry, whose address is 3107 Good Hope Avenue #307, Temple Hills, MD 20748, was appointed personal representative of the estate of John W. Gravely, who died on May 16, 2012 without a Will, and will serve without Court supervision. All unknown heirs and heirs whose whereabouts are unknown shall enter their appearance in this proceeding. Objections to such appointment shall be filed with the Register of Wills, D.C., 515 5th Street, N.W. Third Floor Washington, D.C. 20001, on or before January 26, 2013. Claims against the decedent shall be presented to the undersigned with a copy to the Register of Wills or filed with the Register of Wills with a copy to the undersigned, on or before January 26, 2013, or be forever barred. Persons believed to be heirs or legatees of the decedent who do not receive a copy of this notice by mail within 25 days of its first publication shall so inform the Register of Wills, including name, address and relationship.
Date of first publication:July 26, 2012
Brenda D. PerryPersonal Representative
TRUE TEST COPY
Anne MeisterRegister of WillsWashington Informer
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www.washingtoninformer.com The Washington Informer Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 43
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ries in the New York Times after September 11, 2001. For months, postage stamp sized photos ac-companied short but reveal-ing blurbs about those who lost their lives. On one hand, the blurbs were humanizing. For me, though, they were a reminder of the equivalency of life and the lives we choose to ignore.
There were 12,000 gun-related deaths in the United States in 2008. Eighty percent of the gun deaths in the world’s 23 richest countries happened in the United States, as did 87 percent of the deaths of children. We have more than 270 million privately owned guns in this country. When we add the number of military (police,
After President Obama’s spoke to the National Urban League convention this week in New Orleans, even the NAACP pretended that he hadn’t snubbed them.
For the record, I voted for Obama in 2008. And as a Repub-lican, I took a lot of heat from those in my party for doing so. My vote for Obama had little to do with his race. He was by far the better candidate. There was no way I was voting for a ticket that included Sarah Palin. The Republican Party did not deserve my vote. I will vote every time on a case-by-case basis because no-body owns me or my vote.
Last week, I talked about the importance of Black business leaders. They justifiably complain about limited access to capital – which is not good in a capitalistic society – and the failure of gov-
MALVEAuxcontinued from Page 22
JACKSON continued from Page 22
sheriffs) guns, there is at least one gun for every man, woman, and child in this country. Some hark back to their Second Amendment rights in their gun ownership, but the Second Amendment was passed before assault weapons and Glocks. If people have the right to bear arms, do they have to right to have 6,000 rounds of ammuni-tion, obtained on the Internet? If we can’t limit guns, can we at least regulate the distribution of ammu-nition?
In the same year that there were 12,000 gun deaths in the United States, there were a scant 11 gun-related deaths in Japan. Indeed, while the United States has 90 pri-vately held guns per 100 people, the next largest per capita rate of privately held guns is in Yemen. In contrast, China has three guns per
ernment at every level to make sure Black businesses get a fair shot of landing contracts. After all, Blacks pay taxes too, often at a higher rate.
You would think that this would change under President Obama – but it hasn’t.
According to a recent story in the Washington Post, “U.S. gov-ernment contracts to black-and Hispanic-owned small businesses fell last year for the first time in a decade, declining at a sharper rate than awards to all companies.
“Contracts to the black-owned firms dropped 8 percent to $7.12 billion in the fiscal year that end-ed Sept. 30, compared with fiscal 2010. Awards to Hispanic-owned businesses decreased 7 percent to $7.89 billion, according to federal procurement data.
“Contracts to the two minor-ity groups fell at a faster pace than all contracts, which dipped 1 percent as the U.S. government slowed spending to help reduce
the federal deficit. The gap may reflect stiffer competition over a shrinking pool of revenue and the recession’s greater impact on black and Hispanic firms.”
I am not surprised by Obama or Democrats. After all, this is the same party that dissed and embarrassed Congressman Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) when they fell into minority status in the House in 2010 and had to shuffle the top leadership posts. Of course, the first Black president sat quietly by and said absolutely nothing.
Both parties, in recent times, have ignored the Black vote. Butt under Obama, it has sunk to an all-time low. And if he gets 96 percent of the Black vote in No-vember as he did four years ago, our people will get exactly what they deserve – nothing.
Raynard Jackson is president & CEO of Raynard Jackson & Asso-ciates, LLC., a D.C.-public relations government affairs firm. His website is: www.raynardjackson.com. wi
100 people.The National Rifle Association
loves to say, “guns don’t kill, peo-ple do.” As usual, they display lim-ited thinking. People with guns are the ones who kill! Why won’t we address that by dealing with issues of gun and ammunition control?
The 12 people who lost their lives represent a fraction of 1 per-cent of those who die from gun violence annually. As we mourn these lives, let us mourn the lives of the thousands who were also killed because it is easier to buy a weapon than it is to buy marijuana in most parts of our nation. wi
Julianne Malveaux is a Washington, D.C.-based economist and writer. She is President Emerita of Bennett College for Women in Greensboro, N.C.
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FLETCHER continued from Page 22nored by the dominant forces in the respective countries leading to slippage into ethnic strife and civil war.
Muslim fundamentalism of the irrationalist sort that we are witnessing in Mali is not only an embarrassment to Muslims, but a criminal enterprise destroying some of the most important historical features of Mali. Yet these forces did not pop out of nowhere. The Libyan revolu-tion and the NATO intervention
helped to unleash unintended consequences. It is also the case that some of these same forces have been created or backed by various governments in the re-gion in order to serve as proxy armies to carry out their own objectives.
Mali must be saved and this will necessitate a dynamic role for the African Union, and per-haps the United Nations. It is not a role that should involve the U.S. military, however, which will certainly be the impulse of those forces that see Muslim funda-mentalism as the main threat to
humanity. Mali must be saved through negotiations and the active role of Mali’s neighbors. It cannot be allowed to sink to the levels of another Somalia, a country broken and all but for-gotten until yet another disaster unfolds. wi
Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a Senior Scholar with the Institute for Policy Stud-ies, the immediate past president of TransAfrica Forum, the co-author of Solidarity Divided and the author of the forthcoming “They’re Bankrupt-ing Us” – And Twenty other myths about unions. He can be reached at [email protected]
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46 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
ence will make a difference for a lifetime. Why is it that in all the campaign talk that we’re hear-ing, almost none of it concerns this subject? We should expect and we should demand better. Not only, if I might conclude, is this the social justice issue of our time, it is also the economic issue of our time. We can talk about jobs till we’re blue in the face, but none of it is going to happen if we continue to fail to support the development of those youngest people most in need. It doesn’t have to be this way, and I hope it won’t con-tinue to be.”
The Children’s Defense Fund believes that the greatest threat to America’s national military and economic security and de-mocracy comes from no enemy
without but from our failure to invest in and prepare all of our children for the future right now.
Today, 60 percent of fourth and eighth grade public school students in all racial and income groups, more than 75 percent of Hispanic and more than 80 percent of Black children can-not read or do math at grade level. Only 3 percent of eligible infants and toddlers receive Ear-ly Head Start and our nation has been unwilling to ensure high quality universal pre-kindergar-ten and kindergarten systems to get all children ready for school or excellent and equitable public schools to ensure that children are college ready and prepared for productive work. A child unable to read or compute at grade level and graduate from high school, college or work-force ready is being sentenced to social and economic death in
our globalizing and competitive economy. Closing the achieve-ment gap between non-poor and poor children and White and non-White children must be an urgent national priority. We know what to do; what we are missing is the public and po-litical will to do it. It’s time for urgent and transforming change for our children’s and our na-tion’s sake. wi
Marian Wright Edelman is presi-dent of the Children�s Defense Fund whose Leave No Child Behind® mis-sion is to ensure every child a Healthy Start, a Head Start, a Fair Start, a Safe Start and a Moral Start in life and successful passage to adulthood with the help of caring families and communities. For more information go to www.childrensdefense.org.
prices will skyrocket as supplies dwindle. Play that Fiddle!
Remember when our beloved President John F. Kennedy said we will put a man on the moon and lead the world in space explo-ration? Well, the guy we have now just closed down NASA (JFK is rolling in his grave). Our nation is now #3 in space behind Rus-sia and China. If we want to go into space we have to buy a seat from them. Many thousands of engineers are still unemployed as a result of this capitulation. Stop fiddling!
“America, the strongest nation on earth” – that saying is becoming passé. Our president has the crazy idea of slashing our military all the
ALFORD continued from Page 23
way back to 1940 levels. Hmmm, isn’t that the year Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan considered us punks and later attacked? It is quite clear that Russian President Vladimir Putin considers Barack Obama a punk. He has a look of disgust when they are together. No one respects weakness, espe-cially when it comes with a fiddle.
Former President Lyndon Ba-ines Johnson vowed to make war on poverty. He started the food stamp program with a budget of $268 million in 1964. Our presi-dent doesn’t fight poverty; he pro-motes it. Last year, we spent more than $78 billion in food stamps. We are becoming a nation of pau-pers and he is playing the fiddle.
Finally, there is the low regard for the Black Church. How do
Muslim Brotherhood, or worse.Bachmann and four other
House Republicans wrote a letter asking the Department of De-fense, the State Department, and other departments to investigate whether the government is being infiltrated by Muslim extremists. It gets better. In particular they
said that Abedin “has three fam-ily members – her late father, her mother, and her brother – con-nected to Muslim Brotherhood operatives and/or organizations. Her position provides her with routine access to the Secretary Clinton and to policy-making.”
Some prominent Republican leaders including 2008 presiden-tial candidate Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), Speaker of the House
John Boehner (R-Ohio) and sev-eral of Bachmann’s colleagues on the House Intelligence Commit-tee denounced her actions.
“When anyone, not least a member of Congress, launches vicious and degrading attacks against fellow Americans on the basis of nothing more than fear of who they are, in ignorance of what they stand for, it defames the spirit of our nation, and we all grow poor because of it. Our reputations, our character, are the only things we leave behind when we depart this earth. And unjust acts that malign the good name of a decent and honorable per-son, is not only wrong, it is con-trary to everything we hold dear,” McCain said on the floor of the
Senate.But wouldn’t you know it, there
are Republicans lining up to de-fend this indefensible slander against a trusted government of-ficial because of her family back-ground, despite the fact that she now happens to be married to Anthony Weiner, a former mem-ber of Congress himself.
House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) defended Bach-mann’s slander of Hillary Clin-ton’s top aide’s loyalty to the Unit-ed States, saying the Minnesota lawmaker’s “concern was about the security of the country.” Oh, that explains racist xenophobia. It’s all about the security of the country.
What I can’t understand is how
this group of people who have demonstrated themselves to be utterly and totally incapable of governing the country can still be vying to lead, and how so many people are still taking them seri-ously. If progressive forces were beset with this kind of leadership at the top they would be a laugh-ingstock.
The only hope these plutocrats have to pull off their scheme in 2012 is: they will be able to con-vince enough gullible voters that WASP-guys like them [the GOP] should govern, precisely because they’re WASP-guys. That’s what xenophobia, masked as “Ameri-can Exceptionalism,” is from the get-go. When will we declare it to be permanently dead?wi
MuHAMMADcontinued from Page 23
you jump into the moral discus-sion of same sex marriage? That debate belongs to our church, not the White House. This is an af-front to our beloved long standing institution – just for a few votes.
Mr. President, I am calling you out. Stop the ugliness and tend to the crisis at hand. Raising taxes in a recession and killing jobs via all of the above is a blue print for disaster. Your record with Black procurement is now at 1.1 percent (GAO). Nixon did better than you! wi
Mr. Alford is the co-founder, Presi-dent/CEO of the National Black Chamber of Commerce®. Website: www.nationalbcc.org. Email: [email protected].
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WEEK OF JULY 23, 2012Prince George’s County, Maryland Is Committed To Delivering Excellence In Government Services To Its Citizens. The County Is Seeking Bids Or Proposals From Businesses Who Share In A “Total
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PRINCE GEORGE’S COUNTY SUPPORTS MINORITY BUSINESS PARTICIPATIONSolicitations identified with an asterisk (*) are reserved for Minority vendors, certified by Prince George’s County, under authority of CB-1-1992. Double asterisk (**) solicitations contain a provision for subcontracting with Minor-ity vendors certified by Prince George’s County.
The County reserves the right to reject any or all bids or proposals in the best interest of the County.
Bidding documents containing instructions to bidders and specifications (excluding construction documents) may be reviewed and/or downloaded through the County’s website www.goprincegeorgescounty.com. Documents may also be obtained from the Prince George’s County Office of Central Services, Contract Administration and Procurement Division, 1400 McCormick Drive, Room 200, Largo, Maryland 20774, (301) 883-6400 or TDD (301) 925-5167 upon payment of a non-refundable fee, by Check or Money Order only, made payable to Prince George’s County Government. Special ADA accommodations may be made by writing or calling the same office. For information on the latest bid/proposal solicitations call the Bid Hotline (301) 883-6128.
- BY AUTHORITY OF –Rushern L. Baker, III County Executive
S09-064 Wheelchair Transportation “EXTENDED”
Pre-Bid Conference: Occurred Closes: 8/9/2012 @ 3:00 p.m.
$ 5.50
S10-081 Dialysis Wheelchair Transportation “EXTENDED”
Pre-Bid Conference: Occurred Closes: 8/9/2012 @ 4:00 p.m.
$ 5.50
C12-112 Fuel Lube Body Truck Pre-Bid Conference: 8/2/2012 @ 3:00 p.m. Opens: 8/16/2012 @ 3:00 p.m.
$5.50
EDELMAN continued from Page 23
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www.washingtoninformer.com The Washington Informer Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 47
Rancher’s Reserve® Beef New York Strip SteakOr Boneless Beef New York Strip Steak $7.99 lb.
EXTREME
PACKVALUE
599lb.
U.S. BEEF100%
WI
ITEMS & PRICES IN THIS AD ARE AVAILABLE AT YOUR SEAT PLEASANT, MD: 6300 CENTRAL AVE., LANDOVER HILLS, MD: 4600 COOPERS LN., BALTIMORE, MD: 1205 W. PRATT ST., 5660 BALTIMORE NATIONAL PIKE, 2401 N. CHARLES ST., TEMPLE HILLS, MD: 2346 IVERSON ST., DISTRICT HEIGHTS, MD: 5800 SILVER HILL RD., OXON HILL, MD: 6235 OXON HILL RD., WASHINGTON, DC: 3830 GEORGIA AVE. NW., 514 RHODE ISLAND AVE. NE, 322 40TH ST. NE., 6500 PINEY BRANCH RD. NW, 2845 ALABAMA AVE. SE, 1747 COLUMBIA RD., NW AND 1601 MARYLAND AVE. NE SAFEWAY STORES. ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE ARE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. SAVINGS VALUES MAY VARY BY STORE. SOME ADVERTISED ITEMS MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES. SOME
ADVERTISED PRICES MAY BE EVEN LOWER IN SOME STORES. ALL APPLICABLE TAXES MUST BE PAID BY THE PURCHASER. SALES OF PRODUCTS CONTAINING EPHEDRINE, PSEUDOEPHEDRINE OR PHENYLPROPANOLAMINE LIMITED BY LAW. “ON BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE (“BOGO”) OFFERS, CUSTOMER MUST PURCHASE THE FIRST ITEM TO RECEIVE THE SECOND ITEM FREE. BOGO OFFERS ARE NOT 1/2 PRICE SALES. IF ONLY A SINGLE ITEM IS PURCHASED, THE REGULAR PRICE APPLIES. MANUFACTURERS’ COUPONS MAY BE USED ON PURCHASED ITEMS ONLY - NOT ON FREE ITEMS. LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASED ITEM. CUSTOMER WILL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR TAX AND/OR BOTTLE DEPOSIT ON PURCHASED AND FREE ITEMS.” NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
CORRECT ALL PRINTED ERRORS. © 2012 SAFEWAY INC. ALL LIMITS ARE PER HOUSEHOLD, PER DAY.
Prices on this page are effective Wednesday, August 1 thru Tuesday, August 7, 2012. ALL LIMITS ARE PER HOUSEHOLD, PER DAY. Selection varies by store.
in a single transaction using your Safeway Club Card and...
$��
*
Spendor more
It’s time to stock up! �$AYS�From Wed. 8/1 to
Sun. 8/5 only!
Reward Coupon!
$1�get a
Use on your next shopping trip thru Sun. 8/12
Safeway Whole Roasting ChickenOr Perdue Whole Roasting Chicken, 99¢ lb.
* Get a $10 off coupon for your next grocery shopping at Safeway when you spend $75 or more in qualified purchases in a single transaction with your Safeway Club Card (calculated after deduction of card savings and all other discounts and savings and not including the excluded purchases below) between Wednesday, 8/1/12 and Sunday, 8/5/12. Qualified purchases exclude purchases of: Beer, Wine, Spirits, Tobacco Products, Fuel, All Fluid Items in the Refrigerated Dairy Section (including Fluid Dairy and Dairy Substitutes), Prescription Items and Co-payments, Bus/Commuter Passes, Fishing/Hunting Licenses and Tags, Postage Stamps, Money Orders, Money Transfers, Ski Tickets, Amusement Park Tickets, Event Tickets, Lottery Tickets, Phone Cards, Gift Cards, and Gift Certificates; also excludes: Bottle Deposits and Sales Tax. Limit one (1) coupon per transaction. Coupon is valid on your next grocery purchase of $10 or more and is subject to additional terms and conditions. You pay sales tax on purchases made with coupon. Coupon cannot be combined with any other discount or offer. Coupon has no cash value and expires 8/12/12. Void where prohibited by law. We reserve the right to correct typographical, pictorial and other ad errors. Online and in-store prices, discounts and offers may differ.
There’s a yogurt for any meal or snack.
Yoplait Yogurt4 to 6-oz.
Selected varieties.Club Price: 50¢ ea.
Chobani Greek Yogurt
6-oz. Selected varieties.Club Price: $1.00 ea.
Dannon Activia or Danimals Yogurt
12-pk, 3.1 to 4-oz. Selected varieties.
Muller Corner or Corner Greek Yogurt
5.3-oz. Selected varieties.
Club Price: $1.00 ea.
10for $5 10
for $10 499 10for $10
Hormel Black Label Bacon12 to 16-oz. Selected varieties.
Arnold Whole Grains Bread or Sandwich Thins24-oz. Breads or 12-oz. Thins.
BUY 1 GET
1 FREEEQUAL OR LESSER VALUE
Center Cut Boneless Pork Top Loin Chops
299lb.
EXTREME
PACKVALUE
Signature Cafe® Whole Roasted Chicken30-oz. SAVE up to $2.00 ea.
599ea.
Edy’s Ice Cream or Nestle Novelties1.5-qt. or 4 to 6-ct. Selected varieties. Club Price: $3.00 ea.
2for $6
6-Pack Pepsi24-oz. bottles. Selected varieties. Club Price: $3.00 ea.
2for $6 Smart Ones Meals
3.95 to 11.5-oz. Selected varieties. Club Price: $2.00 ea. SAVE up to $2.50 on 5
5for $10
Lucerne® MilkGallon. 2%, 1%, Skim Deluxe or Fat Free.
379
Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes10.5-oz., Raisin Bran 18.7-oz. Cereal
or Pop Tarts 8-ct. Selected varieties.
SAVE up to $2.11
188
Charmin Bath Tissue24 Double Rolls. Selected varieties. SAVE up to $5.50
1199 Arm & Hammer Detergent125 to 150-oz. Liquid, 6.61-lb. Powder or 50-ct. packs. Selected varieties. SAVE up to $3.00
899
Snow Crab ClustersCooked. Previously frozen. SAVE up to $2.00 lb.
799lb.
- Responsible Choice -
Fresh Atlantic Salmon Portions6-oz. Color added. Or All Natural Fresh Atlantic Salmon Fillets, $7.99 lb. Farm raised. SAVE up to $2.00 lb.
399ea.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
WED THUR FRI SAT SUN MON TUES AUGUST
Red Seedless WatermelonSAVE up to $5 ea.
299ea.
Large Hass AvocadosClub Price: $1.00 ea. SAVE up to $4.90 on 10
10for $10
Tomatoes on the VineSAVE up to $1.51 lb.
148lb.
Red or Green Seedless GrapesSAVE up to $1.11 lb.
188lb.
Fresh Express or Safeway Farms Salad4.75 to 12-oz. packages. Selected varieties. Club Price: $2.50 ea. SAVE up to $2.38 on 2
2for $5
In the Deli
399ea.
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48 Aug. 2, 2012 - Aug. 8, 2012 The Washington Informer www.washingtoninformer.com
MEMBER FDIC
As you look to achieve financial success, Industrial Bank stands ready to provide the quality services necessary for you to achieve your dreams. To learn more about our
products and services call (202) 722-2000, or visit our website at www.industrial-bank.com
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