Milwaukee times 6 27 13 issue

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Vol. 32 No. 26 • Thurs., June 27, 2013 - Wed., July 3, 2013 • An NCON Publication Serving The Milwaukee Area • 65¢

Fondy Farmers Market opens for the summer season with annual BBQ cook-off Fondy Farmers Market celebrated its season opener on Saturday, June 22, 2013. Over thirty market vendors were available selling fresh produce and homemade treats. To kick off the celebration, Cross Lutheran Church Children's Gospel Choir performed a rousing repertoire of music. All activities were free, from face painting to fines demonstrations. Residents competed in Fondy's Annual BBQ Cook-off which presented cash prizes, trophies and the title of being Milwaukee's BBQ king and queen. Pictured is Bart Clark, 1st winner; Duril White, 2nd winner; Jermaine Little; 2nd winner, and Georgette Wells, 1st winner. Each participant cooked their favorite meat item, chicken or pork ribs. The market is located at 2200 West Fond Du Lac Ave. This market offers more than 150 varieties of locally grown vegetables, fruits, flowers and artisanal bakery. For more information on Fondy Market vendors, special events, youth activities and cooking demos, visit the market's website at www. fondymarket.org or call (414) 562- 2282.

Photo By George Neal

Milwaukee Health Services hosts Men's Health Fair

Milwaukee Health Services, Inc., hosted a Men's Health Fair courtesy of the City of Milwaukee Health Department and the American Cancer Society on Saturday, June 22, 2013 at the Martin Luther King, Jr., Heritage Health Center, 2555 N. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Drive. The purpose of the health fair was to provide individuals access to health care services, community resources, and education that empower and "enrich the lives of men, which impact their children, families and the broader community," said Patricia Anderson-Wilson, Family Support worker for Milwaukee Health Services, Inc.

Staff Photo

2013 Black & White Ball breaks fundraising record, exceeding $400,000 in proceeds to support Milwaukee Urban League

The Milwaukee Urban League’s 28th Annual Black & White Ball proved to be a

Photo by Yvonne Kemp

record-breaking night. The raising more than $408,000 event exceeded $400,000 net to support League programs. proceeds for the first time by A record 19 major sponsors provided early and substantial support for this year’s event which welcomed a crowd of more than 800 guests. And, six companies presented special gifts to the Milwaukee Urban League during the ball, bringing in another record $250,000 in ball funds. “This year’s support for the

Ball was astounding,” said Milwaukee Urban League president and CEO Ralph Hollmon. “The fact that we crossed a new fundraising threshold is a reflection of the tremendous support that the League receives from this generous community. This support inspires us to continually look for more opportunities to serve underserved parts of our community and help increase graduation rates, decrease unemployment rates and promote the entrepreneurial strength that comes from a diverse community.” Guests also helped boost the evening’s revenues, contributing more than $26,000 through their participation in a silent auction and a spe-

cial backpack donation. The backpacks will be filled with school supplies and distributed to children at the League’s annual fall Health Fair, through local churches and community organizations. The crowd enjoyed a fantastic performance by the Grammy award winning group, The Manhattans, in addition to sounds from The Larry Moore Trio during the champagne reception and D.J. Phil Anderson during the post-ball reception. Pictured at the event are (from left) MillerCoors senior director of multicultural relations Larry Waters and Milwaukee Urban League president and CEO Ralph Hollmon.


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The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

National & Local News

Rep. Barnes statement on passage of Republican budget State Representative Mandela Barnes (D-Milwaukee) on Wednesday, June 19, 2013 voted against the 2013-2015 Republican special interest agenda Budget, a plan that expands the unaccountable voucher school program statewide, spending millions of public dollars on private schools, raises middle-class families’ property taxes, increases the state’s fiscal deficit by another half-billion dollars, and eliminates a safety net of health care and jobless benefits for those hurting in this economy. “A decent budget ensures vast public transportation. A decent budget has a tax plan that contributes to growing the local economy, rather than higher income luxury. A decent budget prioritizes strong public education. A decent budget creates a plat-

Mandela Barnes form for job creation,” said Barnes. “These are only a few things to grow Wisconsin, and put us in the right direction. Regrettably, this is an indecent budget. Democrats boldly chose against offering amendments to the bill, with Barnes calling the budget “too flawed to fix. "There is no recourse at the height of indecency.

This Republican Assembly has voted to deny health care to 85,000 people. They have voted to fund unaccountable voucher schools statewide at the expense of our public schools. They have stood with the wealthiest among us, giving tax cuts to the upper class and exploding the deficit rather than provide the middle class with the tax relief, where it would do the most good. “The Republicans in the Assembly have left our children, families, and communities behind,” Barnes said. “This budget is entirely hopeless for the middle class. So, what I plan to do is spend time talking with my constituents, friends and family about the direct attack on our communities.”

Voices Against Violence Coalition kick-off The Peace for Change Alliance Stop the Violence Project (SVP) began a few months ago and now is holding a Voices Against Violence Coalition Kickoff on Saturday June 29, 2013 at the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Center located at 1531 W. Vliet Street, in Milwaukee from 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. The Voices Against Violence Coalition is a community wide effort to bring together all those harmed by crime, including victims, communities, and offenders. “SVP is driven by victim restoration, offender accountability, and community involvement,” Tracey Dent, founder of Peace for Change Alliance said in a statement. The event on June 29 will include a Resource Fair, involving Clean Slate Milwaukee - a program to assist nonviolent felons clear or ex-

punge records, child support assistance, and a few elected officials will be on hand for the kick-off event. The Voices Against Violence Walk begins at 10 a.m. with a starting point at the King Center on 15th and Vliet Streets. The main portion of the day begins at 11:30 a.m., where guest speakers will be providing personal testimony of how violence has affected their lives. Community leaders will be available to speak on how violence has affected their neighborhoods and districts. Voices Against Violence Coalition members include Workforce Development, Wisconsin Jobs Now, Holton Youth Center, Career Youth Development, Milwaukee Clean Slate, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Center and the Silver Spring Neighborhood Center.

Frederick Douglass statue unveiled at U.S. Capitol A statue honoring activist, abolitionist, author, and former slave Frederick Douglass was unveiled at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, June 19, 2013. A crowd was on hand to watch the dedication of the statue inside Emancipation Hall. Douglass becomes the fourth African American with a statue in the U.S. Capitol, joining Rosa Parks, Sojourner Truth and Martin Luther King Jr. The ceremony honoring Douglass was organized by House Speaker John Boehner

and attended by Vice President Biden as well as some of Frederick Douglass’ descendents, among others. Sen. Harry Reid took the opportunity to bring attention to District of Columbia statehood since that was also an issue Douglass championed.

Supreme Court strikes down Defense of Marriage Act, paves way for gay marriage to resume in California

In a pair of landmark decisions, the Supreme Court on Wednesday, June 26, 2013, struck down the 1996 law blocking federal recognition of gay marriage, and it allowed gay marriage to resume in California by declining to decide a separate case. The court invalidated the Defense of Marriage Act, which denied federal benefits to gay couples who are legally married in their states, including Social Security survivor benefits, immigration rights and family leave. Justice Anthony Kennedy, writing for the majority in a 5-4 decision, said that the act wrote inequality into federal law and violated the Fifth Amendment’s protection of equal liberty. “DOMA’s principal effect is to identify a subset of state-sanctioned marriages and make them unequal,” he wrote. In the second case, the

court said that it could not rule on a challenge to Proposition 8, a ban on gay marriage in California passed by voters there in 2008, because supporters of the ban lacked the legal standing to appeal a lower court’s decision against it. The court did not rule on the constitutionality of gay marriage, but the effect of the decision will be to allow same-sex marriage to resume in California. That decision was also 5-4, written by Chief Justice John Roberts. It was not clear when samesex marriages would resume in California. Los Angeles County said in a statement that it was waiting for a technical step by lower courts — the lifting of a stay that stopped gay marriage in California — but was prepared to begin issuing marriage licenses and performing ceremonies for gay couples.

“It’s right and fitting that Frederick Douglass, this extraordinary man, this unflinching voice for freedom, this unyielding advocate for justice should be honored with an enduring monument. It is just and proper that more than 600,000 American citizens who reside in the District of Columbia should finally have a statue representing them here in the United States Capitol,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said. Reid continued, discussing how D.C. residents have all

the burdens of citizenship and escaped slavery, never but not all of the rights. surrendered in the face of “Washington, D.C., resi- oppression. dents have fought and died in every American war, just like residents of Ohio, Kentucky, or any other state. Washington, D.C., residents deserve the same right to self-government and congressional representation as residents of any other state,” Reid said. The statue of Douglass is 7 ft. and 1700 pounds. Speakers at the ceremony A little reminder also spoke of how Douglass, about life insurance. who taught himself to read

St. Mark's Boy Scout Troop 445 spreads anti-tobacco message throughout neighborhood

Staff Photo

Kaleb Hamilton and other members of Boy Scout Troop 445, from St. Mark AME Church, spent a portion of their time on Saturday, June 15, 2013, stenciling anti-tobacco messages on the sidewalk near their church. Kaleb said the scout organization he belongs to is waging a war against corporate tobacco interest in the country because tobacco was now being placed in products like candy, which can become addictive and harmful to people of all ages who may unknowingly ingest the product.

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002030 – 1/06


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

National & Local News

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Ministers’ Wives and Ministers’ Widows, Inc., Annual Convention in Milwaukee

73rd International Convention

Staff Photo

The International Association of Ministers’ Wives and Ministers’ Widows’ 73rd International Convention is being held in Milwaukee at the down town Hilton Milwaukee City Center June 21 – 28, 2013. The organization was established in the fall of 1940 when Elizabeth Coles Bouey issued a call to ministers’ wives and ministers’ widows of various religious denominations for greater and more effective service in kingdom building. The first conference was held on April 8, 1941 at the Second Baptist Church in Richmond, VA. Mrs. Bouey was president of the organization for 17 years and she brought together ministers’ wives from 30 states, including the District of Columbia, West Africa and eight denominations became affiliated. Past presidents of IAMWMW, Inc., include: Dr. Rendella Lucas, Pennsylvania; Dr. Julia F. Keaton McCormick, North Carolina; Dr. Muriel Lemon, New York;

Dr. Shirley Alexander Hart, Virginia; Dr. Celeste Ashe Johnson, Connecticut/New York; and Dr. Janie Charles Holmes, Connecticut. The IAMWMW organization’s current president is Dr. Beverly Williams Glover from Macon, Georgia. The photo above was taken on Tuesday evening after the “Women in Worship” program held at the Delta Convention Center. Participants in Tuesday program from (l-r) are: Minister Norma Gaines Heath, Minister Lynette Branch, Dr. Margaret Brown Payton, Minister Beulah Glover, IAMWMW President Dr. Beverly Williams Glover; Tuesday evening’s “Women In Worship “ speaker Co-Pastor Susie Owens, Minister Sandra Croger, Minister Patricia Wormley, Minister Vernita Josie and Evangelist Jacqueline Small. “A Woman With a Plan” (II Samuel 20:15) was the title of Co-Pastor Susie Owens’ message.

Clement Church hosts neighborhood bar-b-que and street ministry

Staff Photos

Clement Church, 1436 W. Atkinson Avenue, hosted a neighborhood Bar-BQue on the corner of 15th Street and W. Atkinson Avenue on Saturday, June 15, 2013. The purpose of the event was to have residents of the neighborhood come and meet their neighbors as well as church members. There was plenty of food and drinks, activities and a bike raffle. There was also prayer, free consultation, and preaching, singing and fun activities for children and adults. Pastor Willie Coleman of Clement Church said the idea of having the community event began five years ago, and during their very first event they gave away a color digital TV during a raffle, which was purchased from Wal-Mart. The event now attracts suburban churches, including Elmbrook and Northbrook. This year’s community festival attracted 500 people and the planning for next year’s event is already underway.


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The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

Editorials

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN The Milwaukee Times Weekly Newspaper Louvenia Johnson Luther Golden Nathan Conyers (1981-2008) (1981-2005) (1981- ) Lynda J. Jackson-Conyers, Publisher Ruthe Eleanor Latta, Editorial Page Editor

Budget passage is shameful misrepresentation of Wisconsin values Senator Nikiya Harris’ (DMilwaukee) statement on the passage of the 2013-2015 Wisconsin budget: “We had a real opportunity to help struggling Wisconsinites today and turn our state from dismal to prosperous. But we didn’t. “Democrats offered over 50 amendments, many of which multiple Republican colleagues have vocally supported in the past, but refused to vote for today because they were from the other side of the aisle. Instead of providing or listening to good ideas for our state, Republicans were petulant and engaged in a blame game that doesn’t help anyone. "Wisconsinites have made it clear that they are tired of bickering and want us to work together to find real solutions for the very serious problems in our state. Turns out, it is very hard to talk to people who can’t hear you because they are too busy sticking their thumbs in their ears and waving their fingers at you. “People in Wisconsin want to be self-reliant. They’ve been waiting for three years for 250,000 promised jobs to be able to lift themselves and their families out of poverty. But instead of supporting sensible ideas that will help create good paying jobs,

Sen. Nikiya Harris this budget punishes the very families that have been pushed out of the middle class. "Does anyone really think that requiring twice as many job searches for people who are on unemployment will help them find a job twice as fast? When there aren’t any jobs available and we focus on making the unemployed read a skimpy ‘want ads’ section over and over again, our priorities are backwards. Wouldn’t it make more sense to invest in workforce growth programs and incentivize buying from in-state businesses? “This budget is a shameful misrepresentation of our state’s values. Wisconsin families deserve better and I’m sorry that we failed to spend $70 billion of taxpayer money in a way that mirrors our true priorities.”

Being Frank

The long summer The Miami Heat completed their domination of the NBA by winning their third championship this past week. With the crowning of the Heat the NBA season is over. Basketball season is over and it will be more than a month before football season starts. The long summer now begins. Many people live their lives from season to season. Not seasons as in winter, spring and fall, but basketball to football. This may seem odd but think about how much time the average American puts into these sports. The time spent talking, arguing and watching football and basketball in America is astounding. What then will Americans do now that the two most popular sports are on vacation? Baseball is often referred to as the National Pastime. Baseball has what seems like the longest season in professional sports. The problem baseball faces in America is the game is boring. Many people like a baseball team but refuse to watch a game. The length and lack of excitement lulls many to change the channel during telecasts. Also during the summer baseball is just reaching the midway point of the season. The season runs until late September. Many sport fans will only watch during the month of September or playoffs. Soccer is supposed to be the top sport in the world. That’s where the USA is different from the rest of the

of NBA games being rigged. Every fan will have a concept on why the Spurs lost or the Heat won. These talks will go on until mid-July. By mid-July the sports fan will shift out of a basketball mindset and go into football. The media will assuage the transition by doing specials leading up to NFL camps opening. Once NFL camps open then there will be a daily dose of NFL news to swamp the most rabid fan. The NFL jerseys will come out of the closet. You will feel the energy pick up around NFL cities. The long hot summer will be over and Americans will happily be engaged in sport again. Frank James IV © 2013 beingfrankwithfrank@ gmail.com The opinions expressed in this editorial are those of the writer and not of the Milwaukee Times Weekly Newspaper or NCON Communication, its staff or management. Being Frank is a bi-weekly column exclusive to the Milwaukee Times Weekly Newspaper.

NCON Publications welcomes letters to the editor, as a response to subjects reported or analyzed in the newspaper or on other issues of interest to the community. All letters must be legible, and contain a signature and a phone number. Submissions must be received by Friday to be considered for the following Thursday’s publication.

By Dr. Andrew Calhoun, Ed.D. Special for the Milwaukee Times

I got your back black on black crime no longer exist, home ownership is more affordable, health care becomes more accessible, higher education becomes more available, poverty is eradicated, wars cease, justice become equal, all forms of discrimination end, the right to vote is not questioned and there is equal pay for equal work… just to name a few. I know your wish list is just as long. We all need to think outside of the box sometimes, believe in something greater; dare to be great, dream big

world. There are pro soccer teams in the USA but the number of fans don’t compare to the NFL and NBA. One reason is soccer has not gained a grip on the American psyche like football, basketball or even baseball has. There has been interest in soccer recently, more than the past but the soccer fan is still a minority in America. What then will the lost basketball/ football fan do during the month or so until NFL camps open? What will fill the void of excitement that these diehard fans crave like crack heads needing a hit? The NBA draft will generate some excitement but there is no LeBron James in the new class. The MLB AllStar game will also fill a small amount of the void. Many fans will relive the NBA season over beers, dinner, wherever. The NBA Finals will be debated for a good three weeks. The question of why the Spurs left James open in game seven will be discussed more than the Presidential election. The Spurs blowing game six will bring up conversations

The Milwaukee Times Weekly Newspaper

Rebuilding our Community Some people talk a good game, but when something has to be said or done, they too often are missing in action. As you know, talk is really cheap and does not pay any bills. And that is where we are today, a whole lot of people are talking about what should be done, could be done and needs to be done. But that is about it, all talk and… no action. A lot of people participate in wishful thinking, and that is “OK.” I certainly do. I wish for a day when neighborhoods become safer,

By Frank James IV

Publisher/President Lynda J. Jackson-Conyers and to reach for the stars. But taking the next step, to put our words into action is the hard part. To speculate or to take the risk is what frightens people, for no one wants to be seen as a failure or loser and rejection is hard to stomach. It is easy to spot bystanders, onlookers and detractors, but to find stakeholders is another ball game all together. A stakeholder is also a risk taker, they get involved; speak their (Continued on pg. 10)

Marketing Manager & Assistant to the President George Neal Graphic Artists William Gooden Michelle Anibas

Founders Louvenia Johnson Nathan Conyers Luther Golden Accounting Terry Taylor Printing Manager Angel Reyes

The Milwaukee Times email address: miltimes@gmail.com The Milwaukee Times Weekly newspaper is published each Thursday at 1936 N. MLK Dr., Milwaukee, WI 53212 Telephone: 414-263-5088 • Fax: 414-263-4445 Email: miltimes@gmail.com


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

Christian Times

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Open Door Christian Worship Center congregation walks to new church home

Pastor Kenneth and Michele Lock of the Open Door Christian Worship Center Church, Inc. walked briskly to their new church home, 3223 W. Lloyd Street, on Sunday, June 16, 2013. Before departing the old location, Pastor Kenneth and Michele Lock convened the congregation for a final word of prayer, after which the door to the building was locked permanently for the last time. As overseers of the church, Pastor Lock had everyone

to assemble on the sidewalk in front of the building they were vacating. Pausing for a moment and hearing the horn of a motorist passing by, waved stretched right arm and waved a final goodbye. Arriving at their new church home, Pastor Lock paused for a moment on the church’s steps uttered: “God made this possible,” and led everyone inside, which evoked praises and thanks to God from whom all blessings flow.

Church Announcements Damascus Baptist Church family celebrating 55 years of service Rev. Dr. Ellis Wilkins and the congregation of Damascus Baptist Church, 2447 N. 27th Street, will be celebrating the church’s 55th year of service to this community on Sunday, June 30, 2013 at 3:00 p.m. Their special guest will be Pastor Aaron Morgan and the congregation of Hallowed Missionary Baptist Church. Everyone is welcome to come and fellowship.

New Hope Baptist Church organizing Reunion Choir New Hope Missionary Baptist Church, 2433 W. Roosevelt Drive, is in the process of forming a Reunion Choir to perform on October 5, 2013. All current and former choir members from any New Hope choir is invited to contact Sister Lois Farsee at (414) 616-1057. Rev. Archie L. Ivy is pastor.

Grand Bazaar at New Hope Baptist A Grand Bazaar will be held at New Hope Baptist Church, 2433 W. Roosevelt Drive, on Saturday, July 13, 2013 from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The bazaar will take place in the church’s parking lot on the cross corners of Teutonia and Atkinson Avenue. There will be something for everyone: new and used items, food and fun. For more information contact: Bennie Morris at 414-324-9492.

Preaching of the Seven Personages at Prince of Peace Baptist Church Seven area ministers will be preaching about the Seven Personages, from the book of Revelation chapters 12 and 13, on Sunday, June 30, 2013 at 3:00 p.m. at Prince of Peace Baptist Church, 3701 N. 35th Street. For more information, please call: (414) 4446700. The public is invited. Rev. Steven R. McVicker is pastor.

Summer day camp at New Hope Baptist Church Math and reading, arts, crafts and field trips are being offered at New Hope Baptist Church, 2433 W. Roosevelt Drive, Summer Day Camp July 1 – August 16, 2013 daily from 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Breakfast, lunch and snacks for children ages 5 – 12 years old will be offered. Registration begins June 11, 2013. The per week: one child, $35.00; two children, $55.00; three children, $70.00 and for four children, $90.00. Two or more children must be from the same household. Rev. Archie Ivy is pastor.

Unity Missionary Baptist 2013 college and high school graduates Unity Missionary Baptist Church, 3838 W. Fond Du Lac Ave., is proud to announce its 2013 graduates from college and high school: Brittany Pevey graduated from Paine University, Augusta, GA. Brittany attended college on a four year basketball scholarship. She has returned to Milwaukee. Tequillia Mark Dawson graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater; Ravon Posey graduated from Riverside University High School; Briana Frierson graduated from Milwaukee College Preparatory School; Jorita Townsend, Community High School and Alfred Rainey graduated from Northwest Academy – Milwaukee, WI.

Women’s Auxiliary sponsoring Christian Workshop at Canaan The Women’s Auxiliary of The General Baptist State Convention of Wisconsin, Inc. is hosting a workshop on Saturday, June 29, 2013 at Canaan Missionary Baptist Church, 2975 N. 11th Street. The workshop hours are: 8:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. The registration fee is $15.00 in advance and $20.00 at the door. The three sessions being conducted are: Armed and Dangerous, Illuminated Vessel, Single Saved and Set Apart. The workshop theme is: "Characteristics of a Godly Vessel." Pastor Steven Harris of Antioch Missionary Baptist Church will be the keynote speaker. A continental breakfast and lunch will be served. For additional information, please contact: Sister Ann Wilson at (414) 224-8810.


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The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

CHURCH LISTINGS ARE IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER: ABIDING FAITH FELLOWSHIP - GOD’S CREATION MINISTRIES Another Chance M.B.C.

Abundant Faith Church of Integrity 6737 North Teutonia Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53209 www.yourabundantfaith.org (414) 464-5001 Abiding Faith Fellowship Baptist Church

Weekly Schedule:

Pastor Anthony Oliphant Sr. 4600 West Burleigh Street Milwaukee, WI 53210

ORDER OF SERVICE Sunday School ………………… 9:00 am Sunday Morning Worship …… 10:30 am Tel: (414) 444-2822 Fax: (414) 444-2877

Pastor Robert Pyles

Sunday Worship… 10:00 a.m. Tuesday……………6:15 p.m.

“Discover Your Abundant Faith”

ADULT LEARNING LAB New Life New Beginnings Outreach Suite 205 3500 N. Sherman Blvd. Milwaukee, WI 53216 (414) 445-1072 Free Computer Classes ECDL License Software Registration Fee $25 Wed. 11:00 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Mon. & Wed. evening 6:00 p.m.-7:30 p.m. Weekly Open Enrollment

Pastor Charles G. Green ANTIOCH BAPTIST CHURCH 2033 W. Congress Street Milwaukee, WI 53209 414-445-3303 Rev. Steven H. Harris, Sr., Pastor Order of Services Sunday School ....................... 9:00 am Sunday Morning Worship..... 10:45 am Wed. Prayer & Bible Study .... 6:30 pm Thursday Mission ................... 6:00 pm Thurs. Mass Choir Rehearsal 7:00 pm Come Home to Antioch

6618 North Teutonia Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53209 (414) 527-9986 Phone Sunday School.............................9:00 am Sun. Worship Service..................10.30 am Wed. Bible Service.............……… 6 pm These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world. -John 16:33

Calvary Baptist Church Rev. John R. Walton, Jr., Pastor 2959 N. Teutonia Avenue Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53206 Phone: 414-372-1450 Fax: 414-372-0850 Website: www.CalvaryBaptistMke.org

BETHEL Christian Methodist Episcopal Church 3281 N. 26th Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 Rev. Willie F. Dockery, Jr. “The Church on the Grow”

Weekly Schedule

Sun. School ………….… 8:30 a.m. Sun Worship ………….. 10:00 a.m. Thursday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study ……………………. 7:00 p.m. 442-8970.

Dr. Robert L. Sims, Pastor BETHESDA BAPTIST CHURCH “THE HOUSE OF MERCY” 2909 N. 20th Street. Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53206 Tel: 414-442-1323 Fax: 414-442-1324 E-Mail: bethesda.baptist@sbcglobal.net

Order of Service:

Sun. Enrichment Hour ……………… 8:00 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship ……………. 10:00 a.m. 3rd Sun. Communion Service …….. 7:00 p.m.

SCHEDULE OF SERVICES

BLESSED DELIVERANCE Missionary Baptist Church Rev. J. Anthony Phillips

Sunday: Sun. School ........................................ 8:15 a.m. Morn. Worship ................................ 9:30 a.m.

2215 North 23 Street Milwaukee, WI 53205 (414) 763-9136 (414) 763-9136 (Fax) BlessDeliverance@aol.com rd

Wednesday: Bible Study .................... 10:00 a.m. & 6:00 p.m.

Weekly schedule: Sun. School ................. 8:45-9:45 a.m. Sun. Worship ..................... 10:00 a.m. Wen. Bible Study ......... 6:30-8:00 p.m.

Saturday: Early Morning Prayer ......................... 7:00 a.m.

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP COMMUNITY CHURCH

Rev. Dr. Mary Jean Lewis-Jiles 2176 N. 39th Street Milwaukee, WI 53208 Weekly schedule: Sun. Worship ......................... 10:45 a.m. Sunday School ........................ 9:00 a.m. Sat. Teacher’s Mtg., ................. 9:00 a.m. Wen. Prayer Service & Bible Class ....... ........................................... 6 - 8:00 p.m. Wed. A.M. Bible Class ............ 9- 10 a.m.

Corinth Missionary Baptist Church 1874 N 24th Place Milwaukee, WI 53205 Phone: 414-933-1987 Fax: 414-933-3545 www.corinthmbc.com Rev. John Laura, Pastor

CHRIST TEMPLE C.O.G.I.C. Elder Travis D. Evans, Sr., Pastor 2778 N. 10th Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 414-263-0500 church ofce www. ctemplecogic.og Opportunities to Worship Sunday School ……………9:30 AM Sunday Morning Worship ..... 11:00 AM Sunday Evening Worship ..... 7:00 PM Wed. Evening Worship .... 6:45 PM

3649 N. Teutonia Ave. Elder Milwaukee, WI 53206 Stephen Hawkins, pastor.

Citadel Of Praise Church of God In Christ 2328 West Capitol Drive Milwaukee, WI 53206 (414) 299-0608 Deon Young, Pastor

Weekly Schedule: Sun. School ......................... 9:00 a.m. Sun. Worship ..................... 11:00 a.m. Phone 445-1980. Do watch us grow. Come and grow with us.

WEEKLY SCHEDULE Sun. Celebration of Worship…………….…………… 12:00 p.m. Wed. - WoW Pastoral Teaching ………………………...……………… 7:00 p.m.

CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD C.W.F.F. Temple 132

Rev. Dr. Demetrius Williams, Pastor COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH OF GREATER MILWAUKEE 2249 N. Sherman Blvd. Milwaukee, WI 53208 Weekly Schedule Church Sun. School ................. 9:00 a.m. Sun. Worship ........ 7:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. Prayer Service ................. Wed. 6:00 p.m. Church phone: 414.445-1610 Fax: 414.449-0252

Weekly Schedule

Sunday School 0 9:00 A.M. Sun. Morn. Worship 10:45 A.M. Wed. Prayer Service 6:00 P.M. Wed. Bible Study 0 7:00 P.M. Transportation Available Wednesday - Mission -6 :00 pm Thursday Choir Rehearsal - 7:00 pm “A Church Empowering Lives with Gods Word”

Fellowship of Love Missionary Baptist Church

CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH

2329 North 12th Street Milwaukee, WI 53205 Pastor Rev. William Jackson Missionary Arleathia Myers 414-934-0753 Weekly Schedule Sun. School ........................... 9:45 a.m. Sun. A.M. Worship ............... 11:00 a.m. Wed. Prayer Meeting & Bible Study ...... ................................................. 7:30 p.m. Second Sun. Fellowship: Feb., May, Aug., & Nov ..................................... 4:00 p.m.

DAMASCUS Missionary Baptist Church 2447 N. 27th Street, Milwaukee, WI 53206 Dr. Ellis Wilkins, Pastor Weekly Schedule Sun. School ............................. 9:00 a.m. Sun. Worship ......................... 10:30 a.m. Baptist Training Union (BTU) ... 6:00 p.m. Evening Worship ..................... 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting & Bible Class ..... 6:00 p.m. Phone: 374-6650 or 263-9229.

Eternal Life Church of God in Christ

Rev. B. L. Cleveland, Pastor & Founder Mother E. L. Cleveland, First Lady 7901 N. 66th St. Milwaukee, WI 53223 Ph: (262)242-2878 • Fax: (262)242-0978 e-mail: cogiceterrnal@yahoo.com Worship Services Sunday School..............9:30 a.m. & 5:30 p.m. Sunday Morning Worship...............…11:00 a.m. Tuesday Bible Study............................7:00 p.m. Thursday Bible Study & Evangelical Service ...................................................................7:00 p.m. For more info. visit: www.cogiceterrnal.net

EVERGREEN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH 1138 West Center Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 (414) 265-0400 • (414) 265-0424 Worship Schedule Sun. Church School .................. 8:45 am Sun. Morning Worship ............... 10:00 am Wed. evening Prayer, Bible Study, & Spiritual Formation .................... 6:30 pm

Friendship Missionary Baptist Church

Rev. Judith T. Lester, Pastor Worship Services Temporarily Held at New Covenant Baptist Church 2315 North 38th Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53210 Sunday Morning Worship 12:15 p.m.

905 West North Avenue Milwaukee, WI 53206 Church Phone: (414) 263-6113

Weekly Schedule Sunday School ....................... 9:00 a.m. Morning Worship .................. 10:45 a.m. Wen. Bible Study .................. 6:00 p.m.

God’s Will & Way Church of God in Christ

Friendship Progressive Baptist Church 3276 North Palmer Street Milwaukee, WI 53212 Rev. Michael A. Cokes, Sr. and First Lady Tangie Cokes Order of Service Sun. Early Morn. Worship.............9:15 a.m. Sun. Worship Service...............10:30 a.m. Wed. Bible Study...................... 6:00 p.m. Come G.L.O.W. with us. Stay in touch by texting 71441 and the word theship. Our motto: “No more church as usual”

Genesis Missionary Baptist Church 231 W. Burleigh St. Milwaukee, WI 53224 Rev. A.L. Douglas Jr., Pastor ORDER OF SERVICE Sun. School .......................... 9:15 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship ......... 10:45 a.m. Praising, Great Preaching, Teaching Other ministries to be announced. Church Telephone: 372-7675 Pastor Telephone: 372-7743

GETHSEMANE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Pastor Petria A. Scott

3401 N. 76th St, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53222 414-875-9825 Worship Schedule: Sunday Worship .................... 11:00 a.m. Wed. Bible Study ..................... 7:00 p.m. “CHURCH ON THE CORNER FILLED WITH LOVE”

Pastor Willie Genous & First Lady Evangelist Jo Genous

2900 N. 9th Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 (414) 264-4866 www.godsww.com Godww65@yahoo.com Service Times Prayer M-F ………. 9:00-9:30 a.m. Sunday Sunday School …………… 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship ………. 11:00 a.m. Wednesday Prayer ……………… 6:30-7:00 p.m. Bible Study ……… 7:00-8:00 p.m. Choir Rehearsal ………… 8:00 p.m.

Where there is peace in the midst of the storm

Pastor H.S. McClinton

GOD’S CREATION MINISTRIES

Weekly Services: Sun. School ............... 10:00 AM Sun. Service ...............11:15 AM (414)933-3280 (414)-933-3469 3100 West Lisbon Av. Milwaukee, WI 53208


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

7

ChurCh Listings are in aLphabetiCaL Order: gOd’s gLOry ChurCh - MOnuMentaL M.b.C. God’s Glory Church Ministry 4679 No. 36th Street Milwaukee, WI 53209 (414)875-0660 email: godsglorychurch@sbcglobal.net

Order of Services: Sun. School…………… 9:30 a.m. Sun. Worship………….11:00 a.m. Wed. Bible Study………6:00 p.m. Fri. Evening Evang. …….6:30p.m.

Worship Schedule Sun. Bible Study ...........10:00 a.m. Sun. Worship ................ 11:15 a.m.

“That, according as it is written, He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.” -1Corinthians 1:31

pastor O.r. and evangelist McCoy

Grace Fellowship church of Milwaukee “Helping God’s People To Find Their Place In A Complex World.”

3879 North Port Washington Milwaukee, WI 53212 414-265-5546 rev. andrew & Brenda calhoun

Greater Faith Outreach Ministries, inc. 1934 W. North Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53205 414-562-5183 Bishop Bernard Dotson, pastor Worship Schedule

Sun. School ....................... 9:30 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship ...... 11:30 a.m. Sun. Evening Service ........ 7:30 p.m. Tues. Prayer Service ........... 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Bible Class ............... 7:30 p.m. Fri. - Family Night or Evangelistic Service .............................. 7:30 p.m. Sunday 1560AM ........... 1 until 2 p.m.

greater Mt. sinai Church of god in Christ

Greater GaLiLee Missionary Baptist church “Where Jesus is Lord” pastor Johnny c. White, Jr. 2432 N. Teutonia Avenue Milwaukee, WI 53206 Weekly Schedule: Sun. School .......................... 9:00 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship ........ 10:25 a.m. Wed. Night Prayer & Bible Study .......... ...................................... 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. (414) 562-1110 - Church

Greater MOunt ZiOn MBc

Home Phone: (847) 872-0883 2479 N. Sherman Blvd. Milwaukee, WI 53210-2947 Office Phone: (414) 871-LORD (5673) Kenneth e. cutler, Sr., pastor Worship Schedule Sun. School .......................... 9:00 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship ........ 10:45 a.m. Wed. Prayer Meeting ............ 6:00 p.m. Wed. Bible Study .................. 6:30 p.m.

God's Glory Church Ministry

5384 North 60th St. Milwaukee, WI 53218 (414) 463-5035 e-mail: office@greatermtsinai.com web: www.greatermtsinai.org

Worship services Sun. School ................................. 9:30 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship ........... 8:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m. Tues. PM Prayer ......................... 6:00 p.m.

superintendant Victor C. davis, sr.

Pastor

Wed. Bible Study ...................... 6:30 p.m. Fri Intercessory Prayer ............... 7:00 p.m. Fri. Deliverance Service ............ 7:30 p.m.

Your Community Church • Won’t You Join Us?

Greater Spirit everincreaSinG church (Service at New Prospect Church) 2407 W. Nash St. Milwaukee, WI 53206 OrDer OF Service Sunday Worship......................1:00 p.m. 1st & 5th Sun. P.M. Worship....6:00 p.m. Wed. Night Prayer....................6:30 p.m. (414) 355-4545 MaiLinG aDDreSS: 7631 W. Glenbrook rd. Milwaukee, Wi 53223

Growing In Grace Fellowship Church

5202 W. Lisbon Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53210 Pastor/Teacher Rev. Kenneth Hughes Sunday School.................9:30 a.m. Sunday Worship.............11:00 a.m. Wed. Open Bible Discussion.......... .............................................6:30 p.m. (414) 444-2620

Founder's elder O.r. and evangelistn a. Mccoy 15 Years of Ministry in God's Service 7017 West Medford Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53218 One block North of Hampton Ave. on 70th St. 414-875-0660 Order of Services: Sunday School…………………11:00 am Sunday Worship…………………12 noon Wednesday Bible Study…………6:00 pm Friday Evangelistic Service………6:30 pm come hear a Word from the Lord, it will change your direction.

holy Cathedral Church Of god in Christ

Word of Hope Telecast • Sunday 9AM • ION/ PAX TV • Channel 55/Cable Channel 15 Word of Hope Broadcast JOY WJYI 1340am • Mon – Fri 3:15 PM-3:30 PM

bishop C. h. McClelland

Pastor

Word of hope Ministries, inc. Social Services, Health Care, ATODA, Employment Services, Family & Individual Counseling, Free Computer Training/GED assistance, Prisoner Re-entry Services (414) 447-1965

“Holy Cathedral is A Ministry That Touches People”

Dr. Betty S. Hayes, Pastor & Founder of Holy Mt. Carmel MBC 2127 W. Garfield Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53205 and Christ Gospel On The Rise Soul Saving Ministry, Harrell, AR. WOrShip ScheDuLe Sun. Words To Grow By....................9 a.m. Sunday Worship........................10:45 a.m. raDiO MiniStrieS Sun. (Camden, AR) KAMD.........8:45 a.m. Sun. (Warren, AR) KWRF...........9:30 a.m. Sun. (Milwaukee) JOY 1340.......7:30 p.m. Sat. (Milwaukee) WGLB 1560....2:55 p.m. (414) 344-5361 (Office) Prayer Line - (414) 871-1208 24 hr.

holy temple Firstborn MB church, inc. 4960 N. 18th Street Milwaukee, WI 53209 414-264-4002 (Office) website:htfirstborn.org Dr. Lezar & Lady Burnside pastors Sunday School...................8:00 a.m. Sun. Worship......................9:15 a.m. Tues. Bible Class................7:00 p.m.

“Changing Lives with a Changeless Word”

Jesus is the Way Ministries (C.O.g.i.C)

hOLY teMpLe Missionary Baptist church 4245 N. 60th Street Milwaukee, WI 53216

pastor eugene cowan, ii Senior Servent Leader 4519 W. Villard Avenue Milwaukee, WI 53218 Phone: 461-8484 • Fax: 461-9797 www.JeremiahMBC.com

Sunday School .............. 8:00 to 9:00 a.m. Sunday Service ........... 9:15 a.m. to Noon Wed. Prayer Meeting & Bible class ...... ......................……….. 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. Thu. Bible Class ...... 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Weekly Schedule Sunday School.......................9:00 a.m. Sunday Worship...................10:00 a.m. Tues. Bible Class ..................... 6:30 p.m.

pastor nathaniel Deans

- Family aOda treatment - transportation available -

pastor Jeffrey Coleman First Lady brenda Coleman

“a twenty-First Century Church”

Macedonia Missionary Baptist Church

Life & Liberty church 2009 W. Hampton Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53209 Pastor Evangelist Erma Mosley (Located inside Solid Rock Church) Sunday School..................2:30 p.m. Sunday Worship................4:00 p.m. Tue.-Fri. Prayer..........12 p.m.-1 p.m. Wed. Praise & Choir Rehearsal....... ..........................................5:00 p.m. Wed. Bible Class...............6:00 p.m. All Are Welcome

pastor rodney cunningham 7265 North Teutonia Milwaukee, WI 53209 (414) 228-6779 Phone Weekly Schedule:

Sunday School..........................9:00 a.m. Sun. Worship Service..............10.30 a.m. Wed. Bible Service.........………… 6 p.m. “We’re Stepping Into The Kingdom by Stepping Out on Faith” - 2 Corinthians 5:7

Classes/services: daily Living skills house Management service housing assistance Life skills training parenting Class spiritual support parent assistance education/academic skills development domestic Violence services Mentoring prison Ministry

8415 W bradley rd Milwaukee, Wi 53224 (414)-355-2123 (414)-355-7045 fax rev. Christopher r. boston WeeKLy WOrship serViCes sunday sChOOL .......................... 9:00 a.M.

st. John 14:2 Vers.

sun. spirituaL OrientatiOn CLass ............................................................9:00 a.M.

Kairos international christian church (414) 374-Kicc (5422) www.kmg-wi.org

sun. WOrship CeLebratiOn ...........................................................10:15 a.M.

Sunday Community Ministry......................9:00 am Thursday Community Ministry...................7:00 pm Thur. S.E.T for Youth (Self Expression Thursday) ..................................................................7:00 pm

baptisM & COMMuniOn (1st sun.) .............................................................6:00 p.M.

pastors terrence and Dr. cheryl Moore

Wednesday aduLt prayer &............. bibLe study...................................6:30 p.M.

Gatherings held at Dr. Martin Luther King Elementary School 3275 N. Third Street Milwaukee, WI 53212 (enter parking lot on Ring Street)

Wednesday yOuth prayer &............. bibLe study...................................6:30 p.M.

Time to Worship, Opportunity to Serve

Many Mansions Pentecostal Ministries, Inc.

Founder: pastor nalls 3131 W. Lisbon Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53208 Phone: 414-871-1103 E-mail: SonnyKn@sbcglobal.net Weely schedule: Sun. School……………......…9:30 a.m. Sun. Service……………...…11:30 a.m. Tues. Night Prayer & Study……………….…..……6:00 p.m.

“Transforming lives though the Word of God”

Lamb of god Missionary baptist Church

2034 W. Center st. Milwaukee, Wi 53206 ph: (414) 265-5057 Fax: (414) 265-5029 sunday school.............................10:30 a.m. sunday Worship...........................11:30 a.m. Mon.-Fri. daily prayer..................10:00 a.m tuesday night prayer.............6:00-7:00 p.m thursday intercessory prayer - 7:00-7:30 p.m. thursday pastoral teaching - 7:30-8:30 p.m.

JeruSaLeM MiSSiOnarY BaptiSt church Dr. Donnie Sims 2505 West Cornell St. Milwaukee, WI 53209 442-4720 Sunday Service.......10:45 a.m. Wed. Prayer Night......7:00 p.m.

Dr. Nathaniel J. Stampley, D. Min. Mother Carolyn R. Stampley, M.Ed. Eld. Darrell Grayson, Assistant Pastor 1036 W. Atkinson Ave. • Milw., WI 53206 Phone: 414-264-2727 E-mail: heritageintmin@yahoo.com Web: heritageintmin.org Weekly Schedule Sunday School......................9:00 a.m. Sunday Morning Worship....10:30 a.m. Monday - Friday Prayer...........6:00 a.m. Thursday Worship & Bible Studies....... ...............................................6:00 p.m. “A Local Church With A Global Mission”

JereMiah Missionary Baptist church

2677 north 40th Street • Milwaukee, Wi 53210 Church Office (414) 447-1967 www.holycathedral.org Order of Service Sunday Morning Worship - 8:30 AM and 11:00 AM Sunday School.........................................10:00 AM Sunday Evening Worship...........................6:45 PM tuesday Prayer....................................12:00 Noon Tuesday Prayer & Bible Band....................7:00 PM Tuesday Pastoral Teaching........................7:30 PM Friday Prayer.......................................12:00 Noon Friday Evangelistic Service........................7:00 PM

heritage international Ministries c.O.G.i.c.

Miracle temple of Deliverance

MetrOpOLitan Missionary Baptist church

1345 W. Burleigh Street. Milwaukee, WI 53206 Rev. Willie D. Wanzo, Sr., pastor. Weekly Schedule: Sunday School......................9:00 a.m. Sun. Worship Service.........10:45 a.m. Phone: 562-7200; fellowship hall, 263-9063; Residence 463-1488.

elder Betty Steward, pastor 1000 W. Burleigh Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53206 Order of Service: Sunday Ministry …………10:00 a.m. Worship Service ……… 11:30 a.m. Thursday Bible Study …… 7:00 p.m.

“Where We Preach the Word, Teach the Word, and Live the Word”

Monumental Missionary Baptist church

2407 W. north ave. Milwaukee, Wi 53205 (414) 933-2443 Rev. Roy C. Watson, Pastor First Lady, Sharon Watson Weekly Schedule: Sun. Early Worship 0 8:00 a.m. Sunday School 0 9:00 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 a.m. Wed. Bible Study 0 6:30 p.m.


8

The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

ChurCh Listings are in aLphabetiCaL Order: MOunt CarMeL M.b.C. - redeMptiOn FeLLOwship baptist ChurCh

Mount hermon baptist Church

MOuNt CarMEL Missionary Baptist Church 1717 W. Meinecke Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53206 Rev. hugh Davis Jr. ThM. ThD, Pastor Sunday School......................9:00 a.m. Sun. Worship.......................10:45 a.m. Sunday BTU..........................6:00 p.m. Monday Night Mission............6:00 p.m. Wed. Night Prayer and Bible Study .......................................6:00-8:00 p.m. Certified Marriage, Drug & Alcohol, and Pastoral Counselor Church: 264-2560 Pastor’s Study: 264-8001

New Beginning Seed Faith M.B. Church 138 West North Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53212

1809 W. atkinson ave. Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53206 Office: 414 871-8178 Fax: 414 871-8143 E-mail: Secretary@wi.rr.com Facebook: Mount hermonBaptist Church Order of Services: Enhancement hour Sun. ……… ………………………. 9:00 A.M. Sun. Worship …….. 10:00 A.M. Wed. Prayer & Bible Study ………………………. 6:30 P.M.

Mt. OLIVE BaPtISt CHurCH rev. John K. Patterson, Pastor 5277 North 36th Street Milwaukee, WI 53209 Sunday School..........8:00-9:15 a.m. Sunday Service.................9:30 a.m. Wed. Bible Class 9:15 a.m. & 6 p.m. Church phone 414.461-7755-1610 home phone 414.466-1512

Bobby L. Sinclair, Pastor

new Creation Missionary praise Church

new Covenant baptist Church

2315 North 38th Street Milwaukee, WI 53210 Rev. F. L. Crouther, Pastor Phone: 873-1221 Fax: 873-8614

1404 W. Center Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 (414) 372-7544 (Church) (414) 510-5367 (Cell)

Weekly Schedule

Order of Service

Sunday School.......................9:30 a.m. Sunday Worship........................11 a.m. Thurs Prayer Service.............6:30 p.m. Thurs Bible Study.................7:00 p.m.

Bishop Clayton, Sr., and Lady Renee Duckworth

Sunday Church School……………8:00 a.m. Children’s Church - 1st, 2nd & 3rd Sunday……………………………9:30 a.m. Sunday Morning Worship…………9:30 a.m. Wed. Family Night Sunday School Expository………………………………5:30 p.m. Wednesday Family Night Prayer & Praise…………………………………6:00 p.m. Wednesday Family Night Bible Classes………………………………6:45 p.m. Wednesday Night Worship Service……………………………7:00 p.m. (Last Wed. of the month)

Food Pantry Food Bags* 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. *Please Call For Appointments Hot Meals 2 p.m. - 5 p.m. T.V. Ministry every 2nd Tue. of the month on Channel 96, 8-9 p.m.

“A Church With A True Gospel Praise”

NEWPOrt MISSIONarY BaPtISt CHurCH

Service Begins each Sunday at 1:00 P.M. Ph.#: (414) 708-4884 Come and worship with us!!!

104 West Garfield Street Milwaukee, WI 53212 “Come as you are” Office: (414) 264-4852 Church: (414) 264-3352 Order of Service Sunday School ……… 9:00 a.m. Sun. Morn. Worship .. 10:45 a.m. Wednesday Service …. 7:30 p.m.

Rev. L.C. Martin, Pastor New Life Church - West 3410 W. Silver Spring Dr. Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53209 PH: (414) 393-1290 FX: (414) 393-1234

NEW HOPE BaPtISt CHurCH Rev. Dr. Archie L. Ivy, Pastor/Teacher

Sunday School..........9:00 a.m. Sunday Worship......10:30 a.m. Weds. Bible Class.....6:30 p.m.

The Church were the heart is (II Chronicles 31:21)

new holy ghost tabernacle Missionary baptist Church “God so loved the world” - John 3:16

New Greater Love Baptist Church

3029 N. 35th St. Milwaukee, WI 53210 (414) 444-3106 Pastor Johnny L. Bonner, Jr. “Building On The Vision”

rev. ann Smith, Founder & Pastor

MOuNt ZION Missionary Baptist Church 2207 N. 2nd St., Milwaukee, WI 53212 Phone 372-7811 Rev. Louis Sibley, III, Pastor Sunday School........................9:15 am Sunday Worship..........8 am, 10:45 am 1st Sunday Communion immediately following morning worship. Wed. Bible study and Prayer Meeting .......................................6:30 - 8:30 pm.

2433 W. Roosevelt Drive Milwaukee, WI 53209 Phone (414) 871-0350 • Fax (414)871-4219 E-mail: newhopebc@ameritech.net Weekly Schedule Sun. Worship ………7:30 a.m. & 10:15 a.m. Sun. School .................. 8:55 a.m.-9:55 a.m. Wed. Morning Prayer & Bible Study.……………..10.30 a.m. & 6:00 p.m. Mid-week Service (last Wen. of the month) ...................................................6:00 p.m. “Partnering with God, Practicing Biblical Principles, Strengthening Families”

SuNDaY Sunday School 9:30 AM Sunday Worship 11:00 AM New Life New Beginnings World Ministry & Outreach C.O.G.I.C 2516 West Hopkins Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 Evangelist Margaret Stone, Pastor

Sunday School…………………………….10:00 a.m. Worship Service…………………………..11:00 a.m. 3rd Tues. The Ecumenical Prayer………...6:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer Service……………………..10:45 a.m. Last (2) Wed. Freedom from Addiction Ministry…………………………11:15 a.m. Wed. Food Pantry……………………….12:00 noon Fri. Prayer, Miracle, Prophetic Word……..7:00 p.m. Every 1st Weekend Revival Service: Fri. - 7:00 p.m. • Sat. - 7:00 p.m. Sun. Evening - 6:00 p.m. www.highergroundchristainwomensmovment.org

Dr. Mark a. allen, Sr. Pastor NEW ParaDISE Missionary Baptist Church 2353 West Fond Du Lac Ave. Milwaukee, WI. 53206 Tel: 414-265-0512 Fax:414-265-1910

Prayer Bible Study

5:30 PM 6:00 PM

New Life Childcare Center ages 6 wks - 12 Yrs Now Enrolling 6:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. (414) 393-1290

www.newparadise2353@sbcglobal.net.

Worship Services: Sunday School....................9:00 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship.......11:00 a.m. Tues. Prayer Meeting..........6:30 p.m. Tues. Bible Class.................7:00 p.m. “Come Spend a Day In Paradise”

thursday

rev. Dr. terrell H. Cistrunk Pastor

the Open door Christian worship Center Church, inc.

PILGRIM REST MISSIONARY BAPTIST ChURCh 3737 North Sherman Boulevard Milwaukee, WI 53216 2237 N. 11 St. Milwaukee, WI 53205 (414) 265-5881 Order of Service Sunday School …………… 9:30 a.m. Morning Worship …………… 11:00 a.m. Wednesday Bible Study ……… 7:00 p.m. Voices of Newport Rehearsal ………………………………… 7:00 p.m. rev. W.L. Smith, Sr. , Pastor

“Preaching Christ to the Nation”

pastors: apostle Kenneth Lock sr. and prophetess Michele Lock

3223 West Lloyd Street Milwaukee, WI 53208 Phone:(414) 444-5727 Sun. A.M. Worship……………8:30 a.m. Sun. P.M. Worship……………12 noon Tues. Prayer/TNT Bible Study ………………………………6:30 p.m.

ParaDISE SaNCtuarY Missionary Baptist Church 2705 W. Clarke Street Milwaukee, WI 53210 Rev. David K. Blathers, Pastor

Sunday School.................9:30-10:45 am Sunday Worship.........11:00 am-1:15 pm Wed. Pastor Bible Information Session, Prayer and Testimony..................5-7 pm Sat. Choir Rehearsal and........................ Youth Bible Study..........11 am - 1:30 pm Church (414) 264-2266, Pastor (414) 449-2146

Philadelphia Missionary Baptist Church

2028 W. Cherry St., Milwaukee, WI 53205 Rev. Maddie Turner, Sr., pastor Sunday School...............9:05 a.m. Sunday Worship...........10:40 a.m. Sun. Church Training Union, 6 p.m. Wed. Prayer Service & Bible Study ...............................6:00 - 7:30 p.m. Church Telephone: 344-2400

reverend Martin Childs, Jr., Pastor Sunday Worship ……………………………………… 8:00 a.m. & 10:45 a.m. Sunday Church School: ……………………………………………… 9:15 a.m. Mon. Bible Class ………………………………………… 6:00 p.m. (Women) Tues. Bible Class ……………………………………………………… 12 noon Tuesday Prayer Service ……………………………………………… 1:00 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Class ……………………………………… 7:00 p.m. Wednesday Prayer Service ………………………………………… 8:00 p.m. Friday Youth Fellowship ………………………………………… 6:30-9:00 p.m. Saturday Men’s Prayer Breakfast …… 8:00 a.m. (4427 W. Fond du Lac Ave.) Church Phone: 414-873-1045 Church Fax: 414-873-4101 Website: www.pilgrimrestmilwaukee.org E-mail: preachingchrist@pilgrimrestmilwaukee.org

Pilgrim Baptist Worship Center

redemption Fellowship baptist Church

“a New testament Church” Rev. George M. Ware Pastor

2975 N. Buffum St. Milwaukee, WI. 53212 P.O. Box 241772 Milwaukee, WI. 53224

Sunday Church School.........9:30 a.m. Sunday Worship.................10:45 a.m. Wed. Prayer Meeting & Bible Study ......................7:00 p.m. Church Office #: (414) 265-7171

Prince of Peace Baptist Church 3701 North 35th Street Milwaukee, WI 53216 (414) 444-6700 • (414) 444-6701 fax Steven r. McVicker, Pastor

WEEKLY SChEDULE Sunday School ....................... 9:00 am Sunday Worship................... 10:00 am Tuesday Bible Class .............. 6:00 pm Tuesday Prayer...................... 6:00 pm Thurs. Choir Rehearsal .......... 5:00 pm Welcome to Peace

Senior Pastor Evangelist Barbara Williams Co-Pastor Elder Dexter Williams Power House Deliverance Church 4344 N. 27th St. Milwaukee, WI 53216 414-442-2234 Sunday School...............................9:30 a.m. Sunday Morning Service...............11:30 a.m. Tuesday Night Prayer Service........7:00 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study.................7:00 p.m. Friday Community Food Pantry........2-4 p.m.

transportation available (414) 449-0122

robert a. angel, senior pastor 3500 N. 26th Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 Phone: (414) 875-1926 Website: www.redemptionfc.org

Prayer House of Faith Pentecostal Church, Inc.

4778 N. Hopkins St. Milwaukee, WI 53209 (414) 466 - 3807 Alice O. Green, Founder Dr. Shane E. Rowe, Sr. & Pastor Lekeesha C. Rowe, Senior Pastors

Children’s Min. Sun...................11:30 a.m Sunday Worship.........................12 Noon Tuesday Prayer/Bible Class.....6:30 p.m. www.prayerhouseoffaith.org

robert a. angel Senior Pastor

weekly schedule Sunday School.................................9:00 am Sunday Morning Worship...........10:00 am Sunday Broadcast JOY 1340 - 4:30 pm Wednesday Bible Class.............7-8:00 pm


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

9

ChurCh Listings are in aLphabetiCaL Order: risen saviOr - ZiOn hiLL MissiOnary baptist ChurCh

Shone M. Bagley Ministries /

Phone #: (414) 699-1962 P.O. Box 291 Oak Creek, WI 53154

rev. Dwain e. Berry -pastor risen savior Community baptist Church 2201 n. Dr. mlKing Dr. milwaukee, Wi 53212

services: sunday school sunday Worship Wed. prayer meeting

9:00 am 11:00 pm 6:00 pm

phone (414) 460-8107

Rose Hill Missionary Baptist Church Rev. J.L. Holmes, Pastor 2024 N. Martin Luther King Dr. Milwaukee, WI 53212 Sunday School.......................9 a.m. Sun. New Member Class........9 a.m. Sunday Worship...............10:45 a.m. Tue. Prayer Meeting - 6:30-7:30 p.m. Wednesday Bible Class..........6 p.m. Church phone (414) 264-0360 Office (414) 264-3978 Transportation Available

Showers of Blessings fellowship Church

SCOTT CHRISTIaN YOUTH CENTER & OUTREaCH C.O.G.I.C. 2741 N. Teutonia Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53206

Pastor Annie Naomi Scott Sunday School.............................12:30 p.m. Sunday Services...........................2:30 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study.................7:00 p.m. Friday Fellowship...........................7:00 p.m. emergency Food Pantry every tuesday Hot Meal Program Mon., Wed., Fri. Clothing Bank 2 days • Spiritual Counseling available • 24-hour Dial-A-Prayer 263-1929 Crisis Hot Line for Runaways 263-6515 Future programs: computer classes, sewing classes

SaINT GaBRIEL’S C.O.G.I.C.

Church & Public Event Speaker: - specializing primarily to those who want to know how to get out of their slavery mentality.

SHILOH BaPTIST CHURCH 4801 West Capitol drive Milwaukee, WI 53216 (414) 444-1200 • (414) 444-1212 fax WEEKLy SCHEDULE Sunday School ....................... 9:00 am Sunday Worship................... 10:30 am Tuesday Bible Class .............. 6:00 pm Thurs. Choir Rehearsal .......... 5:00 pm

-

/

Shone M. Bagley, Sr.

Come Home to Shiloh

Ordained Minister

Christian Counselor, specializing in family & crisis, call anytime.

Masters in Christian Counseling

all People are Welcomed

Dr. Robert T. Wilson, Sr., Pastor St. John's United Baptist Church 2429 West Hampton Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53209

yOur ChurCh here Call us at 263-5088 or visit us at 1936 n. MLK drive. Milwaukee, Wi 53212

Sunday Worship Service N. 76th Street & W.Keefe ave. 10:00 - 11:30 a.M. Wednesday Service 7100 W. Villard ave. Milwaukee, WI 53209 7:00 - 8:30 P.M. Pastor darry Tucker Prophetess Paula Tucker

Tel: 414-871-4673 Fax: 414-871-2373 email:st.johnsunitedmbc@ yahoo.com

Rev. Lee a. Shaw, Pastor

ST. JaMES UNITEd Methodist Church

5375 North 37th St.• Milw., WI 53209 (414)795-6397

3438 N. 24th St., Milwaukee, WI 53206 dr. vernon Moore, Pastor/teacher Weekly Schedule Sunday School.......................9:30 a.m. Sunday Worship....................11:00 a.m. Wed. Bible Study....................6:00 p.m. Church Phone: 445-1860 come and find the answers to all of life’s problems and “your needs”.

ORdER Of SERVICE Sun. School ………. 9:00-10:00 a.m. Sun. Worship … 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Tue. Bible Study …… 7:00-8:00 p.m. Wed.NicotineTreatment ……… 6:00p.m.

Order of Service Sun. School...............9:00 a.m. Sun. Worship...........10:15 a.m. Thurs. Prayer Meeting & Bible Class .........................6:30 p.m.

The Reverend Don Darius Butler,Pastor

Pastor Oscar Elim

ST. MaRK

african Methodist Episcopal Church

1616 W. Atkinson Avenue Milwaukee, WI 53206 Rev. Darryl Williams, Pastor Weekly Schedule: Sunday School..................9:15 a.m. Sun. Worship.....8:00 and 10:45 a.m. Wednesday Bible Study.........10 a.m. Wed. Bible/Prayer Service - 7:15 p.m. Phone: 562-8030

ST. PaUL’S EPISCOPaL CHURCH 914 East Knapp Street Milwaukee, WI 53202 Rev. Dr. C. Steven Teague-Rector Sunday’s Worship at 8:00 a.m. and 10:15 a.m. Holy Eucharist, Music, Nursery Handicapped Accessible (414) 276-6277

ST. PETER MISSIONaRY BaPTIST CHURCH 3057 N. 35th Street Milwaukee, WI 53216 Church: 414.442.6389 Home: 414.463.5535 ORdER Of SERVICE Sunday School..................9:00 am Sunday Worship..............10:30 am Tuesday Bible Class..........6:00 pm

Temple of Judah Church

Pastor david W. Stokes 8620 W. fond du Lac ave. Milwaukee, WI 53225 Inside Redeem Pentecostal Church Office Phone: (414) 326-4811

voice of Faith Broadcast on JOY1340 AM....................Sundays @ 5:30 pm Tue. Mana & Bible Study.....7:00 pm Prayer Manna Mon.-Fri...............6:00 am “a Christ Centered Ministry-Bringing people into the presence of God”

Pastor: Rev. Harold Turner Sunday School...................9:00 a.m. Sunday A.M. Worship........10:30 a.m. Sun. P.M. Worship...............3:00 p.m. Tuesday: Prayer Meeting, Mission Mtg., Bible Class....................6-8:00 p.m. Church: 873-3326 Home: 353-5958 2829 N. Teutonia Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53206

TRUE LOVE Missionary Baptist Church 210 W. Keefe Avenue Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53212 Phone: 414-264-6869 Rev. Garry Levy, Pastor

Order of Services Sunday School...............9:30 a.m. Sunday Service...........11:00 a.m. Communion Services 1st Sunday......................7:00 p.m. Wed. night Prayer, Bible, Service & Mission..............................6-8 pm Mission mtg. every 2nd Wed.

Sunday Church School....9:30 A.M. Sunday Worship............10:45 A.M. Wed. Prayer Meeting & Bible Study .........................................6:00 P.M.

TransformaTion Temple

5418 W. Burleigh St. Milwaukee, WI 53210 (414) 393-WORD (9673) Sunday Morning Worship............10 am Tuesday Night Study......................7pm Ripton A. Stewart, Pastor

2661-63 N. Teutonia Avenue Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53206 Office: (414) 265-4850 / Fax: (414) 265-3817 Church Office Hours: Monday through Friday 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. Sunday’s Order of Service Sunday Church School 9:00 A.M. Sun. Baptist Training Union 10:00 A.M. Sun. Morning Worship 11:30 A.M. Mid-Week Schedule Tue. Spiritual Development Ministry Thursday Christian Ministries Thursday Music Ministry

6:00 P.M. 6:00 P.M. 7:45 P.M.

Victorious Child Care, Inc. Open Enrollment 1st - 2nd Shirt - 6:00 A.M. - Midnight Monday - Friday Ages: 6 weeks - 13 years old Office: (414) 562-0530 Tracy Rushing, Director

4300 West villard Avenue Milwaukee, WI 53218 (414) 464-0390 Rev. Robert McFarland, Sr., Pastor

Weekly Schedule:

Sun. School …………… 9:00 a.m. Sun. Morn. Worship…10:30 a.m. Tues. Prayer Mtg & Bible Study…………………… 6:30 p.m.

TaBERNaCLE COMMUNITY BaPTIST CHURCH "A preaching, teaching, healing community of faith.."Matt. 4:23

2500 West Medford Ave. • Milwaukee, WI 53206 OFFICE: 414 -562 -1129 • FAX: 414-562-4713 EMAIL: WWW.TCBCHURCH.COM

Our Weekly Worship Schedule Church Sun. School ………… 8:30 a.m. Celebration of Worship ……..10:00 a.m. Wen. Bible Study & Prayer Meeting……….........6:30 p.m.

The Upper Room Baptist Church

Unlimited Life in Jesus Christ Christian Church 623 W. Cherry St. Milwaukee, WI 53212 Inside the Boys and Girls Club Pastor Sudie B. Jones Services: Sunday School......................10:00 am Sunday Service.....................11:00 am Tue. Choir Rehearsal...............6:00 pm Tue. Prayer & Bible Study 6-7:30 pm Tue. youth Meeting..............6-8:00 pm Wed. Recovery Services.....6-7:30 pm John 14:27

Pastor: Willie F. Brooks Jr. 2200 W. Center Street Milwaukee WI 23209 414/265-5455 Worship Schedule: Sunday School ………9:30 a.m. Morn. Worship…..…11:30 a.m. Mon. Women Circle Min. …… Wed. Bible Study……7:30 p.m. Soar Men Min.……11:30 a.m.

Way of the Cross Missionary Baptist Church

Victory Missionary Baptist Church

Rev. Edward E. Thomas

Rev. Mose A. Fuller, Pastor Home: (414) 871-2933 Church: (414) 445-2958

True Heart Missionary Baptist Church

TRINITY Missionary Baptist Church

Weekly Services: Judah Cafe’........................... 10:00 am Sunday School......................11:00 am Sunday Service.....................12:15 am

ST. TIMOTHY COMMUNITY Baptist Church 3701 N. Teutonia Milwaukee, WI 53208

UNITY MISSIONaRY BaPTIST CHURCH REV. NaTHaNIEL JOHNSON, JR. PaSTOR 3835 WeSt FOnd du LAc Ave. MILWAUKEE, WI 53216 Tel: (414) 445-9249 • Fax: (262)-670-6505 www.unitymb.com email: unitymbchurch@gmail.com Worship Services: Sunday School...........................9:30 a.m. Sun. Worship...........................11.00 a.m. 4th Sun................................Communion 1st Sun....................................Baptizing Wed. Prayer Meeting/Bible Study.......6 p.m. “A Little Church With A Big Heart”

1401 West Hadley Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 Office: (414) 265-2725 ZION HILL Missionary Baptist Church

Weekly Schedule Sun. School ………… 9:30 a.m. Sun Morn. Worship … 10:45 a.m. Tues. Bible Study … 6:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer Service … 6:30 p.m.

1825 W. Hampton Ave. Milwaukee, WI 53209 Rev. Russell Williamson, Pastor Sunday School......................9:15 a.m. Sunday Worship...................10:45 a.m. Wednesday Prayer Service and Bible Study: 10-11:30 a.m. and 7:30-8:30 p.m. Phone: (414) 263-1777


10

The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 20, 2013 - Wednesday, June 26, 2013

An NCON Publication

Education

Community Column

By Michael R. Lovell, Chancellor University of Wisconsin Milwaukee In among the 3,498 individuals eligible for graduation from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee this semester were two small but significant subgroups of students. Along with construction projects we have under way, those students represent significant building blocks for the future of our community. Drew Kartos and Lilliann Paine made up the first significant student subgroup. They were the first people to earn degrees from the Joseph J. Zilber School of Public Health, with both earning a Master of Public Health degree. We continue to be ex-

Building our community’s future

tremely excited about this school and the ability of its faculty, staff and students to help health care professionals better understand and improve the health of area residents and the environment in which we all live. Location was of great importance to us when the school was constructed on North 10th Street alongside one of the former Pabst Brewery buildings. Among our building tenants is the City of Milwaukee Health Department and we’re just a few blocks from Aurora Sinai Medical Center – a major Milwaukee healthcare provider. The second student subgroup was made up of 10 individuals earning their Master of Freshwater Sciences and Technology degrees from the School of Fresh-

Michael R. Lovell water Sciences. The school is already attracting students from all over the world even though the central educational facilities for the school are extremely limited. Those limits, however, are just a short-term challenge as construction continues on the $53 million addition to the school’s main facility at the east end of Greenfield Av-

enue. We received extremely good news about those facilities in June when Kikkoman Foods Inc. – the international soy sauce manufacturer with its largest production facility located in Walworth, Wis. – announced it would help create the Kikkoman “Healthy Waters” Environmental Health Laboratories. Those laboratories will be a key research facility at the Greenfield Avenue site. Another UWM facility under construction also celebrated a milestone in June. The final beam was hoisted into place at the Innovation Accelerator, the first new building at the university’s Innovation Campus along Watertown Plank Road in Wauwatosa. Many friends of the uni-

versity gathered to watch the beam get raised into place and also check out the future construction site for ABB Inc., the first private development at Innovation Campus. UWM already has research projects ongoing with ABB, a global corporation specializing in power and automation technologies, and the new facility on our property will create even more opportunities for ABB; our faculty, staff and students; and the community at large. From small groups of students to large construction projects, UWM is very much focusing on the future of Milwaukee and the surrounding communities. With our partners, we are putting together the building blocks for a solid future.

Public encouraged to ask questions about budget provision Legislation potentially restricts release of voucher school data

MADISON — State Superintendent Tony Evers issued a statement regarding the public information and open government conflict posed by legislation the Wisconsin Assembly passed June 25, 2013 as part of the 201315 state budget. “The Department of Public Instruction takes seriously its responsibility to provide information on taxpayer funded schooling to the public, including parents and the media. Setting a mandated system of preapproval by publically funded private schools for the release of their data to individuals, including prospective parents, is wrong, and would never

I got your back (Continued from pg. 4) minds; for they too have a vested interest in how things go. When a stakeholder takes a stand, they need to know that they are not doing this alone and that someone has their back. For a stakeholder, it’s not just about them, per se, but also for those they represent, and especially those who have no voice and who suffer in silence. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. put it this way… “The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy. Now… who’s got my back?

be legislated or tolerated for public schools. “There is no spin to casting this backroom deal as a retreat in transparency for programs costing state taxpayers almost $400 million over the next two years. “Every taxpayer should read the language of the whole amendment and ask the question: “Why is this needed for publically funded private schools and not public schools?” 3.PARENTAL CHOICE PROGRAMS — RELEASE OF INFORMATION Require DPI, when publicly releasing data related to, but not limited to, en-

rollment of, standardized test results for, applications submitted by, waiting lists for, and other information related to

and completely. Provide that DPI may selectively release portions of the information specified above only to the following: (a) the school district or an individual school; and (b) an entity requesting the information for a specific participating school or the school district, provided that the entity is authorized to obtain official data releases for that school or the school district. [AA 3 Item: 77 and 89] Legislative Fiscal Bureau, pupils participating in or Assembly Amendment 3 to seeking to participate in ASA 1 to AB 40 memoranparental choice programs, dum, 6/19/13 to release the data all at (Emphasis added) the same time, uniformly,

your FIRST CHOICE for real-world LEARNING.

Milw 9-20 7 7/8

Connecting the classroom to internships and jobs that only a vibrant city can offer.

uwm.edu


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 20, 2013 - Wednesday, June 26, 2013

An NCON Publication

11

Bogus reading instruction is the 800-pound quack in many classrooms

By: Bruce D. Price

The single most important aspect of education is reading. If children are not reading, their entire education comes to a halt. That’s what has happened in millions of lives. All the statistics for many decades reveal a curious surprise: our public schools don’t actually know how to teach reading or, more likely, they pretend not to know. This is a bizarre scandal, especially given that children have been learning to read for thousands of years, and 100 years ago this country was thought to be moving toward universal literacy. An odd thing happened circa 1931. The Education Establishment pushed looksay (or Whole Word) into the schools. This method produced bad results, so much so that in 1955 Rudolf Flesch wrote a famous book explaining why Johnny wasn’t learning to read. Mainly, Flesch explained, children need phonetics to learn to read a phonetic language. Imagine that. Then a second odd thing happened. The Education Establishment refused to acknowledge a blunder. Instead, they concocted catchy new jargon (e.g., “Whole Language”), cherry-picked research to prove their method worked even though it clearly didn’t, and heaped abuse on Flesch. The result is that the edu-

cational landscape became and remains a swamp of sophistry and outright lies. Even well-intentioned people can hardly have an intelligent conversation about reading. Unfortunately, this confusion serves as protective cover for the perpetuation of bad theory. Still, phonics did regain favor; and Whole Word, in its pure form, started losing credibility. Circa 1999 the Education Establishment had to stage an abrupt strategic retreat. They conceded minor points so they could hang on to the most harmful feature, that being the exaltation of memorizing Whole Words. The elite educators basically declared: okay, phonics isn’t so bad after all but kids still have to start by memorizing 200+ sightwords. Note the absurd contradiction. Phonics is important but not right away. So now we hear endless chatter favoring Balanced Literacy and “no one method suits every child.” All of this is propaganda which allows the Education Establishment to make children begin reading instruction just as they did 20, 40 and 60 years ago, in the darkest days of Whole Word. Children are no longer subjected to Whole Word in its pure form but they are subjected to a muddled, deceitful version of Whole Word that is almost as harmful. Many children are learning two methods at once, and if

they become good at wholeword-reading, their brains are less likely to become good at phonetic reading. Collateral damage includes ADHD and dyslexia. The common denominator running through every bad idea from 1931 to now is the notion that you can lean to read by memorizing English words as graphic designs or configurations. Suppose a teacher shows you this design, &+; and tells you to pronounce it “car.” You have to stare at that design, preferably write it many times, and keep telling your memory, that’s “car.” The human brain doesn’t have much trouble with a few dozen designs. But in a typical first-grade, children are told to memorize 100 designs, with another hundred or so the next year, and another hundred the year after that. Most children simply give up, overwhelmed and defeated.

This design “&+” is an example of what is typically called a sight-word. This is the essential idiocy in all the bad teaching methods. English words are presented to children as a sight-word, something they memorize on sight. There are no letters, no sounds, no blends, no phonics, nothing that is actually necessary if someone wants to learn to read. For the reader of this article to fully understand the nightmare that was created in our public schools, you have to think of something that you have tried to memorize in your own life, for example, electrical symbols, weather symbols, currency symbols, flags, phone numbers, license plates, something that you were supposed to memorize “on sight.” Or perhaps you studied art history in college and had to memorize scores of paintings. It wasn’t easy but perhaps doable. Remember, however, that naming a painting is successful if you can do it in a few seconds. But reading speed would be to name three or four paintings per second. Virtually no one can do this. My goal here is to have everyone feel the frustration and hopelessness of trying to memorize hundreds of sight-words with instant recall. It just can’t be done unless someone has a nearly photographic memory. But memorizing hundreds of sight-words is precisely what most of American education is based on. Wherever we look around the country (or the world) and find children struggling to read English, you can be sure that Whole Word or Whole Language poisons the air. Note that the Education Establishment, when they embraced Balanced Literacy in 1999, basically confessed that everything they had been claiming for the previous 70 years was a mistake. Remember, they had declared phonics evil, wrong, a waste of time. Suddenly they said: never mind! Why would anyone trust these people?

They had created 50,000,000 functional illiterates by demonizing a method they now declared essential. Now they’ve been creating more functional illiterates by insisting on sight-words in the early grades. This dogma is still peddled on hundreds of sites: “Sight words consist of 220 of the most frequently used words in printed English, excluding nouns. Learning to recognize these words instantly by sight is essential to developing reading fluency and comprehension.“ Essential, it says. Destructive is what it should say. Visit a forum concerned with elementary education or reading, and you’ll hear one wobbly little alibi after another for hanging on to this Frankenstein’s monster that has done so much to hurt American culture. Further confusion comes because some people say sight-word but they’re really thinking of vocabulary words. Of course, everyone needs to learn vocabulary words. But these words are learned in multiple ways: meaning, spelling, phonetics, similarity with other words, rhymes, personal associations, etc. The memory can seize on many factors. But “sight word” is a technical term for words memorized in only one way--shapes the eye can see. Sight-word, both the linguistic term and the instructional concept, is a mistake. We don’t need it at all. Everything flows more smoothly if children learn the letters of the alphabet so they can say them and write them. Then they learn the sounds that letters represent; then they learn the blends of those sounds. Very quickly children know how to read. It all happens in 4-8 months. No sight-words required. Bruce Deitrick Price is an author, artist, poet and education activist. He founded ImproveEducation.org in 2005. This site now has 60 articles. Some are academic/intellectual; others deal with theories and methods used in public schools.

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Kids Special Summer Rate This certificate entitles you to: one free day of lessons at Sabir’s Karate & Fitness Center. Total of one lessons.

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sabir’s 4817 West Center St. Milwaukee, WI 53210 Located in the middle of the block.

Office: 414.445.5231 Cell: 414.550.6615


12

The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

What’s Happening?

Congratulations to the new Mr. and Mrs. Bankhead On Saturday, June 8, 2013 Aaron Bankhead and Jonita Sims were joined in matrimony at Alverno College, located at 3400 South 43rd St. The ceremony was held at the college's chapel with a social hour held afterward in the rotunda and dinner and reception in the conference center. The happy couple were toasted and wished well by over a hundred of their family and friends.

The Milwaukee Times wishes the new couple well on their journey through life and love together.

Photo By Lynda Jackson Conyers

AIM Wisconsin awards Running Rebels first ever AIM HIGH award for a safer Milwaukee

Photo By Yvonne Kemp

The AIM Wisconsin Northwest Jurisdiction in partnership with Eulopia Family Services, Inc. award The Running Rebels Community Organization at the First Annual AIM HIGH For a Safer Milwaukee 2013 Extraordinary Community Leadership Award. Recognizing the organization's tireless dedication towards helping the youth of the Milwaukee Metropolitan Area make the state of Wisconsin safer from interpersonal violence. Pictured (left photo) are Bishop C.H. McClelland (WI Northwest Jurisdiction Prelate), Evang. Steven C. Tipton (AIM WI Northwest Jurisdiction Chairman), Minister Carlos Christian (AIM WI Northwest Jurisdiction Mission President), Pastor D. Suggs (AIM Northwest Jurisdiction Sunday School President), Elder Jermaine Smith (AIM WI Northwest Jurisdiction Youth Dept. President), Norma Mack (AIM WI. Northwest Jurisdiction Music Dept. President), Gloria Rogers (AIM WI Northwest Jurisdiction Youth Dept. Chairlady), Elect Lady Rose Carson (AIM WI Northwest Jurisdiction Evang. Dept. Chairlady), Mother Manns (AIM WI Northwest Jurisdiction Sunday School Chairlady), Dr. Marica Tipton (Eulopia Family Services, Inc. Executive Director). The Honorees Mr. Victor Barnett (Owner/ Founder Running Rebels Community Organization) and his wife Mrs. Dawn Barnett (Co-Executive Director Running Rebels Community Organization). Dr. Marica Tipton, LPC (right photo) is the Executive Director of Eulopia Family Services, Inc. and was the coordinator for the benefit luncheon. Eulopia Family Services, Inc. is a social service agency that offers several different services: Outpatient Mental Health Clinic, ACT Preparatory Courses, Clinical Consultation, Pre-College Writing Portfolio Conference, Bereavement Group families victimize by interpersonal violence and Professional Development Trainings for administrators, educators, community health provides, and community workers.

Welcome Back…

…To

your newly remodeled

401 East Capitol Drive Milwaukee, WI 53212

store at


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

2013 heaDLInerS marcuS aMphitheater

bMo harriS paviLion with miLLer Lite

June 26 . . 7:00pm . . . Violent Femmes and The Avett Brothers June 27 . . 7:30pm . . . FUN. with special guest Walk the Moon and Family of the Year June 28 . . 8:00pm . . . Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers with special guest The Smithereens June 29 . . 7:30pm . . . Jason Aldean with special guests Jake Owen and Thomas Rhett June 30 . . 8:00pm . . . Pitbull July 2 . . . . 7:30pm . . . New Kids on the Block with special guests 98 Degrees and Boyz II Men July 3 . . . . 7:30pm . . . Luke Bryan with special guests Thompson Square and Florida Georgia Line July 4 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Rush July 5 . . . . 7:30pm . . . Tim McGraw with special guests Brantley Gilbert and Love and Theft July 6 . . . . 7:30pm . . . John Mayer with special guest Phillip Phillips July 7 . . . . 7:30pm . . . Eagles

June 26 . . 8:00pm . . . Gavin DeGraw with special guest Nikhil Korula Band June 27 . . 8:00pm . . . Billy Idol with special guest Cherry Pie June 28 . . 8:00pm . . . LL Cool J featuring DJ Z-Trip with special guest Terry Sims June 29 . . 8:00pm . . . Dispatch with special guest The Ballroom Thieves June 30 . . 8:00pm . . . Alice Cooper with special guest No Quarter (Led Zeppelin Tribute) July 2 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Styx with special guest Connor Christian and Southern Gothic July 3 . . . . 8:00pm . . . The Go-Gos with special guest Streetlife w/Warren Wiegratz July 4 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Barenaked Ladies with special guest Vicci Martinez July 5 . . . . 9:45 pm . . . Lewis Black July 6 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Foreigner with special guest Bad Boy July 7 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Jimmy Eat World with special guest The Super Happy Fun Club

miLLer Lite oaSiS June 26 . . 10:00pm . . Diplo June 27 . . 10:00pm . . Dropkick Murphys June 28 . . 10:00pm . . Cake June 29 . . 10:00pm . . Imagine Dragons June 30 . . 10:00pm . . The Wailers July 2 . . . . 10:00pm . . Empire of the Sun July 3 . . . . 10:00pm . . LeAnn Rimes July 4 . . . . 10:00pm . . Skillet July 5 . . . . 10:00pm . . Nelly July 6 . . . . 10:00pm . . 311 July 7 . . . . 10:00pm . . The Mavericks

briggS & Stratton big backyard with CoorS Light and Tap miLwaukee June 26 . . 10:00pm . . Kip Moore June 27 . . 10:00pm . . REO Speedwagon June 28 . . 10:00pm . . Phil Vassar June 29 . . 10:00pm . . Pat Benatar with Neil Giraldo June 30 . . 10:00pm . . Silversun Pickups July 2 . . . . 9:30pm . . . Umphrey’s McGee July 3 . . . . 10:00pm . . Brandi Carlile July 4 . . . . 10:00pm . . Guster July 5 . . . . 10:00pm . . O.A.R. July 6 . . . . 10:00pm . . K’NAAN July 7 . . . . 10:00pm . . Trampled By Turtles

uLine warehouSe with rockStar energy Drink, miLLer Lite and CW 18 & my 24 June 26 . . 10:00pm . . Court Yard Hounds June 27 . . 10:00pm . . Blues Traveler June 28 . . 10:00pm . . Switchfoot June 29 . . 10:00pm . . Less Than Jake June 30 . . 10:00pm . . A-Trak July 2 . . . . 10:00pm . . Jana Kramer July 3 . . . . 10:00pm . . Drowning Pool July 4 . . . . 10:00pm . . Andrew McMahon July 5 . . . . 10:00pm . . Rick Springfield July 6 . . . . 10:00pm . . Craig Morgan July 7 . . . . 10:00pm . . Loverboy

k-nation | caScio interState MuSic Stage with Shepherd expreSS and WmSe 91.7 June 26 . . 8:30pm . . . Faux Fir June 27 . . 9:00pm . . . The Melismatics June 28 . . 9:00pm . . . Bright Kind June 29 . . 9:00pm . . . I’m Not A Pilot June 30 . . 9:00pm . . . The Ivorys July 2 . . . . 9:00pm . . . The Invaders July 3 . . . . 8:30pm . . . Midnight Reruns July 4 . . . . 9:00pm . . . Copper Box July 5 . . . . 9:00pm . . . The Delta Routine July 6 . . . . 9:00pm . . . The Championship July 7 . . . . 9:00pm . . . Archie Powell & The Exports

oTHer HIGHLIGHTS: CAMPUS CLASH: Represent your campus by wearing your college apparel and compete for the ultimate bragging rights. Enter to win a VIP Rockstar Experience for you and your entourage. Check in at the #SFLIVE LOUNGE and receive a fest flag with (1) free weekday admission ticket. KLEMENT’S SAUSAGE PRESENTS THE ELIZABETH “BO” BLACK FAMILY FOUNTAIN WITH B93.3: Your day at Summerfest would not be complete without a stop at the “Splash Pad.” Kids of all ages splash and play the day away while keeping cool. In addition, each day from 1:00 - 2:00 pm the Racing Sausages will be available for photo opportunities (weather permitting). June 28, Noon- 2:00 pm. Purchase a $1 brat (one per person) and proceeds will benefit Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin and the Summerfest Foundation. Listen to B93.3 for special Summerfest promotions.

harLey-davidSon roadhouSe with miLLer High LiFe June 26 . . 10:00pm . . Yeah Yeah Yeahs June 27 . . 10:00pm . . Talib Kwell June 28 . . 10:00pm . . Athmosphere June 29 . . 10:00pm . . Pretty Lights June 30 . . 10:00pm . . Social Distortion July 2 . . . . 10:00pm . . Timeflies July 3 . . . . 10:00pm . . MGMT July 4 . . . . 7:30pm . . . Dark Star Orchestra July 5 . . . . 10:00pm . . Hollywood Undead July 6 . . . . 10:00pm . . Buddy Guy July 7 . . . . 9:30pm . . . Tony Vega

u.S. ceLLuLar® connection Stage with LeinenkugeL’S & fm 102/1 June 26 . . 10:00pm . . Grouplove June 27 . . 10:00pm . . Atlas Genius June 28 . . 10:00pm . . Matt & Kim June 29 . . 10:00pm . . Cracker June 30 . . 10:00pm . . Cold War Kids July 2 . . . . 10:00pm . . AWOLNATION July 3 . . . . 10:00pm . . Alex Clare July 4 . . . . 10:00pm . . The Neighbourhood July 5 . . . . 10:00pm . . The Airborne Toxic Event July 6 . . . . 10:00pm . . Neon Trees July 7 . . . . 10:00pm . . Bad Religion

johnSon controLS worLd Sound Stage with BLue moon and 88nine radiomiLwaukee June 26 . . 10:00pm . . The Spinners June 27 . . 10:00pm . . Amadou and Marian June 28 . . 10:00pm . . Femi Kuti & The Positive Force June 29 . . 10:00pm . . Morris Day and the Time June 30 . . 10:00pm . . Dr. John & The Nite Trippers July 2 . . . . 10:00pm . . Willy Porter Band July 3 . . . . 10:00pm . . Gabriel Sanchez presents The Prince Experience July 4 . . . . 9:30pm . . . Omarion July 5 . . . . 10:00pm . . Greg Koch featuring Joh Cleary, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Paul Barrere & John Sieger July 6 . . . . 10:00pm . . Big Sam’s Funky Nation July 7 . . . . 10:00pm . . Pat McCurdy

jojo’S Martini Lounge with miLLer Lite June 26 . . 8:00pm . . . 5 Card Studs June 27 . . 8:00pm . . . Hot Sauce June 28 . . 8:00pm . . . Boogie Men June 29 . . 8:00pm . . . The Toys June 30 . . 8:00pm . . . The Rhythm Kings July 2 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Eddie Butts Band July 3 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Uprising July 4 . . . . 8:00pm . . . The Barbeez July 5 . . . . 8:00pm . . . The Sweet Tarts July 6 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Love Monkeys July 7 . . . . 8:00pm . . . Cold Sweat & The Brew City Horns

PADDLEBOAT WATER EXPERIENCE: Presented by Badger Meter, this family friendly activity provided by Lakeshore Paddle Sports will give patrons the opportunity relax and take inNoon views of thepm festival PADDLEBOAT WATERto EXPERIENCE: – 7:00 each and day. downtown Presented Milwaukee. by Fromthis Noonfamily – 8:00 pm each day, provided paddle around part of the lagoon for 30 minutes Badger Meter, friendly activity by Lakeshore Paddle Sports in boatsthe that hold up totofour (4)and people. dockand on the north will give patrons opportunity relax takeLocated in viewsatofthe theboat festival of the grounds, this –is7:00 a can’t downtownend Milwaukee. From Noon pmmiss eachexperience! day, paddle around part of the lagoon forSUMMERFEST 30 minutes in boats that hold up to four (4) people. Located at the SKYDIVE SHOWS: boat dock6/26 on the north end of the grounds, – 6/28, 7/2, 7/5 AT 2:30 pmthis is a can’t miss experience! SUMMERFEST SHOWS: Enjoy aSKYDIVE thrilling show from the air when Skydive Milwaukee performs five 6/26 – 6/28, 7/2,over 7/5Lake AT 2:30 pm during Summerfest, landing on Lakeshore State jumps Michigan Enjoy a thrilling show from when will Skydive Milwaukee performs fiveInjumps Park. Any spot on the the air grounds provide eyecatching views! addition, over Lake visit Michigan during Summerfest, landing on Lakeshore State Park. with skydivers on the ground and learn about the history of theAny Sky Knights. spot on the grounds will provide eyecatching views! In addition, visit with skydivers on the ground and learn about the history of the Sky Knights.

TexT ‘SMILe’ to SFeST (73378) For updateS, ofFerS & inFo. Get tIckeTS now aT SuMmerFeST.coM All programs, times, performers, and activities are subject to change. Powered by U.S. Cellular.® Message and data rates apply.

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The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

Home Time

Talking Health with Dr. Carter

By Dr. Lester Carter Owner, Carter Drug Store

Fat belly or flat belly, you choose (part 2) Believe it or not, now you actually do have a choice. Put aside your reasons for your tummy: runs in the family, baby weight, no will power, no budget for liposuction, or (my personal favorite) "getting older". Instead, be unreasonable - and go for it! Let the Flat Belly Diet be your guide. In the new book from Rodale Press, Prevention editor-in-chief Liz Vaccariello and co-writer Cynthia Sass, MPH, RD, give us a breakthrough 32 day plan for flattening our bellies. And, they promise, "Not a single crunch required." This week we will learn all about MUFA's. Eat your MOO-Fahs! What?! ! ! Sounds like bad language doesn't it? Nope. This language is actually bringing good news. MOOfahs is the flat belly authors' nickname for MUFAs, monounsaturated fatty acids. We have been writing about the health benefits of these fatty acids for years. The most famous MUFA carrier is the olive. In 2007, groundbreaking information about MUFAs was published in Diabetes Care. Spanish researchers found that a diet rich in MU-

FAs inhibits the accumulation of weight in the belly. Paniaqua, et. al., looked at three different diets, all containing the same number of calories. The diets were 1) high in saturated fat; 2) high in carbs; and 3) high in MUFAs. All the participants had both large stomach girth and insulin resistance. The amazing result was that the MUFA diet reduced subcutaneous belly fat and visceral body fat. This result is particularly astonishing in the context of insulin resistance. Because MUFAs are the only food ever shown to have this effect, they are the centerpiece of the Flat Belly Diet. The use of MUFAs in every meal is what makes this diet unique. It is specifically

designed to help us lose belly fat! What are the MUFAs? There are five categories of monounsaturated fatty acids: 1. Oils 2. Olives 3. Nuts and seeds 4.Avocados 5. Dark chocolate Let's take a look at each category, beginning with oils. Although Vaccariello and Sass list "high-oleic" safflower oil as the richest in MUFAs at 76 percent, this is not true. Macadamia nut oil is the winner at 80 percent. Possibly because of the high cost of fuel, this product is not as easily available as it was previously. In my experience it is the tastiest plant oil.

My recommendation is extra virgin olive oil. At 76 percent MUFA, it delivers health benefits not available in other oils. It has antibacterial properties and can even kill H. Pylori, the ulcer-causing bacteria. Its antioxidant capacity helps prevent heart disease and cancer. Plus, it helps reduce inflammation. Of course, you can go straight to the olive itself, using them as garnish, salad ingredients, in Italian sauces, and in tapenade, the classic chopped olive spread. Macadamia nuts are the kings of the MUFAs. Sunflower seeds, walnuts, pistachios, and pecans each have their claim to fame. Sunflower seeds contain a fatty acid that has been shown to protect women against heart disease. Walnuts are high in omega-3s, giving protection against heart disease and inflammation. Unsalted pistachios have been shown to normalize blood pressure during stress. Pecans contain more antioxidant power than any other tree nut. Avocados are "fat" with nutrition. They contain lutein, the eye protector, and beta-sitosterol, a cholesterollowering plant sterol. Put in salads and salsa, they more than double the absorption

of carotenoids, antioxidants known to protect against macular degeneration. They are also rich in fiber, vitamin Kl, and potassium. In Nutrition News "Whole, Fresh, & Lively", they covered plant-based antioxidants. We introduced the health benefits of chocolate. Just remember, that's only dark chocolate. Once you add milk/cream to chocolate, you can subtract the antioxidant benefits. Further, chocolate is fattening. A serving size of Dove dark chocolate ( 40 grams) contains 210 calories and 13 grams of fat, 8 of which are saturated. And this is where the MUFAs come in. Some of this saturated fat is in the form of stearic acid. Stearic acid, an unusual saturated fat, is converted by the liver into the "healthier" monounsaturated fat. And, folks, after an hour of searching online, this is as close as I could come to ascertaining the amount of MUFA in chocolate. Negligible. On a diet that is caloriebased, chocolate is not where I would secure my MUFAs.

Even ‘silent’ strokes can harm memory, thinking

Study found many older patients showed signs of damage, even without full-blown stroke diagnosis

People who experience stroke-like symptoms -- socalled “silent strokes” -but do not have full-blown strokes are still at higher risk for memory and thinking problems, a new study finds. Researchers reporting June 19 in the journal Neurology said the findings emphasize the need to be vigilant when any sign of stroke occurs. “Our study highlights the importance of discussing stroke-like symptoms with your family doctor, even if they don’t last long,” study author Dr. Brendan Kelley, of the University of Cincinnati, said in a journal news release. “These symptoms can be a warning sign that a person is at increased risk of stroke or problems with thinking or memory.” Kelley’s team’s study involved nearly 24,000 people, average age 64, who completed stroke-symptom questionnaires at the start of the study and every six months after that for at least two years. Their memory and thinking skills were also tested yearly. During the study, 30 percent of the participants experienced stroke-like

symptoms but did not suffer a stroke. Those people were more likely to develop memory and thinking problems than those without such symptoms. Memory and thinking

problems were much more likely to occur in both whites and blacks with stroke-like symptoms (11 percent and 16 percent, respectively) than in people without such symptoms (5 percent and 10

percent). Another expert said knowing the symptoms of stroke is key. “It is important that people who experience an inability to speak, slurred speech,

weakness, double vision, dizziness or numbness on one side of the body undergo [emergency care] for treatment of stroke,” said Dr. Rafael Alexander Ortiz, (Continued on pg. 15)


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

15

Many young Americans unaware they’re infected with HIV Study found age was key to whether patients knew HIV status and were getting treatment The younger you are, the that more than 200,000 of less likely you are to realize the more than 1.1 million you are infected with HIV Americans who are infected or receive treatment for it, a are unaware they carry the new study finds. virus. The investigators also Early diagnosis, prompt found that only about 37 and continued care, and an- percent of infected people tiretroviral drug therapy are received regular care, only key to lowering the risk of one-third were prescribed illness and death among pa- HIV-suppressing medicines, tients, and reducing trans- and 25 percent had achieved mission of HIV, the virus a “suppressed viral load,” that causes AIDS. meaning HIV was being kept However, this study of to very low levels. 2009 data from the NationThese results varied widely al HIV Surveillance System by age. For example, among found that people under the HIV-infected people aged 13 age of 45 who are infected to 24, only about 40 percent with the virus are much less had received a diagnosis of likely than their older peers HIV infection and only 30 to know they are infected had been referred GBC FLYER_Layout 1 6/13/13 3:02 PMor Pagepercent 1 to be getting proper care. for care. The study also revealed Lower percentages of peo-

ple aged 25 to 44 received regular care, were prescribed drug therapy and had a suppressed viral load, compared with those aged 55 to 64, the study found. For example, 28 percent of young adults with HIV were receiving treatment, compared with 46 percent of those aged 55 to 64. The study was published

online June 17 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine. Overall, more than 850,000 Americans with HIV had not achieved the treatment goal of viral suppression. This included 75 percent of men with HIV, 79 percent of blacks, 74 percent of Hispanics, and 70 percent of whites. “Individuals, health care providers, health departments and government agencies must all work together to increase the numbers of people living with HIV who are aware of their status, linked to and retained in care, receiving treatment and adherent to treatment,” concluded researchers led by H. Irene Hall of the U.S. Cen-

Reverend Garry Levy, President

General Baptist Annual Banquet A “Black-Tie” Affair

ters for Disease Control and Prevention. “In 2011, the HIV field was shocked to learn that only about a quarter of individuals living with HIV were successfully receiving HIV treatment,” Drs. Katerina Christopoulos and Diane Havlir, of the University of California, San Francisco, wrote in an accompanying commentary. “The sobering numbers of those missing out on effective treatment because they did not know they were infected and those who knew their status but did not seek care spurred collaboration between the HIV treatment and prevention movements, two areas with different funding streams that often operated independently of one another,” they noted. “Already the HIV community has mobilized to further develop and study interventions that address bottlenecks in the cascade. Achieving an AIDS-free generation will be within reach if, and only if, these efforts succeed,” Christopoulos and Havlir concluded. SOURCE: JAMA Internal Medicine, news release, June 17, 2013

For more information on HIV/AIDS

Friday, augusT 9, 2013 6:30 p.m. TickeT price

$50

per person

keynote speaker: Bevan k. Baker, FacHe Health Commissioner - City of Milwaukee Alverno College Conference Center 3400 South 43rd Street Milwaukee, WI

For additional information, contact: Ms. Tammy Rasco (414) 264-6869 trasco@truelovembchurch.org

“Working together in unity to fulfill God’s purpose.”

— II Corinthians 5:17

and its prevention contact: ARCW at (414) 273-1991, BESTD Clinic at (414) 272-2144, or 16th St. Clinic at (414) 672-1353

'Silent' strokes (Continued from pg. 14) director of Neuro-Endovascular Surgery and Stroke at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. He was not involved in the new study. “Some strokes can be ‘silent’ or asymptomatic because of the location within the brain,” Ortiz said. Health care workers should ask questions regarding a potential history of silent strokes in patients, he added, so therapies might be initiated that could “decrease the chance of memory problems and, more importantly, to decrease the chance of a lifethreatening stroke.”


16

The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

Personal Finance & Business

By Jason Alderman Director of Visa’s financial education programs

How to dispute a credit card charge Have you ever ordered something online that was delivered damaged or never arrived at all? Or been double-billed by a merchant? Or spotted a charge on your credit card statement you didn’t make? Most of us have. Fortunately, the 1975 Fair Credit Billing Act (FCBA) protects your rights during such credit card billing disputes. It also outlines the process for contesting charges made to your account. Here’s how it works: First, FCBA protection applies only to “open-end” credit account transactions those involving credit cards or revolving charges (e.g., department store accounts). It doesn’t cover installment contracts you repay on a fixed schedule, such as car loans. Billing errors that are covered by the FCBA include: • Fraudulent or unauthorized use of your credit card, whether it was stolen or merchants charged unapproved items to your account.

• Charges that list the wrong date or amount. • Charges for goods or services you either did not accept or that weren’t delivered as agreed. • Math errors, such as being charged twice for a transaction. • Failure to post payments or other credits. (Note: Report suspected fraud immediately. By law, you’re only liable for the first $50 in unauthorized charges; however, most card issuers waive that liability if you report the charges quickly.) Review all billing statements carefully upon receipt because in order to be covered under FCBA rules, most disputed transactions must be reported within 60 days of the statement date on which the error appeared. First, contact the merchant and try to resolve the dispute directly with them. If this good-faith resolution attempt doesn’t work, you can escalate the process by filing a written report with your credit card issuer within the

60-day window. The card issuer is then obligated to investigate the dispute on your behalf. They must acknowledge your complaint, in writing, within 30 days of receipt and resolve the dispute with the merchant within two billing cycles ‘ but not more than 90 days. Send your letter via certified mail to the card issuer’s billing inquiry address, not the payment address. Include your name, address, account number and a description

of the billing error. Include copies of sales slips or other documents that support your position. According to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), you may withhold payment of the disputed amount and related charges during the investigation. In fact, many card issuers may voluntarily remove the charge until the matter is resolved since they are representing you, their client, in the dispute. If it turns out your bill contains a mistake, the credi-

tor must explain, in writing, the corrections that will be made. In addition to crediting your account, they must remove all finance charges, late fees, or other charges related to the error. However, if the card issuer’s investigation determines that you owe part ‘ or all ‘ of the disputed amount, they must promptly provide you with a written explanation. If you disagree with the investigation’s results, you may further dispute your claim with the creditor, as outlined by the FTC at www.consumer. ftc.gov/articles/0219-faircredit-billing. (That site also contains a sample dispute letter and other helpful FCBA information.) If you believe a creditor has violated the FCBA, you may file a complaint with the FTC or sue them in court. Hopefully, you’ll never have a billing dispute that goes to these extremes. But it’s good to know how consumer laws protect you, just in case.

Think Tank leaders working to create economic development fund Several individuals met Saturday, June 22, 2013 at Coffee Makes You Black for a lively discussion on creating an economic development fund to assist individuals from the African American community in creating new businesses in the black community. One of the leaders stated that while the State of Wisconsin receives money based on economic and poverty levels in a community, very little of that money flows back into poverty stricken areas. And that is why members of this think tank see the need for an economic development, which would be controlled by the stakeholders who provide the seed money for this novel idea. MemStaff Photo bers of this think tank also envision assisting business owners in writing business plans and how to manage their cash flow. One of the participants shared the business success of a young man needing only a lawn mower and a edge trimmer, which he was assisted in obtaining. After acquiring the equipment, the individual went out and cut lawns all summer and “never asked for any more money that summer.” Stories of this nature could be replicated many more times. Having a robust business climate in the black community would allow these businesses to assist in

the funding of African World Festival, Juneteenth Day and other cultural activities, which occur in the black community. Leading this discussion last Saturday were: Wisconsin Black Chamber of Commerce representative Reuben Hopkins, and Tony Courtney. The other think tank leaders participating were: Charlotte Payne, Leander Burks, Attorney Roy Evans and Eric Weaver.


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

Home Time

Heating Things Up:

Mack's Heating tips for the home owner

By James Mack

Dryer fires and how to prevent them In most homes, the clothes dryer has become an indispensable part of family living. And for families with children, laundry often seems never-ending. But, many families don’t know that clothes dryers can be a leading cause of fires in the home – approximately 15,000 every year. Most dryer manufacturers these days, rigorously inspect, certify and test dryers while they are still in the factory to ensure that safety standards are met. Once you bring them home, a little preventative maintenance can keep them in good working order. What causes fires? One of the most common causes of dryer fires is lack of maintenance. When lint traps aren’t cleaned as often as they should be, the resulting build-up in the screen or other areas can cause the dryer to perform poorly, operate at elevated temperatures and possibly overheat – with dangerous consequences. Vent systems must also be checked and cleaned to maintain proper air flow for the same reasons. Problems may also occur if consumers place improper items in their dryers, such as foam backed rugs or athletic shoes, or vent their appliances with plastic or vinyl exhaust materials. Make sure that whatever you put in your dryer is approved and safe

to place in a dryer. When in doubt, check the washing instructions on the tag of the clothing or consult the manufacturers website for more information. What can you do? An important safeguard your family can take is to ensure that your dryer has rigid or flexible metal venting and ducting materials to help sustain airflow. This will also reduce operating costs and extend the life of the dryer and clothing due to lower drying temperatures. Additionally: • Clean the lint trap before and after drying each load of clothes. • Don’t forget to clean the back of the dryer where lint can be trapped. • The interior of the dryer and venting system should be cleaned periodically by qualified service personnel. If you notice the drying time is longer, clean the vent system thoroughly to ensure proper airflow. • Replace plastic or vinyl exhaust hoses with rigid or

Please Come And Join Us For “FREE” HOLY GHOST FISH FRY & BAR-B-Q COOKOUT EVERYONE IS WELCOME (Held Outdoors)

God’s Love, Grace & Mercy Outreach Ministry MINISTER JAMES W. NELSON, SR., FOUNDER/HOST/M.C. June 28, 2013 – 6:00 P.M. – 9:00 P.M. 3179 N. Richards Street

flexible metal venting. • Do not dry clothing/fabric on which there is anything flammable (alcohol, cooking oils, gasoline, spot removers, dry-cleaning solvents, etc.). Flammable substances give off vapors that could ignite or explode. • Don’t forget to read manufacturers’ warnings in use and care manuals that accompany new dryers. Also, warning markings can usually be found on the inside of the dryer’s lid and take only minutes to read. Did you know that? Clothes dryers can be found in 80 percent, or 81.5 million homes throughout the United States. A full load of wet clothes placed in a dryer contains about one half gallon of water. As water is removed, lint is created from the clothes. Clothes dryers are one of the most expensive appliances in your home to operate. The longer it runs, the more money it costs you. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) estimates that 15,500 fires associated with clothes dryers occur annually. These fires account for an average of 10 deaths and 310 injuries and more than $84.4 million in property damage annually. On a positive note, the number of clothes dryer fires has dropped by 35 percent from the 24,000 fires that occurred annually, on average,

Tech Talk With Stanley Dyett

P.C. or not to P.C., that is the question?

There are many gadget choices that clutter our electronic market these days and folks are beginning to ask themselves whether the personal computer (P.C.) is still a useful device to have in their homes, considering the vast increases in computing power that the laptop has and recently the increasing power being put into tablets. We all know that a laptop can do most things a P.C. does so the question really is should one buy a laptop or a tablet. First, one has to decide what tasks are mission critical to you and make sure that the device has the capability to run the software or the "app" necessary for that task. If you are a gamer then at this juncture the tablet may not be the most powerful tool today and your choices may be between a laptop or a desktop. If you are a business person and need spread sheeting

For Your "God is at home, Windows 2008 it's we whoPlease haveCome And Join Us For Server and “FREE” Networking goneHOLY outGHOST for FISH a FRY & BAR-B-Q COOKOUT Needs! Computers EVERYONE IS WELCOME walk." and Computer (Held Outdoors) Repairs! God’s- Love, Grace & Mercy Outreach Ministry Meister MINISTER JAMES W. NELSON, SR., FOUNDER/HOST/M.C. June 28, 2013 – 6:00 P.M. – 9:00 P.M. Eckhart Call: (414) 477-6244 3179 N. Richards Street Milwaukee, WI 53212

(414) 514-1500

(414) 514-1500

& REFRESHMENTS GOSPEL SINGING, PRAISE DANCING, FELLOWSHIPPING COMMUNITY NEWS & ANNOUNCEMENTS, LIVE MUSIC “Man does not live by bread alone, but every word that comes From the mouth of the Lord” Deuteronomy 8:3 PLEASE HELP US MAKE THIS A SUCCESS BY BRINGING AND DONATING WATER, SODA, FISH, HAMBURGERS, ETC. GOD BLESS YOU!

functions, etc., then look for the tablet (e.g. Windows Surface Pro) that can run those programs and compare costs and functionality with a traditional laptop. If you are strictly looking for internet functionality and portability then your needs may push you to a tablet. Look at the carrying/travel weight of a laptop versus a tablet which is lighter; and lastly look and compare the costs of either to your budget. Laptops are not expensive but can be heavier than the tablet. Remember that there is no clear winner here, only a choice that you will make based on your own preferences at that certain point in time. Enjoy your device when you get it. There are good devices in the market. Choose well. See ya next week. Stan

Wisconsin Web Worx

Milwaukee, WI 53212 PRAYER, PRAISE, WORSHIP, FREE FOOD

17

Mack's Heating & Refrigeration James Mack • Gas Furnace Servicing PRAYER, PRAISE, WORSHIP, FREE FOOD & REFRESHMENTS

GOSPEL SINGING, PRAISE DANCING, FELLOWSHIPPING COMMUNITY NEWS & ANNOUNCEMENTS, LIVE MUSIC

Owner

• Duct Cleaning “Man does not live by bread alone, but every word that comes From the mouth of the Lord”

• Removal of Lint from Dryers Deuteronomy 8:3

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2491DONATING W. Fond du LacANDAve. WATER, SODA, FISH, HAMBURGERS, ETC. Milwaukee, WI 53206 GOD BLESS YOU! (414) 550-9696 (414)265-7003

Serving the Community for Over 50 Years!


Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

Art & Entertainment

THE

18

The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

By Terri Schlichenmeyer

“Mister and Lady Day: Billie Holiday and the Dog Who Loved Her” by Amy Novesky, illustrations by Vanessa Brantley Newton Nobody listens to a thing you say. Grown-ups are always telling you to hush, be quiet, don’t yell, and always use your inside voice (even outside). You know you’re never supposed to keep secrets, but don’t be a tattle-tale. Talk louder but stop shouting. Don’t make so much noise. Speak up, the grown-ups say, but the only people who listen – really listen to a kid like you - are your pets. And in the new book “Mister and Lady Day” by Amy Novesky, illustrated by Vanessa Brantley Newton, you’ll see that even famous people know who’ll lend an ear… When Billie Holiday was a little girl, she dreamed of becoming a star. And that’s just what hap-

pened: she grew up to be a famous jazz singer. People called her Lady Day and they loved to hear her voice. But even big-time stars get lonely sometimes, and they need someone to listen to their dreams and fears. Lady Day had her dogs. There were, in fact, lots of dogs in Lady Day’s life. There was a tiny poodle she carried in her pocket. She had a little spotted beagle, and two Chihuahuas that she fed with a baby bottle, a giant Great Dane, and a mediumsized terrier named Bessie Mae Moocho. There was a wandering mutt with a sad face who ran away but always found his way back home. But the dog that Lady Day loved the most was a boxer

sang to him. When Lady Day performed at fancy clubs in Harlem, Mister was there – and sometimes, he even had a steak! When the show was over, he guarded Lady Day in her dressing room. Then, one day when her career seemed to be at its best, Lady Day got into trouble. She had to leave home, and Mister couldn’t come. She cried and cried, and promised him that she’d come home as soon as possible. c.2013, Harcourt She wasn’t sure if she’d $16.99 / $20.99 Canada ever see him again. If she 32 pages did, would he remember named Mister. her? Would Mister be Wherever Lady Day was, happy to see her when she Mister was there, too. She returned? knitted sweaters for him and So you say that your child’s bought him a mink coat. She BFF is a D-O-G? Then she’ll cooked for him and even know she’s in good company

Milwaukee Art Museum presents summer-long exhibitions by African American artists Continuing its yearlong celebration honoring American art and artists, the Milwaukee Art Museum presents 30 Americans, showcasing the

work of thirty-one contemporary African American artists who tackle issues around race, religion, gender, sexuality, and cultural identity.

Opening June 14, this wideranging survey drawn from the Rubell Family Collection, Miami, explores ideas central to what it means to be an

ART RACE IDENTITY

30 Americans is a dynamic exploration of contemporary American art. Paintings, sculptures, photographs, and more by many of the most important African American artists of the last three decades powerfully examine cultural identity and artistic legacy. NOW THROUGH SEPT 8, 2013

Sponsored by:

KIDS 12 & UNDER FREE Kehinde Wiley, Equestrian Portrait of the Court-Duke Olivares, 2005 (detail). Image courtesy Rubell Family Collection, Miami. Photo by Chi Lam.

American. “The art in 30 Americans is provocative and challenging, and will explore how our identities and histories are varied, yet we are all still Americans,” said Milwaukee Art Museum Director Daniel Keegan. “This is a vastly different exhibition from anything that the Museum has done in recent years.” 30 Americans features nearly eighty photographs, paintings, sculptures, installations, and works on paper and in digital media by Jean-Michel Basquiat, iona rozeal brown, Nick Cave, Robert Colescott, Leonardo Drew, Rashid Johnson, Glenn Ligon, Shinique Smith, Hank Willis Thomas, Mickalene Thomas, Kara Walker, and Kehinde Wiley, among others. In conjunction with the 30 Americans exhibition, the Museum is presenting thirty works by thirty Wisconsin African American artists in Schroeder Galleria, entitled “Wisconsin 30.” The exhibition was designed to complement the works on view in 30 Americans and was organized by the Museum, in collaboration with the African American Art Alliance support group, and the Haggerty Museum at Marquette University. “Our feature exhibition, 30 Americans, is about identity and creating dialogue, as well as the achievements of these thirty-one contemporary artists, considered some of the best in the world,” said Brady

when you’ve got “Mister and Lady Day” in the house. By giving young readers a sense of Billie Holiday’s deep love of dogs, author Amy Novesky makes this true story into one that kids – especially kids with cherished pets – can completely understand. Novesky lightly glosses over the kind of trouble that Lady Day found, but curious kids will find more of an explanation on the last page. On the flipside, littler children will love looking at the colorful collage-watercolors by Vanessa Brantley Newton. Overall, if you’ve got a young animal lover in your life, put this tale on the shelf and stick around. “Mister and Lady Day” is a book that 3-to-8-year-olds will want to listen to again and again.

Roberts, chief curator for the Milwaukee Art Museum. “We thought it was the perfect opportunity to include regional African American artists and highlight their achievements.” The installation includes artists such as Marlon Banks, Reginald Baylor, Tyanna Buie, Anwar Floyd-Pruitt, Christopher McIntyre, Evelyn Patricia Terry, Della Wells, and Iverson White. “The works presented will help foster dialogue within the community and showcase the outstanding regional work being produced,” said Roberts. As part of the exhibitions, the Museum is offering a variety of family programming, and several free admission days for the entire community. Included in the programming are lectures, videos, Lakefront Festival of Art (June 21-23), Kohl’s Art Generation Family Sundays (July 21), and “MAM After Dark,” an after-hours party (June 14 and August 16). More information is available at mam.org. The exhibition runs through September 8. Adults are $15, seniors and students are $12. Kids age 12 and under get in free every day, as do Wisconsin teachers, veterans, and active military and their families. The first Thursday of every month is free for everyone, thanks to Target.


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

19

The State of Equality and Justice in America

Needed: Action agenda to educate our children

At 5:00 a.m. and, careful not to wake her daughter and two sleeping grandsons, Helen gets dressed for the morning shift at a DC hotel kitchen. “My supervisor is a kid. I hate it, but this job is all that’s keeping us from moving back to the shelter,” Helen told me, adding that, if they get lucky, her daughter Erika might earn a little extra, braiding hair in between caring for the boys and applying for work. Helen once had high hopes that Erika, her youngest child, would become the first college graduate in the family. But with the burden of more than $20,000 in defaulted student loan debt and fees, the prospects that her daughter will ever return to finish her degree are bleak. It’s the story of Helen’s family, and millions more like her. The constricting economic burdens created by excessive student loan debt, not only prevents young people from building wealth, it spirals outward in concentric circles ensnaring parents, children, grandchildren, strangling the economic growth of entire communities. Student loan debt now exceeds $1 trillion, and not surprisingly, African-Americans and other underserved mi-

nority students are disproportionately affected. According to the Center for American Progress, 81 percent of African-Americans borrow money at higher interest rates than their peers, which creates greater financial vulnerability. More than 13 percent of students whose loans came due in 2009 defaulted within three years for non-payment, a situation exacerbated by high unemployment, a struggling economy, and the effects of the Great Recession. We need to shift the paradigm in a way that fundamentally uproots the assumptions underlying low-income students and public higher education funding. What if institutions which serve disproportionate percentages of low-income, first generation traditionally underrepresented students were funded based upon the socio-economic and demographic profile of the students and size of the institution’s endowment? The higher the percentage of lower income students enrolled and persisting in an institution, the higher its federal funding level. The national goal is, after all, moving more of the growing populations to college completion. What if conflicting public policies were eliminated? For example, the cost of incar-

ceration is $26,000 yearly per inmate. The tuition rates at the historically Black Morgan State University are $17,000 and $25,000 respectively for in-state and out-of-state students, and represent positive cash flow to the state. Across the spectrum, the cost of attaining a degree at a public HBCU is $2,500 less per year than at a public HWCU, and $10,000 less per year at a private HBCU than a private HWCU, according to The College Board. If we are to meet President Obama’s national goal of graduating 60 percent of Americans with a two or four-year degree by 2020, an estimated two million additional African-American students must be educated. Historically Black Colleges and Universities will need to increase the number of graduates per year from 35,000 to more than 57,000. This will not happen without a major overhaul of the student financial aid system. We must reform the Pell Grant program to require notification of likely Pell Grant eligibility to middle school student families participating in needs-based federal programs e.g., free/reduced lunch. This will incentivize low-income students to believe that college is possible. We must devise an automatic income-based repay-

THE GENERAL BAPTIST STATE CONVENTION Congress of Christian Education Theme: “Solidarity with the Savior thru his work” St. Matthew 5:15 & St. John 10:20 July 15 – 19, 2013 6:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. WAY OF THE CROSS MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH 1401 W. Hadley Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53206 Children and Youth Department Will Meet At CANAAN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH 2975 N. 11th Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53206 Rev. Garry Levy – Convention President Dr. Lessaree Walker – Congress President Mrs. Elizabeth Hughes – Congress Dean Dr. Louise Mormon – State Director of Christian Education

ment (IBR) plan for student loans by which borrowers can make payments through employer withholding. If a student were unemployed, there would be no obligation to pay. If a student loan borrower must file for bankruptcy the code should be changed back to permitting privately issued student loans to be dischargeable in bankruptcy like nearly all other forms of private debt. We must cap student and parent loan interest rates on subsidized Stafford Student Loans, Parent Plus Loans, and other government education loans at no more than 2 or 3 percent to remove the twin obstacles of high interest rates and prohibitive student debt. This will assist 7.4 million student and parent borrowers. We must incentivize governors, state legislatures, and municipalities to establish Promise Communities in which endowments would be established and funded by a percentage of the regular expenditures of residents e.g., utility and grocery bills. The endowment would fund the cost of a four-year public education for qualifying lowincome students. This concept has achieved successful outcomes in several states. A bold agenda? Absolutely. If the lessons of the 1960s teach us anything, it is that real progress is not built on

cautious compromises. We must begin a movement on behalf of black and brown, low-income, first generation students. The components of the movement are there. It begins with an action agenda to educate our children from pre-school upward. That’s the kind of movement that the National Association for Equal Opportunity in Higher Education (NAFEO) is ready to lead. That’s the bold agenda that Helen’s family and other families in America desperately need now. Lezli Baskerville, Esq. is president/CEO of the NAFEO. This article - the nineteenth of a 20-part series - is written in commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, of which Congressman Lewis is grand marshal. The Lawyers’ Committee is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization, formed in 1963 at the request of President John F. Kennedy to enlist the private bar’s leadership and resources in combating racial discrimination and the resulting inequality of opportunity - work that continues to be vital today. For more information, please visit www.lawyerscommittee.org.

ST. MARK AME CHURCH Presents MEN’S EMPOWERMENT WEEKEND CALLING 100 MEN! The question has been asked, “are men needed?” The answer can be found at St. Mark AME, 1616 W. Atkinson Avenue during the Men’s Empowerment Weekend, Friday, June 28 through Sunday, June 30. This impactful weekend of prayer and fellowship is an invitation for 100 men to come together to pray, worship and break bread. “June represents Father’s Day and Men’s Health Month. Celebrating men and fathers, bringing them together and healing the spirit of a man is critical to addressing the many ills that plague our community. Black men suffer from the highest incarceration rates and unemployment rates,” said St. Mark AME Pastor Darryl R. Williams. Black men have every reason to give in and give up, but we don’t. I know that our men are needed and relevant; we want to remind men that they are relevant. When the question is asked, are men needed? We must answer by standing together through prayer and fellowship and being supportive of one another. This weekend of empowerment is to build our spiritual kingdom, build our relationships with our youth and to remind ourselves what we have to do as leaders in our families.” The Men’s Empowerment Weekend is free and open to everyone.


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The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

What’s Happening?

Rev. Harris and First Lady Pamela Harris celebrate 2nd year anniversary The congregation of Antioch Missionary Baptist Church, 2033 W. Congress Street, celebrated the 2nd year anniversary of Pastor Steven H. Harris, Sr., and First Lady Pamela Harris on Sunday, June 23, 2013 at 3:30 p.m. The anniversary theme was: “I Will Serve the Lord” (Joshua 24:14). After devotion by Antioch’s deacons, Pastor and Mrs. Harris were escorted into the sanctuary by the Pastor’s Aide Committee, which was followed by greetings from Sister Ruthie McDowell. Tributes to Pastor and Mrs. Harris were made by Brother Wayne and Sister Virginia Rucker. Comments were made by Pastor Walter Smith of Newport BapStaff Photo tist Church and Pastor Danny Washington of Greater Spring Hill Baptist Church. Pastor Donnie Sims of Jerusalem Baptist Church was the anniversary speaker. Pictured above from (left to right) are: Pastor Donnie Sims, Minister Victor Manns, First Lady Pamela Harris, Minister Michael Cooper, Pastor Steven H. Harris, Pastor Danny Washington, former First Lady of Antioch Mrs. Pearl Beauchamp, First Lady Fannie Smith and Pastor Walter Smith.

Tabernacle hosts 'Taste of Tabernacle'

The

Staff Photo

The congregation at Tabernacle Community Baptist Church, 2500 W. Medford Avenue, enjoyed their second “Taste of Tabernacle” on Saturday, June 22, 2013. Parishioners treated tasters with distinct cuisine from 12 different states, including: Mississippi, New York, Texas, Utah, Arkansas, Wisconsin, California, Michigan, Oregon, Nevada, Alabama, and Arizona. Food prepared was traditional to the state, and approximately 60 individuals participated in planning, decorations, cooking and serving. This was the second year for this event and is hosted by Tabernacle’s Ushers, Greeters and Nurses Ministry, chaired by Mrs. Kathryn Jenkins and Mrs. JoElla Adams. The main objective is to support the scholarship fund that has been established for the children of Tabernacle as well as hosting a fellowship for the church and the community where everyone can participate, have fun and connect spiritually and socially. The event was attended by 200250 people throughout the day.

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Accepting applications Wausau: classes begin in July; Summit: classes begin in September


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

What’s Happening?

21

Now Unto Him Ministries celebrates 17 years

Apostle Curtis Robinson and Dr. Pat Robinson and the congregation of Now Unto Him Ministries, Inc., 2807 W. Elder Wallace Drive, observed the church’s 17th Year Anniversary on Sunday, June 9, 2013. The anniversary theme was “Be Careful for Nothing.” Evangelist Hattie Robertson was the mistress of ceremony. Other program participants included: Minister Nia Scott who did the welcome while Kimari Barr performed brilliantly doing a praise dance interpreting “Take Me to the King” by Pamela Harris, Staff Photo which received a standing ovation and a thunderous applause. Other program participants include: Now Unto Church. The anniversary speaker was Pastor Larry Singleton of St. Gabriel Church of God in Christ. Him Voices of Praise, and a soloist from True Foundation

Blessed Deliverance hosts annual 'Homecoming Weekend' The congregation of Blessed Deliverance Missionary Baptist Church, 2215 N. 23rd Street, hosted their annual Home Coming Weekend, beginning Saturday, June 15th with a community picnic for individuals living in the surrounding community. At last year’s Community Picnic, more than 250 people were fed and just as many were anticipated to participate this year. The Homecoming Weekend concluded on Sunday, June 16th with worship services being conducted outdoors under a tent. Pictured are (l to r) Deacon Richard Lewis, Deacon Anuntrae Boyd, Pastor James A. Phillips and Deacon Benjamin Carson.

Staff Photo

Rose Hill presents 'Praise in the Park'

Staff Photo

Rose Hill Missionary Baptist Church, 2024 N. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Drive, along with "The Chosen Vessels" TV Producer, Ms. Cynthia Hunt, sponsored a community event - "Praise In the Park" - on Saturday, June 22, 2013 at the Washington Park Band Shelter. Ms. Hunt and her Chosen Vessels organization have sponsored Praise in the Park three years, while this is the first time for Rose Hill Baptist Church. This year's event featured praise dancers, Gospel Rapper The Heavy Bomber, Jarat and the Daughters of Destiny praise dancers from Holy Redeemer COGIC. Local businesses provided the food and beverage. Rev. J. L. Holmes is pastor.


22

The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

June/July Announcements

Happy Birthday Salutes! Wishing You All The Best!

A Special Invitation You are cordially invited to join the Northside Church of God Family as they commemorate the retirement of Rev. Dr. Sandy L. Johnson on

Sunday, June 30, 2013 at Northside Church of God 4858 North 19th St. Milwaukee, WI 53209 Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 a.m. (Family and Friends Fellowship Dinner following service) Tribute Celebration 4:00 p.m. Closing Reception 6:30 p.m.

June 1st Andi Davis June 2nd Katrina McGhee Bessie Blackmon June 3rd Malik Bridges Elaine Gooden June 4th William Gooden Melvine Fumbanks June 6th Anthony Neal June 7th Robin Farin June 8th LaDonna Lee June 9th Willie Lyons Kivon Smith

June 11th Stella M. Miller Ernestine Dodd Yolanda Davis

June 23rd Kyron Lewis Bruce Kern Tanisha Olvarando

June 12th Vera Hawthorne

June 24th Bonnie Rogers Lester Binns Daniell Carney

June 14th David Woolfolk June 16th Darryl Lyons June 17th Marcas Salffold

June 25th Matthew Duncan Kountney Blevins JaMation Bell June 26th LaVell Davis

June 19th June Thaddeus Banks, Jr. Segeh Chamberlin

June 27th Louis A. Lee

June 20th Jaylen Hutcherson Enica Saffold Antonette Green Sean Chamberlin

June 29th Dawin Williamson Jane Hutcherson Bashunda Hall Erma Perkins

June 22nd Yvonne Banks

Do you have a friend, family member, or colleague who has just celebrated or is about to celebrate a birthday? Stop by our office with their name on Monday to get them in that week’s edition of Happy Birthday Salutes! Visit us at 1936 N. Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, call us at (414) 263-5088 or e-mail them to miltimes@gmail.com.


The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 26, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

23

OFFICIAL ADVERTISEMENT

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Office of the Milwaukee Public Schools, DIVISION OF FACILITIES AND MAINTENANCE SERVICES, 1124 N. 11th St., Milwaukee, Wisconsin, June 20, 2013. Sealed proposals will be received at 1124 N. 11th St., directed to the attention of Ms. Gina M. Spang, P.E., Director of the Division of Facilities and Maintenance Services, pursuant to Section 119.52(3) Wisconsin Statutes, until Tuesday, July 16, 2013 at 1:30 P.M., in accordance with plans and specifications for the following work: All contractor(s) and subcontractor(s) are subject to the prevailing wage rates and hours of labor as prescribed by the Milwaukee Board of School Directors of the City of Milwaukee consistent with provisions of Section 66.0903 of the Wisconsin Statutes. BID GUARANTY TO ACCOMPANY BID: MPS Bid Bond, Certified or Cashier’s Check: 10% of Contractor’s Base Bid. EXTERIOR SIGNAGE Riverside University High School 1615 East Locust Street Milwaukee, WI 53211 MPS Property No. 029 MPS Project No. 2771 The HUB requirements for this project are 0% The COIN requirements for this project are 0% The minimum Student Participation requirements for this project are: Paid Employment: 0 Hours Educational Activities: 0 Hours

WI-C6548974

Deposit for Drawings and Specifications: $25.00 MAILING CHARGE: $35.00

American Family Insurance Company and its Subsidiaries, American Family Insurance Company Home Office – Madison, WI 53783 ©2012

Ad:SUAD12048227; Format(84.62mm x 101.59mm) Date: 04/12/2012 09:42 CST Computer Classes

Freelance Writers Wanted The Milwaukee Times Weekly newspaper is seeking qualified freelance writers to produce meaningful editorial content for publication. Qualified applicants who have the prerequisite journalistic skills and educational background will be assigned to write about: Family, religion, education, sport, recreation, economics and politics, crime, incarceration, the criminal justice system, law enforcement and public safety, lifestyle and a host of other subjects. Interested applicants should email a copy of their resume to Nathan Conyers at: miltimes@ gmail.com or fax to: (414) 263-4445. Individuals selected will be called to arrange an interview.

Our Heritage Training, Inc., 5401 N. 76th Street, Milwaukee, WI, will offer Basic Beginning & Intermediate Computer Summer Classes for seniors 50 and over, from June 24- August 2, 2013. The total cost for the classes is $160. For further information to schedule or enroll call Ms. McCoy@ 414-540-8771.

The bidding documents may be obtained 7:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Monday through Friday from A/E Graphics, Inc., 4075 North 124th Street, Brookfield, WI 53005; phone (262) 781-7744; fax (262) 781-4250. Call A/E Graphics for availability of bid documents for pick up. Plans and specifications will be loaned to a prospective bidder upon receipt of the deposit listed, which deposit will be returned upon surrender of the plans and specifications in good condition. Bid documents must be returned only to A/E Graphics, Inc. Plans and specifications may be examined at the Facilities and Maintenance Services’ office. Bid documents may not be examined at A/E Graphics, Inc.. Plans and specifications may also be viewed online at A/E Graphics, Inc. @ www.aegraphics.com. Each proposal shall be for a fixed lump sum. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids or to waive informalities. Upon reasonable notice, efforts will be made to accommodate the needs of disabled individuals at the bid opening through sign language interpreters or other auxiliary aids. The following TDD number is available for the hearing impaired for questions prior to bid opening, 283-4611. GREGORY E. THORNTON, Ed.D, 10337936/6-20-25-7-2-9 Superintendent of Schools.

Save the Date! NDHS Athletic Hall of Fame Event Sat., October 19, 2013 6:00 p.m. Tickets: $50.00 Contact: Saleem El-Almin at 414-962-4000 for more information.

Wanted Minister of Music/Organist Canaan Baptist Church is seeking a Minister of Music or Organist/ Pianist to lead and direct church choirs. Please apply in person or mail resume to Canaan Baptist Church 2975 N. 11th Street Milwaukee, WI 53206 or Email resume to canaanforchrist@AOL.com . Attention Human Resource Committee, Fax (414) 264-1595, call 414-264-2070 MondayFriday.

Walgreens 2826 N. MLKing Dr. 2222 W. Capitol Dr. 2727 W. North Ave. 4808 N. Hopkins St. 7171 N. Teutonia 76th & Mill Rd. LENA’S 4061 North 54th St. (Midtown) 4623 W. Burleigh Ave. 2322 W. Oak St. 4030 N. Teutonia Dr. Libraries Washington Park Library Central Library (Downtown) Banks Columbia Savings 2000 W. Fond du Lac Ave. Seaway Bank 2102 W. Fond du Lac Ave. BMO Harris Bank 2745 N. MLKing Dr. North Milwaukee State Bank 5630 W. Fond du Lac Ave. Pick’N Save 2355 N. 35th Street 5700 W. Capitol Dr. 7401 W. Good Hope Rd. Other Locations Carter Drug Store 2400 W. Burleigh St. Dismuke Insurance Agency 8201 W. Capitol Dr. City Hall 200 E. Wells St. The Milwaukee Times Offices 1936 N. Martin Luther King, Jr. Dr. Also be sure to visit your local churches to get your copy of The Milwaukee Times Weekly Newspaper.


24

The Milwaukee Times Weekly Paper

Thursday, June 27, 2013 - Wednesday, July 3, 2013

An NCON Publication

HERE’S TO SEEING A LOTTO

DOUBLE THIS MONTH! Daily Pick 3 Double Draw Days are here! Every night in June, if the GREEN Double Draw ball is drawn, there will be TWO Daily Pick 3 drawings with TWO sets of winning numbers for that day! It’s only during the month of June, and only for Daily Pick 3. Winning Odds: $1.00 Straight, $500, 1:1,000; $0.50 Straight, $250, 1:1,000; $1.00 3-Way Box, $160, 1:334; $0.50 3-Way Box, $80, 1:334; $1.00 6-Way Box, $80, 1:167; $0.50 6-Way Box, $40, 1:167; $1.00 3-Way Straight/Box, $80, 1:334, $330, 1:1,000; $1.00 6-Way Straight/Box, $40, 1:167, $290, 1:1,000. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the Problem Gambling Help Line: 1-800-GAMBLE-5 (1-800-426-2535). © 2013 Wisconsin Lottery wilottery.com

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6/5/13 9:27 AM


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