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South Florida Mourns The Loss Of Leading Photographer Photographer,, Hobbie 'Sule' Johnson
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The Significance Of Million Man March Tour In Miami
Suffering And Smiling PAGE 8
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Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper VOL. 44 NO. 25 50¢ A Pr oud PPaper aper ffor or a Pr oud PPeople...Sinc eople...Sinc Proud Proud eople...Sincee 1971 THURSDA Y, JUL Y 30 - WEDNESDA Y, AUGUST 55,, 2015 THURSDAY JULY WEDNESDAY
Without addressing disability we’ll never make Death of a Black woman meaningful progress in ending police violence Author unknown
CARTER-LONG
COKLEY By Rebecca Cokley and Lawrence Carter-Long Freddie Gray, Eric Garner, Kajieme Powell, James Boyd, and Ethan Saylor were all killed in controversial and ultimately tragic interactions with law enforcement. Odds are the first
four names are more familiar to most people, but what these individuals share in addition to the troubling ways they died might come as a surprise. It’s not race. All five individuals were disabled. Freddie Gray, who died in the custody of Baltimore police, was reported to have an intellectual disability due to lead poisoning. Eric Garner died at the hands of Staten Island po-
lice, and was asthmatic. Kajieme Powell, fatally shot by the St. Louis Police Department, had a history of mental illness. James Boyd, shot and killed by Albuquerque Police, also had a history of mental illness. Ethan Saylor, who had Down syndrome, died of asphyxia after an incident with off duty officers moonlighting as security guards in Frederick, Md. The medical examiner ruled Saylor’s death a homicide though no charges were filed. “Disability is the hidden variable in so many of both the day-to-day and worst-case violent interactions between citizens and law enforcement in the United States. Looking at disability allows us to see the intersections among incidents otherwise divided by race, class, gender, weapons used, and outcomes,” said David M. Perry [http://www.thismess.net/p/ about-me.html], who has dropped more words on the topic of police violence and disability than any other journalist. “If we don’t get a handle on disability issues,” Perry concludes,
“we will not make meaningful headway in solving the problems of police violence and lack of trust in law enforcement in America.” A September 2014 review of San Francisco officer-involved shootings between 2005 and 2013 by KQED found that a whopping 58 percent of people killed by law enforcement had “mental illness as a contributing factor.” A year before the Bay area investigation, a 2013 report by the Treatment Advocacy Center and National Sheriffs’ Association estimates that half of the people shot and killed by police in the U.S. “have mental health problems.” Much like how racial disparities in educational discipline reveal implicit biases that show how disability discrimination contributes to the School to Prison Pipeline, it is critical that we look deeply into disability issues within communities of color as they relate to law enforcement.
22 The Lord God fashioned into a woman the rib which He had taken from the man, and brought her to the man. 23 The man said, “This is now bone of my bones, And flesh of my flesh; She shall be called Woman, Because she was taken out of Man.” 24 For this reason a man shall leave his father and his mother, and be joined to his wife; and they shall become one flesh. Genesis 2:22-24 (NASB)
This came to me via an email and it made me think how the mother of civilization could be so victimized to the point of destruction. How could we allow this to continue? If the Black woman dies, so does the civility of life as we know it to be. It is so apparent that civilization is headed down a slippery slope to a fertile death filled with improper instructions and examples to how we should treat our women. From 2013 to the present, 15 Black women were killed during police encounters. Haram militants kidnapped 276 young girls from northeastern Nigeria last year. (Cont'd on Page 5)
Legacy of ‘First Lady of the Black Press’ still relevant today
(Cont'd on Page 3)
Black male STEM story By Michael H. Cottman Urban News Service BALTIMORE, MD. — Ayooluwakiitan Oluwafemi, 13, proudly displayed a rubber smart-phone case that he designed on a 3D printing machine. “It’s a prototype,” the Baltimore middle-school student said softly during a July 14 event at Morgan State University. College officials here announced an unprecedented partnership with Verizon Wireless. The Minority Male Makers Program (MMMP) will introduce young Black men to opportunities in the STEM field. That’s short for Science, Technology, Engineering, and
Math. Oluwafemi wants to be an entrepreneur. He refuses to accept any of his mother’s money to go to the movies — or any social events. He aspires to earn his own cash and become a selfmade millionaire by developing and selling cutting-edge 3D apps. And he’s not alone. This initiative is a first-ofits-kind, two-year program that offers 700 Black male students hands-on experience in advanced technology, critical thinking, and problem solving. These skills should help these young Americans compete in a digital, fast-paced, global marketplace.
Ethel Payne still relevant today. Oluwafemi,proudly shows his rubber smart-phone case that he designed on a 3D printing machine. From May 2015 through December 2017, according to Verizon executives, MMMP will provide boys of color at 15 middle schools access to a range of STEM disciplines including
app design, app development, basic decoding, 3-D-Modeling, 3-D-Design, 3-D-Printing, and Robotics. (Cont'd on Page 5)
Funeral services held for George Cooper, a lifelong advocate for HBCUs By Freddie Allen, NNPA Senior Washington Correspondent
George Cooper, longtime supporter of HBCUs.
Pleading Our Own Cause
WASHINGTON (NNPA) – Funeral services for George Cooper, the 10th president of South Carolina State University in Orangeburg and executive director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities, were held Monday, July 27 at The Peoples Community Baptist Church in Silver Springs, Md. He died on Sunday, July 19. In a statement on the death of Cooper, U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said that Cooper made tremendous contributions that benefited countless students in a full and extraordinary career. “Throughout his life, Dr. Cooper was committed to promoting excellence, innovation and sustainability across our nation’s HBCUs,” said Duncan. “Dr. Cooper provided the wisdom and direction needed to form important partnerships between HBCUs and the federal government.”
WWW.
Duncan continued: “This Administration has truly benefited from Dr. Cooper’s leadership and will continue our service and advocacy for HBCUs in a manner that follows his passion, persistence and humility. Although he will be sorely missed, his legacy will live beyond him.” Congressional Black Caucus Chairman G. K. Butterfield called Cooper “a lifelong supporter of higher education” and HBCUs, in a statement from the group. “As a former president of South Carolina State University and the Executive Director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities, George Cooper understood well the role that HBCUs continue to play in providing access to higher education for many African American and minority students,” said Butterfield.
By Jazelle Hunt, NNPA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, D.C. (NNPA) – When James McGrath Morris set out to write his latest book, he didn’t know how timely it would be. When Eye on the Struggle: Ethel Payne, The First Lady of the Black Press hit shelves, Essence magazine had just released its Black Lives Matter issue. The Justice Department had closed its investigation into Trayvon Martin’s murder, with no charges. Mainstream media was scramling
Four reasons you should be tested for hepatitis C. Man gets tested for hepatitis C. (Read full story on Page 3)
(Cont'd on Page 7)
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to report on police violence and systemic racial ills, and Black Americans took much of this coverage to task for its racist, shallow, or negligent portrayals. “We get these events filtered through the mainstream media. The mainstream media is still very white. I don’t mean they don’t hire people of color… it’s a perspective issue. The fact the media had a debate over the use of the word ‘terrorist’ [for Dylann Roof] in South Carolina is an indication,” said Morris. (Cont'd on Page 5)
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A good education by any means necessary Black women have to work 19 months to make
CHAVOUS Kevin P. Chavous, Executive Counsel, American Federation for Children, Contributing Writer, Urban News Services At age six, Mical spent the majority of his first school year kicked out of class for behavioral issues, including angry and violent outbursts. His Great Aunt and legal guardian, Martha Presley, was worried sick about Mical and his future. At such a young age, he seemed destined for failure and even worse, prison some day. “He would go to school on Monday and get suspended, then he would go to school on Wednesday and get suspended again,” Milwaukee’s Martha Presley is remembering her nephew Mical’s kindergarten year at his inner- city neighborhood public school. By second grade, he couldn’t even read. Martha had taken custody of Mical after his grandmother passed away. His grandmother was all he had. Mical’s father was never in the picture,
and his mother had relinquished custody because she wasn’t capable of properly caring for him. “There were domestic violence issues, numerous times when she couldn’t feed him, and they moved from house to house,” Martha says. Martha was overwhelmed and at her wits end. She kept switching Mical’s school, but he continued to get into trouble. He hated school and wasn’t learning anything. While families like Martha and Mical live in the daily, inner-city life struggle, federal lawmakers have been debating the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), an act that determines how and under what guidelines the federal government help fund America’s schools. The last reauthorization of ESEA occurred in 2002 under former President George Bush and was called No Child Left Behind. During the most recent reauthorization debates, various members of Congress have offered an array of proposals and amendments relating to ESEA, such as creating a clear definition of the concept of “bullying.” However, none of these suggestions would help parents and guardians, like Martha Presley, who are desperate to find highquality educational alternatives for their at-risk kids forced to go to schools where they just aren’t performing well, whatever the reason may be. Then again, Congress has the luxury of debating ideas that don’t work for real people a luxury Martha Presley and others like her do not have.
Each passing day, each passing week, each passing year, Mical’s future was becoming bleaker and bleaker. Fortunately for Martha and Mical, Milwaukee offers school choice options for them beyond the designated neighborhood school. One of those options is the Milwaukee Parental Choice program. This scholarship opportunity was created in 1990 and is the first voucher program in the nation. The program offers scholarships for low-income students to attend one of the participating private schools at no cost to the student’s family. It began 25 years ago with 300 students and has now grown to 27,000 kids. “I heard all about that scholarship program and said we’ve tried everything else, lets give this a try,” Martha says. Mical became a scholarship recipient, and she was able to enroll him in Milwaukee’s HOPE Christian School. Life changed for the better from that day on. “I sent him there, and they worked with him,” Martha tearfully remembers Mical’s first days at HOPE. “He wasn’t getting sent home anymore. Mical had to buckle down and work hard with his teachers to get caught up, but now his favorite subject is reading.” “I pay attention, I listen to my teachers, and I don’t get suspended anymore,” Mical proudly says. “I read, I’m really good at reading!” Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill, Congress continues to debate ESEA, and no one knows for sure what the final bill will look like. (Cont'd on Page12)
Saturday, August 15th 10:30 AM to Noon South Regional / Broward College Library 7300 Pines Blvd., Pembroke Pines, FL 33024
CAB Reverse Trade Show Business owners and entrepreneurs, you’re invited to market your products and services directly to Broward County Certified Agency Buyers (CABs). Here’s your chance to get your foot in the door and promote your business to the right people. Bring your business cards, brochures and fact sheets.
Participating Broward County Agencies include: Parks and Recreation • Port Everglades • Purchasing • Transportation and More! Pre-registration is strongly recommended. For more information, visit Broward.org/EconDev or call 954-357-6400.
what white men did in one year
African American women who work full time, year round are typically paid $19,399 less per year than their white male counterparts. This means African American women have to work nearly 19 months—until almost the end of July—to make as much as white men did in the previous year alone, according to a new analysis by the National Women’s Law Center
released recently, the day that African American women finally catch up to white men’s pay, 208 days into the year. Key findings from the analysis include: African American women typically make just 64 cents for every dollar white men make. Based on today’s wage gap, over the course of a 40-year career, African American women
would typically lose nearly $776,000 to the wage gap— this means African American women would have to work almost 63 years to earn what white men earn in 40 years. The wage gap persists across occupations and even in lowwage occupations that typically pay $10.50 per hour or less, African American women still experience a wage gap, making only 73 cents for every dollar white men make. African American women with high levels of education still experience a wage gap—African American women with only a bachelor’s degree typically make $45,000 per year— only about $2,630 more than white men with only a high school degree ($1.06 for every dollar). NWLC legal and economic experts are available to discuss the broader implications of the wage gap for African American women. Notes: All figures are for full time, year round workers. Figures for whites exclude Hispanics.
South Florida mourns the loss of leading photographer, Hobbie “Sule” Johnson By Charles Moseley Hobbie “Sule” Johnson migrated from the City of Brotherly Love in search of warmer weather and to pursue a career in photography. South Floridians are morning his untimely death. After a recent battle with bone cancer, Johnson succumbed early Monday morning, July 27, 2015. He was 64 years old. Hobbie Arthur Johnson, Jr. aka ‘Sule’ was born June 18, 1951 to the late Hobbie Arthur Johnson and Ellen Gloria (Wiggins) Johnson. Johnson attended Simon Gratz High School. Sule had three children by the time he attended CCP (Community College of Pennsylvania). Their names: Tamika, Kobie, and Tene, affectionately known to Sule as #3. Sule studied computer technology at that college. Besides his passion for photography, he also had a passion for baking. Sule had other children early in his life; Juma and a set of twins, Kiesha and Aisha. Sule married and had two more children, Suliman and the baby, Lateefah. Sule visited South Florida one winter from the harsh winters in Pennsylvania. He realized what all of us South Floridians knew, often saying, “Why would anyone
For over 35 years, Sule Johnson was one of South Florida’s leading photographers, specializing in Wedding, Glamour, and Event photography. live anywhere else besides here?” his wife Dale recalled. “Sule called his mother and told her he was not coming back
to Pennsylvania to live,” his wife added. Sule embarked on the new phase of his life here in South Florida. After establishing Benchmark Studios and building a successful clientele, his life moved in still another direction. He spent a short time in South Carolina to work for a corporation called Photography Studio. Sule also felt the environment would be more suitable to raise his two youngest children. “If you knew Sule you may recall he never called anyone’s children “kids.” He believed that children are not animals and should not be referred to as such,” said Dale. After a period of time, Johnson returned to South Florida, where he added Glamour Photography to his repertoire. In recent years he established a new company called In Loving Memory Plaques, which he continued to operate along with his wife, at the time of his untimely demise. Sule leaves to mourn his passing: wife, Dale; brother, Willie; three sisters, Sandra, Gloria, and Brenda; eight children; and a host of grandchildren, a great grand, and a host of nieces, nephews, family and friends.
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Africa open for business with President Obama’s visit cheering Kenyans. “When it comes to the people of Kenya, especially the youth, I believe there is no limit to what you can achieve. You can build your future right here, right now” said President Obama. The sixth Global Entrepreneurship Summit is extremely important to Africa’s future and sustainability. Many of the orders and businesses on the continent are on hold because the American lawmakers must approve financing for the Export-Import Bank. This infusion of funds is in jeopardy, and must be approved by the
Republicans who think investing in Africa is a bad deal. If the United States refuses to invest in Africa, other countries such as China and Russia will expand their investments in the continent. If the United States refuses to become a major player in the African emerging economy, we will lose billions of dollars in investments. The future of the world economy will be connected to Africa, and America must be engaged on the ground floor. Building power plants takes time, and Power Africa officials are looking at secured deals that
are closed rather than power plants already built. Power Africa says they have leveraged more than $18 billion in deals closed with private sector financing. It is obvious that many of these deals are not a result of U.S. efforts, and Africa is doing deals with countries around the world. Doing business in Africa is a difficult task because the continent struggles with corruption, disease, and poverty. But Africa is open for business, the opportunities are endless, and there are Africans becoming millionaire and billionaires every month. African Americans must look to Africa for business opportunities because now is the time to get on the ground floor.
Four reasons you should be tested for hepatitis C President Obama and Kenyatta attend a panel discussion at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit. From left are President Obama; Judith Owegar, co-founder of Akirachix; Kenyatta; Josipa Majic, CEO of Teddy the Guardian; and Jahiel Oliver, CEO of Hello Tractor. President Obama is the first had dinner with three dozen By Roger Caldwell sitting American president to family members because this is This past weekend, President visit Kenya, and he is commit- his father’s homeland. “There Barack Obama attended the ted to making the United States are cousins and uncles and aunsixth Global Entrepreneurship a partner in Africa’s growth. ties that show up you didn’t Summit in Nairobi Kenya, July “This promise includes initia- know existed, but you’re always tives like Power Africa, which is happy to meet” says the Pres24 thru 26, 2015. The week’s summit is an op- working with African govern- ident. portunity to bring global inves- ments and private sector leadThis is the President’s fourth tors, and venture capitalists ers to add more than 30,000 visit to the continent, and he from America and other coun- megawatts of cleaner electricity concluded this trip in Kenya on tries together to learn and dis- to power 60 million homes and Sunday. He will also visit Ethiocuss what economic business businesses. The administra- pia. In Kenya, President Obaactivities are available in Africa. Three of the world’s 10 fastest tion’s Young African Leaders ma discussed issues on corrupgrowing economies are in Afri- Initiatives is helping to develop tion, counterterrorism, and gay ca, and the cities and countries business skills while cultivating rights Saturday with warm reare Nairobi, Kenya, Cape Town, a network for young emerging flections of being in Africa. He South Africa, and Lagos, Ni- African leaders” says Maria also urged Kenya’s leaders to geria. Africa is waking up from Contreras-Sweet, Lead Ambas- keep up efforts to combat cora long sleep and this new gene- sador for Global Entrepreneurs. ruption, calling it the biggest As for President Obama’s potential threat to Kenya’s ration understands the imporfirst official trip to Kenya, he economic growth. tance of technology. Today, Nairobi is the site of was greeted by adoring crowds On Sunday, President Obamajor African headquarters for throughout the country, and ma gave an emotional speech such major companies as the nation considers him a local inside a packed Nairobi gymGoogle, Microsoft, and IBM. son. At the hotel he met and nasium filled with nearly 5,000
Without addressing disability we’ll never make meaningful progress in ending police violence (Cont'd from FP) There’s much to do, but we can begin by addressing these factors: · Obtain accurate and upto-date information. Currently, those monitoring police incidents with disabled people are largely restricted to using media reports for details which are often sketchy and incomplete at best. One way to correct this is to include disability data in the Death in Custody Act and track disabilities that have been acquired while in police custody. Gaining access to information being collected identifying race and gender, while adding disability and related subcategories would go a long way toward giving us an accurate accounting of the situation. · Non-compliance isn’t automatically criminal. If law enforcement understood that, and acted accordingly, we could minimize the occurrence of police-related violence in all com-
munities. The issues go beyond mental health. Diabetics experiencing insulin reactions have been mistakenly perceived as threatening or intoxicated. Deaf individuals have been pepper sprayed, tasered or worse because police officers didn’t know American Sign Language. People with cerebral palsy, which often causes speech difficulties and involuntary muscle tremors, have been inaccurately arrested for drunk driving. Some might assume mandatory CIT or Crisis Intervention Training would address these concerns, but there is precious little accountability or even agreed upon standards for assessing the long-term value of these programs. Community involvement can positively influence the CIT experience for all concerned, but to date, there remains no agreed-on standard for gauging or assessing what works. We need to end the use of solitary confinement as punishment and practice in detaining
youth and people with disabilities. The ACLU contends that “solitary confinement can cause extreme psychological, physical, and developmental harm. For children, who are still developing and more vulnerable to irreparable harm, the risks are magnified - particularly for kids with disabilities or histories of trauma and abuse.” The systems and structures that sustain police violence against communities of color, people with disabilities, and people of color with disabilities are the same. There’s no reason the common ground that inescapably and undeniably connects our communities shouldn’t be stronger than fear or other factors that, in the end, only support the status quo by keeping us apart. Rebecca Cokley is the executive director of the National Council on Disability (NCD), an independent agency that advises the White House and Congress on national disability public policy. She joined NCD in 2013 after serving four years in the Obama Administration.
IMPORTANT NOTICE POSITIVE LIVING 18 (Sept 18-20, 2015) is now accepting applications. Positive Living is the nation’s largest and longest running HIV/AIDS conference in the United States, and it’s held right here in your backyard! If you would like an application to attend please e-mail PositiveLivingOASIS@gmail.com. Scholarships are available. The Positive Living experience is the backbone for the Positive Living Conference each year. As we prepare for Positive Living 18 we are mindful of our audience. We like to refer to the audience as our family because our ultimate goal is to bring people together to share and expand their knowledge and their contacts. Positive Living provides a safe space to mingle, providing everyone who so desires an opportunity to engage in dialog and strategy building. While there is a heavy emphasis on advocacy training, we make sure to offer educational opportunities on treatment options, prevention services, the impact of the affordable healthcare act, and other pertinent information on many subjects by bringing together recognized experts in these fields with the people whose life’s experiences provides the evaluation of what is working and what is not working. It is all about empowerment and learning to build viable networks to strengthen each person’s ability to tackle HIV/AIDS both personally and collectively. We welcome each of you to Positive Living 18 and the inviting shores of theEmerald Coast in Ft. Walton Beach, Florida. Our home base is once again the Ramada Plaza Beach Resort where General Manager Joe Guidry and his staff goes out of their way to make us feel at home. We look forward to a great conference, renewing old friendships, while making new friendships. Special thank you to Butch McKay and OASIS staff for continuing the great conference.
(Cont'd from FP) You may be seeing more commercials and hearing more buzz about hepatitis C. What’s the big deal? The epidemic is five times the size of the HIV epidemic. And recent scientific breakthroughs mean that there is now a cure for this often silent virus. Contracted through blood or bodily fluids from a person who is infected, the hepatitis C virus (HCV) causes an infection in the liver that may not cause symptoms for years. People at greatest risk include current and past injection drug users; people who received blood products before 1992; those injured by needle sticks, such as healthcare workers; and PLWHA. Veterans and the incarcerated are among those disproportionately affected. HCV is occasionally transmitted via sexual contact, particularly among MSM who engage in high-risk sex, such as not using condoms, whether or not those men are living with HIV or AIDS. African Americans are also disproportionately affected by HCV. Indeed, 22 percent of
those with hepatitis C in the United States are Black. Baby boomers—which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention identifies as people born between 1945 and 1965 —are also at risk for HCV infection because HCV rates were highest during the ’70s and ’80s, when the blood supply was not screened for hep C. They could have acquired the virus and not known it. If you fall into one of these categories or are either curious or anxious about whether you have HCV, here are four reasons to take charge of your health: 1. Most people who have hepatitis don’t know they have it. Typically, HCV doesn’t cause symptoms for years, so a person infected years ago may not even be aware of it. Meanwhile, the virus has been causing liver damage that could lead to cirrhosis or liver cancer. 2. Under the Affordable Care Act, testing and treatments for some demographic groups are free. For example, people born between 1945 and 1965 with health insurance can get the HCV test as one of the preventive health screenings
covered under the act. Those who qualify for Medicare Part D may get assistance with coverage for medications through a stand-alone prescription plan or a Medicare Advantage prescription-drug plan. Also, some pharmaceutical companies will help with costs for those who qualify. 3. New drugs such as Harvoni, Sovaldi and Viekira Pak not only cure HCV; in clinical trials they have proved equally effective for Blacks and non-Blacks. 4. You can get screened once for HCV and then you’re done. Unlike HIV testing, which is suggested every six months, public health experts suggest a one-time screening for baby boomers. The bottom line is, hepatitis C screening doesn’t have to be a chore on your health-care checklist that you dread. Instead it can be a task that you can confidently check off once you get tested and know where you stand. Candace Y.A. Montague is an award-winning freelance health writer and health reporter for Capital Community News in Washington, D.C.
National Senior Citizens Day • Friday, August 21, 2015
VITAS Celebrates Our Senior Citizens—Every Day • For all they have achieved • For all they continue to achieve • For the legacy they leave to this community We owe them our gratitude and our pledge to improve the quality of their lives, to help them remain in the place they call home, and to assure comfort and dignity as they age. Does someone you love need compassionate care at home?
Proud Sponsor of:
SINCE 1980
For more information, contact Deborah Mizell, Community Liaison, at 954.777.1824 • 800.723.3233 • VITAS.com
Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper
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Community Digest
Publix is Proud to Support Community News WHERE SHOPPING IS A PLEASURE
Voter Registration Drive
The Ladies of Chi Psi Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated, will host a Voter Registration Drive at the annual Back to School Family Health Fair, 8 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 1, 2015 at Lauderdale Manors Early Learning and Resource Center, 1400 N.W. 14 Court, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. For more info., visit us at www.chipsiomega.org or call (954)410-6673.
Tournament
Showcase
Second Annual J’Mari & Friends Water Smart Showcase, Saturday, Aug. 8, 2015 from 1 to 5 p.m., at Joseph C. Carter Park (Sunland), 1450 W. Sunrise Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Our mission is to educate and provide important Water Safety information that helps keep kids safe in and around the water. For more info call Tangeria Miller: tangerialm@gmail.com Shirley Harold: Shhourofpower@yahoo.com
Program
Addressing HIV/AIDS in Florida among Black guys and Bisexual Men, Saturday, Aug. 1, 2015 from 12 noon to 5 p.m., at Pride Center Florida, 2040 N. Dixie Hwy., Wilton Manors, Fla. NAACP, FAMU Center for Healths Equity, National Black Gay Men's Advocacy Coalition Equality Florida, Blacks AIDS Institute, BTAN Melbourne, and BTAN Broward County.
Celebration
Health Fair Bethel A.M.E. Church “Connecting Ordinary People To An EXTRAordinary God”, Rev. Eddy Moise Jr., pastor, Eighth Annual Scholarship Golf Tournament, Saturday, Aug. 8, 2015, shotgun at 8:30 a.m., at Pompano Beach Municipal Golf Course, 1101 N. Federal Hwy., Pompano Beach, Fla. 18Hole Championship Von Hagge & Delvin Designed Course.
Meeting
Miami Northwestern Senior High School is planning a Sunday Service on Aug. 9, 2015. Planning meetings are weekly; Tuesdays at 6:30 at New Birth members are invited to participate. Contact Laura Gallon Jones at (305) 8364829 for more info.
Chi Psi Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated, will host its annual Back to School Community Health Fair, 8:30 a.m., until 12:30 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 1, 2015, at the Lauderdale Manors Early Learning and Resource Center, 1400 N.W. 14 Ct., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Community is invited. For more info visit us at www.chipsiomega@info.org. or contact us at (954) 806-1462.
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated Zeta Rho Omega Chapter cordially invites you to join us in celebrating the official adoption of Reverend Samuel Delevoe Park, Saturday, Aug. 1, 2015 from 10 to 11 a.m., at 2520 N.W. Sixth St., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Chapter president JoeAnn Fletcher. For more info call Doris Love at (954) 325-9041.
Reception
"If the lions do not write their own history, then the hunters will get all the credit."
Businesses-2- Businesses Alliance Reception, Tuesday, July 28, 2015 at 5:30 p.m., at Little Haiti Cultural Center, 212 N.E. Terr., Miami, Fla. For question? Call (305) 762-6151.
EDUCATION MATTERS Every Child Deserves a Chance to Succeed.
- An African Proverb
Happenings at African-American Research Library and Cultural Center
African-American Research Library and Cultural Center, 2650 Sistrunk Blvd., Fort Lauderale, Fla. Upcoming Destination Friday events: Sept. 4 Hawaii and Nov. 6 - the Bahamas. For more info call (954) 357-6210. * Film of biracial Belle, who nudged Great Britain into abolishing the slave trade – shown Saturday, Aug. 1, 2015 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. For more info call (954) 357-6210.
Do YOU Suspect Housing Discrimination, Harassment, or Predatory Lending? Call HOPE TODAY! Miami-Dade: (305) 651-4673 Broward: (954) 742-3778
Senior Prom
Summer Program
Broward Citizen for Seniors Community Service Organization proudly announces our Seventh Annual Senior Prom, Saturday, Aug. 22, 2015 from 6 to 11 p.m., at Bahia Mar Hotel, 801 Seabreeze Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Tickets on sale at: · MODCO, (Mount Olive Development Corporation), Weekends, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., weekdays 1530 Sistrunk Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. · Alan’s Clubhouse, Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., 915 N.W. Sistrunk Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. · Martnick’s Pharmacy, Saturdays, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., at 6783 Stirling Rd., Davie, Fla. (in the Stirling Plaza the Shops at Stirling Place – between University Drive and Davie Road) For more info call Cheryl Cooper, at (954) 303-4900 or Pearl Copeland at (954) 2888702 or may email at browardseniorsprom@gmail.com or visit us on website at BCFSINC.org
The free Summer Recreation Program at Broward County Parks and Recreation Division’s six neighborhood parks, located in the Broward Municipal Services District in enhancing its programming this summer with other governmental and notfor-profit agencies. Seven new topics will be offered to participants, depending on age group: · The Broward Sheriff’s Office will provide safety presentations focusing on druguse prevention for teens, and Broward Fire Rescue will host a series of “Firefighter Camp Days.” · The American Lung Association will share info on the dangers of smoking and e-cigarettes, and the Hanley Center will offer alcohol literacy challenge presentations to discuss the dangers of underage drinking. · The Animal Rights Foundation of Florida will promote responsible pet ownership and wildlife conservation, while Dog Scouts will teach our youth how to interact with dogs by bringing certified pet-therapy dogs to each park. · Opportunities Industrialization Center of South Florida is offering a teens-only program called “Becoming a Responsible Teen,” which will cover topics as varied as strengthening communication skills to pregnancy prevention. · Memorial Healthcare System will present child-safety education, “Positive Attitude Wins” and anti-bullying information. · Holy Cross Hospital will provide nutrition classes focusing on healthy food choices and the importance of regular exercise. · The Urban League of Broward County will follow the Botvin LifeSkills Training curriculum so participants can learn about making responsible life choices, including developing communication skills, focusing on education, and fostering healthy relationships with friends and family. · Free SWIM Central water-safety instruction is available for ages 6 to 10. The Summer Food Program makes free lunches available daily from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and snacks daily from 2:30 to 3 p.m. Weekdays, through Friday, Aug. 14, 2015; from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (early drop-off will be available from 8 to 9 a.m. late pickup is available from 5 to 6 p.m., registration is still available at Franklin, Lafayette Hart, and Roosevelt Gardens parks. The program is full at Boulevard Gardens Community Center, Reverend Samuel Delevoe Memorial Park, and Sunview Park. · Franklin Park, 2501 Franklin Dr., Fort Lauderdale, Fla., (954) 357-7080. · Lafayette Hart Park, 2851 N.W. Eighth Rd., Fort Lauderdale, Fla., (954) 3577970. · Roosevelt Gardens Park, 2841 N.W. 11 St., Fort Lauderdale, Fla., (954) 3578700. For further info call or visit the park of your choice.
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Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper
Even though Blacks borrow more for college, enrollment declines By Freddie Allen, Senior Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON, D.C. (NNPA) – Recognizing that a college degree is one of the surest paths to a job and economic
security, Black families are taking on more student loan debt than white and Hispanic families, according to a new report by Wells Fargo. According to the report, student loan debt increased by
roughly 97 percent between the 1995-1996 school year and 2015 and Black undergraduates that started school during the 2011-2012 school year can expect to borrow $28,400 for a four-year bachelor’s degree
CONGRESSWOMAN FREDERICA S. WILSON GETS SUPPORT FOR HER #BRINGBACKOURGIRLS MOVEMENT FROM YOUNG AFRICAN LEADERS VISITING SOUTH FLORIDA — The Congresswoman was joined at the press conference by young African leaders visiting South Florida. They are Mandela Fellows being hosted by FIU as part of President’s Obama’s Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI). There is a sizeable Nigerian community in South Florida really watching this and supporting Congresswoman Wilson’s efforts. This is also timely given the fact that terrorism has reached U.S. borders and equally important #blacklivesmatter. Congresswoman is pictured with the Mandela Fellows; Word of Life Bible Church Pastor, Prophet Ige Kelly Osaibvovo and Dr. Yinka Tella, President of the Nigerian American Foundation (NAF) and Coordinator of CONSFLO.
Death of a Black woman If we do not immediately reverse the manner in which our feelings are expressed towards our women, we are doomed by our children. They emulate our inappropriate actions then they impose death sentences on each other. —Bobby R. Henry, Sr. While struggling with the reality of being a human instead of a myth, the strong Black woman passed away. Medical sources say she died of natural causes, but those who knew her know she died from being silent when she should have been screaming, smiling when she should have been raging, from being sick and not wanting anyone to know because her pain might inconvenience them. She died from an overdose of other people clinging to her when she didn’t even have energy for herself. She died from loving men who didn’t love themselves and could only offer her a crippled reflection. She died from raising children alone. She died from the lies her grandmother told her mother and her mother told her about life, men & racism. She died from being sexually abused as a child and having to take that truth everywhere she went every day of her life, exchanging the humiliation for guilt and back again. She died from asphyxiation, coughing up blood from secrets she kept trying to burn away instead of allowing herself the kind of nervous breakdown she was entitled to, but only white girls could afford. She died from being responsible, because she was the last rung on the ladder and there was no one under her she could dump on. The strong Black woman is dead. She died from being a mother at 15 and a grandmother at 30 and an ancestor at 45. She died from being dragged down and sat upon by unevolved women posing as sisters and friends. She died from tolerating Mr. Pitiful, just to have a man around the house. She died from sacrificing herself for everybody and everything when what she really wanted to do was be a singer, a dancer, or some magnificent other. She died from lies of omission because she didn’t want to bring the Black man down. She died from tributes from her counterparts who should have been matching her efforts instead of showering her with dead words and empty songs. She died from myths that would not allow her to show weakness without being chastised by the lazy and hazy. She died from hiding her real feelings until they became hard and bitter enough to invade her womb and breasts like angry tumors. She died from always lifting something from heavy boxes to refrigerators all by herself. The strong Black woman is dead. She died from never being enough of what men wanted, or being too much for the men she wanted. She died from being too Black and died again for not being Black enough. She died from being misinformed about her mind, her body & the extent of her royal capabilities. She died from knees pressed too close together because respect was never part of the foreplay that was being shoved at her. She died from loneliness in birthing rooms and aloneness in abortion centers. She died in bathrooms with her veins busting open with self-hatred and neglect. And sometimes when she refused to die, when she just refused to give in, she was killed by the lethal images of blond hair, blue eyes and flat butts. Sometimes, she was stomped to death by racism & sexism, executed by hi-tech ignorance while she carried the family in her belly, the community on her head, and the race on her back! The strong Black woman is dead! Or is she? No she isn’t, not if she’s reading this!!!!!!!!!!! **********
Correction: The Westside Gazette would like to apologize for any grammatical errors as a result of a computer glitch in the July 23 - July 29, 2015, If old seasoned wood can be cleaned what about you? article. This issue has been resolved and we look forward to Pleading Our Cause with your committed support.
Legacy of ‘First Lady of the Black Press’ still relevant today (Cont'd from FP) “So what I found is that Ethel Payne’s story, her perspective, her form of journalism 50 years ago, still has relevance today. Because while we may have made leaps in terms of segregation…the dominant filter today remains a white-controlled media.” Ethel Payne was poking holes in that filter at a time when the White majority fought against the tide of sustained agitation to secure civil and human rights for all. At the Chicago Defender, Payne was the eyes and ears of the Civil Rights Movement, reporting from its front lines in the Deep South, press conferences at the White House, and iconic rulings at the Supreme Court. In 1953, she became the third Black person to join the White House Press Corps, and was known for persistently prodding President Dwight D. Eisenhower on Jim Crow laws and desegregation efforts. In the ’50s and ’60s, she jetted around the globe for international stories such as Black soldiers in Vietnam and the Nigerian Civil War, becoming the first Black woman to be a fulltime foreign correspondent. Yet, she always returned for on-the-ground coverage of moments that would become history, such the start of the Montgomery bus boycott and the desegregation of Little Rock, Ark.’s Central High School. In 1972, Payne joined CBS and became the first Black woman commentator at a major network. In 2002, she was memorialized on a postage stamp. With 40 years of tireless journalism and a legacy honed at a Black-owned newspaper, Payne earned her reputation as the “First Lady of the Black Press.” “When The New York Times or The Washington Post would report on the passage of the Civil Rights Act of ‘64 or the Voting Rights Act of ‘65, the tone of the articles was that these were munificent gifts being given to a disen-franchised people,” Morris said. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
compared to Hispanics who will borrow $27,600. The total price of attendance for Black full-time students increased 115.4 percent during the 2011-2012 school year compared to the 1995-1996 school year and white students experience 113.6 percent jump over the same time period. The report stated, “The average out-of-pocket net price (which is the price after aid plus student loans) increased 88.7 percent for Blacks, 80.8 percent for Asians and 74.7 percent for whites between the 2011 and 2012 school year compared to the 1995 and 1996 school year.” In addition, the report found that more than 60 percent of Black undergraduate students qualify “for some type of aid from the federal government” compared to 50 percent of Hispanics and 34 percent of whites and Asians. John Rasmussen, the president of personal lending and the head Education Financial Services at Wells Fargo said that two primary realities often frame the conversation about higher education: student loan
Black male STEM story (Cont'd from FP) The program will be offered to high-achieving African American and Hispanic seventh- and eighth-graders on the campuses of four historically Black state universities — Jackson, Kentucky, Morgan, and North Carolina A&T. “I want to applaud this initiative,” said Morgan State University President Dr. David A. Wilson. “We have a great opportunity at Morgan – and the other HBCUs — to make a difference in the lives of young people.” MSU administrators and Black engineers say the initiative is necessary because male students of color are severely underrepresented in STEM fields. Dr. Eugene DeLoatch, founding dean of MSU’s Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr. School of Engineering, said Black men compose only 3 percent of America’s engineers. That number, he said, hasn’t changed much over the years. “That’s a crime,” said DeLoatch, a past president of the American Society of Engineering Education. He was the first African American to lead ASEE in its 109-year history. But, “This is what we do: we develop talent,” DeLoatch said. “This is exciting stuff. Of course, it makes sense that a company like Verizon, a technology company, is investing its resources
Johnny Taylor, president and CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund, (TMCF), worries about Black parents getting wrong message. (Photo by Freddie Allen/NNPA News Service) debt and the growing costs associated with earning a degree. “The outstanding amount of student loan debt has now exceeded $1.2 trillion,” said Rasmussen. “That is larger than credit card debt and automobile debt.” He also noted that the cost of college over the past 20 or 25 years has increased at a pace
that is significantly faster than inflation. “Families are trying to be really practical,” said Rasmussen. “Trying to keep costs down now, staying in state more, exploring community college options, and asking tough questions like, ‘Are my kids ready to go to college?’” (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
in determining how we can give a brighter future to the youth of America, particularly those who are often marginalized and whose potential is often overlooked.” He said Black boys — and Black men — can help lead the world in developing groundbreaking technology if given the instruction, consideration, and academic opportunities. Educators identify several alarming statistics that have hindered progress in the job market for some Black men: Disproportionate incarceration rates stand at 4.3 percent of Black males compared to 0.7 percent of white males (U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics). Unemployment rates equal 15.4 percent for Black males compared to 6.8 percent of white men (BLS Labor Force Report). Also, high school graduation rates are 52 percent for Black males compared to 78 percent for white males. (2012 Schott Foundation for Public Education Report.) Furthermore, according to the Council of Great City Schools Report, only 5 percent of college students are African American males. Dr. Dontae Ryan — president, chief technical officer, and owner of DLR Technology — said the MMMP’s goal is to empower Black students by offering them lifelong technology and entrepreneurial skills. “They need role models. Programs like this are very important,” Ryan said. “It lets students know what is possible;
they can become engineers and mathematicians. Programs like this are essential.” The MMMP parallels one of President Barack Obama’s signature efforts. “My Brother’s Keeper” is a sweeping, national, public-private partnership to empower America’s young Black men and other boys of color through mentorships and job-training programs. My Brother’s Keeper was established in 2014 with a $200 million commitment from several large foundations. A new White House report says that the opportunity gaps facing youth of color restrain the U.S. economy, lower aggregate earnings, shrink the labor market, and slow economic growth. According to the white House, a 25-year-old Black man has only a one-in-two chance of being employed today, due to early death, incarceration, low labor-force participation, and high unemployment. Rose Kirk is president of the Verizon Foundation, which allocated $400,000 for the joint venture between Verizon and Morgan State University. She believes the Minority Male Makers Program will provide long-term employment and professional opportunities for Black men. “What we found is that nobody is paying attention to little Black boys and to little Hispanic boys,” Kirk said, “and they deserve the same opportunities that so many other kids have.”
Read Our History in the pages of the Westside Gazette
THIS FORMER SLAVE WAS THE FIRST BLACK WOMAN TO RECEIVE A MD IN GEORGIA -- Dr. Eliza Ann Grier was a former slave who did th e the impossible during the 1800’s—she was the first Black woman licensed to practice medicine in the state of Georgia. Dr. Grier
was born in North Carolina during the height of the Civil War. She went on to college with the intentions of becoming a school teacher, but quickly changed her mind when she saw that there was a need to serve her community in the medicinal capacity. She said, “When I saw colored women doing all the work in cases of accouchement … or childbirth, oing to and all the fee g going some white doctor who merely looked on, I asked myself, 'why should I not get the fee myself?'” In this brief clip, we learn more about this remarkable woman. She certainly did break down doors for us in the medical community.
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Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper
Enchanting Jazz-Soul singer Nicole Henry in concert August 14, at the Arts Garage, Delray Beach By Bobby R. Henry, Sr. With the kinda of voice and a personality to match that could easily make you fall in love with her, songstress Nicole Henry will be wooing audiences as she performs here in South Florida at the Arts Garage in Delray Beach on Aug. 14, 2015. As I spoke with Henry for a brief telephone interview, I could almost touch her passion for what she does.
“I always want people to understand and feel the emotions and believe me! You believe Aretha Franklin and I always want to get the sound that reaches people; real passions not just street music.” One writer wrote of Henry, “The evening’s high point came when Henry sang Bob Marley’s Waiting In Vain, placing even the wait staff in a trance. As if the reggae legend’s lyrical plea to his love could be any more ro-
mantic, Henry’s voice, accompanied by the gentle rifts of an electric guitar, added a layer of satin to the song, making it not only romantic, but sensual.” Since her introduction in 2004, Henry is recognized in the jazz world as a much-admired vocalist. She was named Best New Jazz Artist during that year in Japan and she has maintained her accomplishments and acclaims ever since. Henry’s adoring, soulful
voice and charm has made her a recipient of: 2013 Soul Train Award for “Best Traditional Jazz Performance,” three Top10 U.S. Billboard and HMV Japan jazz albums, and rave reviews both domestically and internationally by The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The Japan Times, El Pais, Jazz Times, Essence and more. Henry has left audiences spellbound in over 15 countries, starring at venues in cities in-
cluding New York, Tokyo, Madrid, Moscow, Paris, Shanghai, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco and Miami. Nicole has expanded and shared her talents through the musical umbilical cords across the genera of soul, gospel, blues and jazz. She has performed with greats like jazz artists Kirk Whalum, Gerald Clayton, John Stoddart, Julian Lage, Gil Goldstein, Larry Grenadier, and Eric Harland. “I want to push the envelope and do some contemporary Soul live and original music. We all change; I wanna do some of the 70’s Soul’s music roots. Rhythm and Blues change with the time
HENRY (Photo by Michael Weintrob) and Soul is what it is; deep real!” Henry has proved and shown her soulful, inspired interpretations of some of her favorite classic hits of the ‘70s from legendary musicians including Bill Withers, Aretha Franklin, Joni Mitchell, James Taylor, The Commodores and Gladys Knight. Growing up in a musical family in Bucks County, Penn., Henry wrapped herself in the arts early on, singing in school and church, and studying cello and ballet. After graduating from the University of Miami with a degree in Communications and Theatre, she launched a successful acting career, appearing in commercial roles as well as a series of voiceover assignments. However, she directed her strongest passion toward the development of her full-time singing, career which was quickly rewarded in her present hometown. From someone who, “loves to look at people in love,” and enjoy their happiness, I can’t wait to hear and see Henry as she allows us to take a soulful journey with her in a musical therapeutic evening. Nicole Henry will be preforming at the Arts Garage, 180 NE First Street Delray Beach, FL 33444. Doors open at 7:30 p.m. Show time is 8 p.m. Call (561) 450-6357 or email:info@artsgarage.org
Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper
July 30 - August 5, 2015 • www.thewestsidegazette.com • Page 7
FPL building a stronger, smarter grid to enhance the electric system serving Miramar and improve everyday reliability FPL installing advanced, automated switches to expand the smart grid, deliver reliable service to customers JUNO BEACH, FL – Florida Power & Light Company (FPL) has planned a number of system upgrades in the Miramar area, including the deployment of new smart grid technology as part of its ongoing work to provide customers with affordable, reliable electric service. In 2015, FPL will install 14 automated switches along its main “feeder” power lines and 231 automated switches along smaller “lateral” lines serving neighborhoods in Miramar as part of the company’s electric system upgrades in the area. “FPL is investing to build a stronger and smarter grid our customers in Miramar can count on in good weather and bad. This includes a number of new projects in the area, starting with the installation of smart, automated switches that provide greater visibility across the electric system and allow us to restore power for our customers faster when there is an issue,” said Manny Miranda, FPL senior vice president of Power Delivery. The automated devices detect and prevent potential problems along the electric grid, as well as restore and reroute power, when necessary, to reduce the number of customers affected by an outage. 2015 Work in Miramar In addition to the installation of the automated switches, FPL will upgrade the power lines serving key facilities in the Miramar area, such as the community thoroughfare along Flamingo Road. The projects strengthen the electric system to better withstand major storms and allow for faster service restoration following power outages. The work includes installing stronger utility poles, including in some projects, concrete poles that are designed to withstand wind gusts of up to 145 mph. Overall, FPL is upgrading four main power lines in Miramar in 2015. Other improvements in Miramar this year include: inspecting 650 utility poles for strength, clearing vegetation – a common cause of power outages – from 135 miles of power lines and inspecting seven main lines with advanced infrared technology. Strengthening the Grid When the planned 2015 work is completed, FPL will have made the following improvements in and near Miramar since the last major hurricane season in 2005: · Reinforced 15 main power lines, including those serving critical local facilities, such as Memorial Hospital Miramar, the Broward Sheriff’s Office Fire Rescue Emergency
Funeral services held for George Cooper, a lifelong advocate for HBCUs (Cont'd from FP) In a separate statement, President Barack Obama said that Cooper spent the majority of his life ensuring that students at HBCU’s were receiving a quality education and had what they needed to succeed and improve their communities and the nation. President Obama continued: “George’s passing is a great loss for my Administration, the HBCU and higher education communities and for everyone that knew him.” Cooper’s tenure at South Carolina State University, that lasted less than four years, was buoyed by success and controversy. State lawmakers had already decided to slash funding to the school when Cooper took the reins of the embattled HBCU in July 2008. Enrollment declined sharply and Cooper narrowly survived a trustee vote for his termination in 2010. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
Medical Services telecom tower and a local 911 emergency communications center. · Inspected 8,200 utility poles, restoring or replacing those that no longer meet the company’s standards for strength. · Cleared 1,270 miles of power lines of trees and veget-
ation – a major cause of power outages. · Inspected 85 main power lines and equipment using the latest infrared technology, helping FPL address issues before they cause outages. Since 2006, FPL has invested more than two billion dollars across its 35-county service area
– in addition to its other ongoing system maintenance and improvement work – to make the electric grid stronger and smarter. For more information, visit these websites: www.NextEraEnergy.com, w w w . F P L . c o m , www.NextEraEnergyResources.com.
Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper
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Opinion
The Westside Gazette, under the Management of BI-ADs, Inc., reserves the right to publish Views and Opinions by Contributing Writers may not necessarily reflect those of the Staff and Management of The Westside Gazette Newspaper and are solely the product of the responsible individual(s) who submit comments published in this newspaper.
By Lucius Gantt
To Be Equal
The 2015 National Urban League Conference By Marc H. Morial, NNPA Columnist “You can holler, protest, march, picket and demonstrate, but somebody must be able to sit in on the strategy con-ferences and plot a course. There must be strategies.” – Whitney M. Young, National Urban League President, 1961-1971 America faces tremendous challenges today and tomorrow. As a nation, we are experiencing what may be the most intense focus in decades
The Gantt Report Suffering and smiling
on economic inequality, educational equity, racial justice – and injustice. In a moment of perhaps the greatest social and economic upheaval in a generation, thousands of people from all walks of life and manner of profession will convene in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. to do more than recite our country’s familiar litany of challenges; more than march and raise our voices in rightful and outraged unison; and more than debate within the narrow confines of our individual communities. For four power-packed days, we will
The arrest and death of Sandra Bland sent chills through many communities By Perry Thurston, Fort Lauderdale attorney and candidate for Florida Senate District 31 Sandra Bland’s actions on July 10th while driving on the streets of Texas were completely innocent and her arrest was appalling. Watching the video of her arrest sent chills through my body and brought tears to my eyes as
Thurston I realized her actions could easily have been the actions of my Mother, Daughter, Aunt or many of my colleagues. Not just relatives, but everyone that I’ve spoken with have agreed, and are relieved that we have the video. Sandra Bland’s arrest, detention and death was sadly avoidable and unnecessary. We know that most of our law enforcement officers are there to protect and serve but the few cast major aspersions on them all. This case highlights the multiplicity of problems and cracks throughout our justice system. The Urban League’s National Conference begins this week here in Fort Lauderdale, and one would expect our Presidential hopefuls to be in attendance. This is an opportunity for them to show leadership on the broad issues affecting our nation, one of which is criminal justice reform including; police tactics, body cams, arrest decisions, jail/incarceration procedures, mental health sensitivity and our monetary bail requirements that allow similarly situated citizens to remain incarcerated based simply on wealth. Presidential leadership cannot change the appalling outcomes that occur when good officers, minority and majority, simply stand and watch in silence as their colleagues send chills through our community. Evil prevails when good men and women do nothing.
Florida large power users playing games want out of energy fees By Roger Caldwell Regulations in Florida are nasty words because the large business conglomerates are always looking for ways to increase their CALDWELL bottom line. Whenever large companies are forced to comply with regulation from the state or federal government, they end up losing a portion of their profits. Therefore, they think of ingenious ways of not paying their bills. In the last quarter, Wal-Mart made a three billion dollar worldwide profit, but they are leading the charge in Florida to opt out of paying energy fees. There is a group representing other large users of electricity such as grocery store chains, chemical, pulp, paper, cement and phosphate plants who also want out. These large conglomerates have been paying into a conservation program called the Florida Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act (FEECA) since 1981. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR GUIDELINES The Westside Gazette welcomes your letters. Letters must be signed with name clearly legible along with a phone number and complete address. No unsigned or anonymous letters will be considered for publication. The Westside Gazette reserves the right to edit letters. The letters should be 500 words or less.
discuss and debate the state of our cities. We will become the architects of new solutions to old, entrenched problems and well thought out strategies to save our embattled cities. This year’s National Urban League Conference theme, “Save Our Cities: Education, Jobs + Justice,” is a unique opportunity for mission-oriented conversation and action on policies and issues affecting African Americans and urban communities. As in years past, our nation’s most influential community leaders, top policy makers, political and business leaders, and so many more, will join in our continuing efforts to make a real difference for our cities. Following a long-standing tradition of major-party presidential candidates addressing the conference, the National Urban League counts several 2016 presidential hopefuls – Republicans and Democrats alike – as invited guests. The candidates, including former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley and retired neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson, will share their respective visions for a more equitable and inclusive America in the candidates’ session, “Off to the Races: The 2016 Presidential Candidates’ Plenary.” It is vital that those contending for the highest office in the land not only listen to our concerns, but be a part of its discussion and offer up their unique strategies and solutions for consideration to the very people who may one day move them into that coveted White House at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. The chance to engage in thoughtful dialogue and interact with national leaders and luminaries is one of many unique opportunities being offered at the conference. The National Urban League has also developed quality
programs, events and forums to inform and MORIAL inspire attendees and motivate them to continue empowering themselves, and by extension, their communities and the nation. The Expo Hall will feature hundreds of exhibitors; a career and networking fair; a Health Zone where attendees can enjoy workshops and get free health screenings for the entire family; an Empowerment Stage with celebrity-filled sessions and local entertainment; a college fair with colleges, universities, and scholarship organizations; and a marketplace of local small businesses. In a nod to these modern times and this generation’s methods of mobilizing around issues of social justice in the digital era, the National Urban League, in partnership with Digital Grass, is hosting “TechConnect: Hack-AThon for Social Justice,” presented by Comcast NBCUniversal. The two-day hack-a-thon is a call to action for techsavvy innovators to design original applications to alleviate the most pressing social issues of our day, particularly in the areas of education, jobs and justice. There are many reasons to register and become a part of this singular, unprecedented opportunity. Besides the unmatched professional and civic engagement, business development and networking opportunities, this conference is stronger, more inclusive and more reflective of the diversity of thought around the areas of economic and social justice as the number of voices and opinions added to the discussion grows. The benefit of your presence is another noteworthy addition to this conference that only you can decide to include in what promises to be an enriching and inspiring experience. I look forward to meeting you in South Florida.
Donald Trump, the Republican Party and US By Pastor Rasheed Z. Baaith “He that hateth his brother is in darkness, and walketh in darkness, and knoweth not whither he goeth, because that darkness hath blinded his eyes.” (1John 2:11) While it may amaze some and astound others that Donald Trump is leading the ever increasing field of those seeking the Republican nomination for President, it should come as no surprise. When I hear Republicans voice dismay and puzzlement at how Trump’s bombastic, racist, fracturing statements appeal to members of their Party, I wonder if they’ve been asleep for the last 30 years. The Republican Party is responsible for the making of Donald Trump. Ever since the inception of the so called “Southern Strategy” by President Nixon’s tacticians and schemers, the appeal to those who are white, male and racist has been the order of the day. The Republican Party has centered its election call based on skin color. Trump is just shouting the party line. No, they don’t call for n*ggers to be lynched or laws to bring segregation back but every time the Republicans talk about “taking American back” or saying “this country can be great again,” or “make America what it used
to be,” or “law and order,” it’s code for racist thinking. Trump knows what a lot of us refuse to believe, and that is that a sizeable number of BAAITH Americans - what Nixon called and Trump is beginning to call the “Silent Majority” - will give their support to someone who stigmatizes and demonizes people of color. These folk may not say what Trump says as loudly as he does or even admit to agreeing with what he has said but when they close the curtain in the voting booth, they’ll give Trump their vote. And of course Trump has an ever increasing group of vocal supporters, including some Black folks who are loud and vociferous in their support of this small minded man. Trump is proof positive that some Black people will support almost anybody. It’s not just that Trump was leader of the “birthers” who to this day don’t believe President Obama was born in the United States, it’s also Trump wanting to believe that the President’s academic success is the result of affirmative action and academic institutions Obama attended, setting a lower standard of achievement for Black people. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
An answer for Confederate apologists By George E. Curry, NNPA Columnist Someone identifying himself as Jimmy Oliver sent me an email objecting to a column I wrote under the headline, “Confederate Traitors Don’t Deserve to be Honored.” I presume he wrote to get a reply, so here it is, with Oliver’s words in italics. I do not appreciate you calling my ancestors traitors, Benedict Arnold or traitors. Well, I do not appreciate your ancestors enslaving my ancestors. I do not appreciate your white ancestors thinking they were superior to my ancestors solely because God created us a different color. I do not appreciate your ancestors forcing my ancestors to work long hours for free. I do not appreciate your ancestors treating mine like property, buying and selling them at will. I do not appreciate your ancestors breaking up African families whenever they wanted to and I do not appreciate your male ancestors raping my powerless female ancestors. And, yes, your ancestors were traitors. In fact, their photographs should be placed next to the word “traitor” in the dictionary. The definition of traitor is clearly spelled out in Article 3, Section 3 of U.S. Constitution: “Treason against the United States, shall
consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort. No person shall be conCURRY victed of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or on confession in open court.” In case you missed it, the Confederacy leveled war against the United States from 1861-1865. The Civil War was fought, not because of slavery, but for southern states rights. Yes, it was fought because southern states wanted “states rights” – the right to maintain slavery. Slavery was not the most compelling issue of the Civil War. That’s pure nonsense. The states’ orders of secession prove otherwise. For example, “A Declaration of the Immediate Causes which Induce and Justify the Secession of the State of Mississippi from the Federal Union” began: “In the momentous step which our State has taken of dissolving its connection with the government of which we so long formed a part, it is but just that we should declare the prominent reasons which have induced our course. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
One of my favorite musical songs is called Suffering and Smiling by the great Afrobeat legend, Fela Kuti. It talks about how many religious leaders GANTT enjoy life on earth in a much better fashion than their followers do. The leaders can enjoy life now, somewhat, while the members of their flock oftentimes have to wait until they die to have a good time in the afterlife. In some Black communities, places of worship are almost everywhere. The only buildings that outnumber churches are the buildings that house liquor stores! Way back in the day, many religious leaders were rebellious slaves, abolitionists, freedom fighters, civil rights leaders, community activists and men and women that risked their churches, their lives, their livelihoods, their reputations and much more to stand up and fight the slimy, degenerate, wickedly devilish beast! Today, a number of religious leaders carry on that tradition of fighting the individuals and institutions that exploit, oppress and financially enslave the church goers, the people that attend the Masjid and the members of congregations at places of worship in a variety of religious communities. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
Republicans use cruelty as a political weapon By Lee A. Daniels, NNPA Columnist Donald Trump, the blowhard mogul masquerading as presidential candidate, has once again discovered the problem with tryDANIELS ing to be a demagogue in a democracy: It’s the risk of “going too far.” Sometimes that means merely being made to look foolish – as when President Obama early in the 2012 presidential election season deftly punctured Trump’s trying to play the conservatives’ racist “Birther” game. However, at other times it means being exposed as a vindictive bully whose fragile ego provokes a reflexive lashing out at any and all critics. That’s the muddy road Trump’s been splashing down since he punctuated announcing his candidacy last month with a vile slur against undocumented Mexican immigrants, Hispanic-Americans and citizens of Mexico alike, and followed it this month by attacking in personal terms two GOP veteran Senators, John McCain, of Arizona, and Lindsey Graham, of South Carolina, who had sharply criticized his antics. Trump’s astonishing behavior – in declaring that McCain, who endured years of brutality in a North Vietnamese prison during the 1960s’ war in Southeast Asia, was “not a war hero,” and then days later publicly revealing Graham’s mobile phone number and urging his supporters to call him – wasn’t just “unpresidential.” (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
Blackonomics
The change we’ve been waiting for By James Clingman, NNPA Columnist In light of the conversations about police abuse, unwarranted stops CLINGMAN and arrests, and homicide cases involving Black people and police officers, many Black people get angry, maybe have a march, and then go home to await the next incident. Some of our organizations do their usual thing by making loud threatening statements and then get back in line until the next crisis hits. Amos Wilson said, “Until our behavior changes, the behavior of those who oppress and abuse us will not change.” In other words, the onus for change is on us. Many of you may not know about the Uniform Reporting Law Enforcement Improvement Act (URLEIA), which is proposed legislation that calls for the creation of a National Office of Civilian Oversight that hosts meetings across the nation to garner citizen input. Law enforcement agents, their spouses, and unions are not permitted to attend or participate in the Civilian Oversight Conferences. These conferences are essentially designed to create policy that governs policing. Police unions and associations are largely responsible for developing the policing approaches we see in effect today; URLEIA will change that practice. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
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AF amily T hat Prays T ogether, Stays T ogether Family That Together, Together
Church Directory
Worship T his and Every Sunday at the Church of Your Choice This
Bethel Missionary Baptist Church 2211 N.W. 7th Street, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33061 Church: (954) 583-9368 Email: bethelmbchurchfl@att.net
Reverend Jimmy L. English PASTOR WORSHIP SERVICES Sunday Worship ............................................................. 8 a.m. & 11 a.m. Sunday School ........................................................................... 9:30 a.m. Wednesday (Prayer Service & Bible Study) ............................... 7:30 a.m. Saturday (Women Bible Study) ............................................................ 8 a.m. "Baptized Believers working together to do the will of God"
Faith United Church of Christ 6201 NW 57 Street Tamarac, FL 33319 954-721-1232 uccfaith@bellsouth.net faithbroward.org "Historically the First Church in the City of Tamarac!”
Rev. Dr. Ileana Bosenbark, Senior Pastor WEEKLY SERVICES & EVENTS SUNDAY Worship Service (Communion 1st & 3rd Sunday) ........................................................... 10 a.m. F.A.I.T.H. Academy for Children (Spiritual Formation) K-12 ................................ 10 a.m.
TUESDAY F.A.I.T.H. Academy for Adults (Spiritual Formation) - Office Complex ...... 10:30 a.m.
WEDNESDAY Worship & Arts Ministry Rehearsals (Open Auditions) - Sanctuary .............................. 7 p.m.
First Baptist Church Piney Grove, Inc. 4699 West Oakland Park Blvd. Lauderdale Lakes, FL 33313 Office: (954) 735-1500 Fax: (954) 735-1939 fbcpg@bellsouth.net
Rev. Dr. Derrick J. Hughes, Pastor SUNDAY SERVICES Worship Services .......................................................... 7:30 & 10:45 a.m. Children's Church ........................................................ 7:30 & 10:45 a.m. Communion (First Sunday) ......................................... 7:30 & 10:45 a.m. New Members' Class .................................................................... 9:30 a.m. Church School .............................................................................. 9:30 a.m. Baptist Training Union (BTU) .................................................... 1:00 p.m. Wednesday (Bible Study) ...................................... 11:15 a.m.. & 7:00 p.m.
Harris Chapel United Methodist Church Rev. Juana Jordan, M.Div E-MAIL:juana.jordan@flumc.org 2351 N.W. 26th Street Oakland Park, Florida 33311 Church Telephone: (954) 731-0520 Church Fax: (954) 731-6290
SERVICES Sunday Worship ................................................. 7:30 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Sunday School .............................................................................. 9:00 a.m. Wednesday (Bible Study) ........................................... 11a.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Mount Calvary Baptist Church
800 N.W. 8th Avenue Pompano Beach, Florida 33060 Church Telephone: (954) 943-2422 Church Fax: (954) 943-2186 E-mail Address: Mtcalvarypompano@bellsouth.net
Reverend Anthony Burrell, Pastor SCHEDULE OF SERVICES SUNDAY
New Member Orientation ........................... 9:30 a.m. Sunday School ................................................ 9:30 a.m. Worship Service ........................................ 11:00 a.m. WEDNESDAY Prayer Meeting ............................................... 6:00 p.m. Bible Study ..................................................... 7:00 p.m.
"Doing God's Business God's Way, With a Spirit of Excellence"
New Birth Baptist Church The Cathedral of Faith International Bishop Victor T. Curry, M.Min., D.Div. Senior Pastor/Teacher 2300 N.W. 135th Street Miami, Florida 33167
ORDER OF SERVICES Sunday Worship ........................................................ 7:00 a.m., 11:00 a.m. & 7:00 p.m. Sunday School ....................................................................................................... 9:30 a.m. Tuesday (Bible Study) ......................................................................................... 6:45 p.m. Wednesday (Bible Study) ............................................................................... 10:45 a.m.
1-800-254-NBBC * (305) 685-3700 (o) *(305) 685-0705 (f) www.newbirthbaptistmiami.org
New Mount Olive Baptist Church 400 N.W. 9th Ave., Ft. Lauderdale 33311 (954) 463-5126 ● Fax: (954) 525-9454 CHURCH OFFICE HOURS Monday - Friday 8:00 - 4:00 p.m.
Dr. Marcus D. Davidson, Senior Pastor WORSHIP SERVICES & BIBLE STUDY Sunday .................................................... 7:15 a.m. 9:00 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. Sunday School ............................................................................ 10:00 a.m. Wednesday Noonday Service .................................. 12:00-12:30 p.m. Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting ............................................ 6:30 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study ................................................... 7:00 p.m. Where the kingdom of God is increased through Fellowship. Leadership, Ownership and Worship F.L.O.W. To Greatness!
WORSHIP THIS AND EVER Y SUNDA Y EVERY SUNDAY AT THE CHURCH OF OUR CHOICE
July 30 - August 5, 2015 • www.thewestsidegazette.com • Page 9
Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist Church 1161 NW 29th Terr., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 33311 (954) 581-0455 ● Fax: (954) 581-4350
St. Ruth Missionary Baptist Church 145 NW 5th Ave., Dania Beach, FL 33004 (954) 922-2529
www.mtzionmissionarybapt.com
Dr. James B. Darling, Jr., Pastor/Teacher WORSHIP SERVICES Sunday Worship Service .............................................................................. 8:00 & 11:00 a.m. Sunday School ............................................................................................................... 10:00 a.m. Communion Service (1st Sunday) ......................................................................... 11:00 a.m. Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting ........................................................................... 6:30 p.m. Wednesday Night Bible Study ................................................................................... 7:00 p.m. Saturday (2nd & 4th) Christian Growth & Orientation .................................. 8:30 a.m. But be doers of the Word - James 1:22 nkjv - “A Safe Haven, and you can get to Heaven from here”
Obituaries Clark & Norris Homes of Funeral BROWN Funeral services for the late Brenda L. Brown – 67 were held July 25 at Greater Providence Missionary Baptist Church with Pastor Maurice Robinson officiating.
James C. Boyd Funeral Home BERKOWITZ Funeral services for the late Barbara Jean Berkowitz – 57. CLARK Funeral services for the late Nellie Bell Clark – 80 were held July 25 at Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s with Brother Glen Clark officiating. HAWKINS Funeral services for the late Barbara Hawkins – 68. SPENCER Funeral services for the late Prophetess Patricia Ann Spencer – 55 were held July 25 at Mount Zion A.M.E. Church with Pastor George A. Hardy officiating. Interment: Sunset Memorial Gardens. THOMAS Funeral services for the late Christina Floyd Thomas – 61.
McWhite's Funeral Home EDWARDS Funeral services for the late Bernadette Edwards - 90 were held July 25 at McWhite’s Funeral Home Chapel with Wendell Edwards officiating. Interment: Sunset Memorial Gardens. MCCATTY Funeral services for the late Brother Frans Roy McCatty -
50 were held July25 at Grace fellowship Center Church of God with Bishop Maurice Clarke,Sr. officiating. Interment; McCatty Plot, Jericho, Linstead, St Catherine, Jamaica, West Indies. PEYTON Funeral services for the late De’Andre D. Peyton - 21 were held July 25 at New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church with Pastor Sapp officiating. SPENCER Funeral services for the late Denfield M. Spencer held July23 at McWhite’s Funeral Home Chapel with Rev. P. Gordon officiating. Interment: Antigua.
Roy Mizell & Kurtz Funeral Home COPELAND Funeral services for the late Ethel Mae Copeland – 80 were held July 24 at New Mount Olive Baptist Church with Dr. Calvin Haralson officiating. Interment: Sunset Memorial Gardens. EDWARDS Funeral services for the late William James Edwards, Sr. - 85 were held July 25 at Roy Mizell & Kurtz Worship Center with Pastor Darryl Harrison officiating. FREEMAN Funeral services for the late Barbara Louise Freeman – 80 were held July 25 at Golden Heights Church of Christ with Dr. W.F. Washington officiating. Interment: Sunset Memorial Gardens.
Create Your Own Lasting Tribute Call (954) 525-1489
WORSHIP SERVICES Wednesday (NOON DAY PRAYER) ............................................. 12 -1 p.m. Wednesday (PRAYER MEETING & BIBLE STUDY) .................... 645 p.m. Sunday Worship Service ................................................................. 10 a.m. Fifth Sunday Worhip Service ............................................................ 8 a.m.
Williams Memorial CME “PRAYER IS THE ANSWER” 644-646 NW 13th Terrace Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 (954) 462-5711(Ministry Office Line) (954) 462-8222(Pastor’s Direct Line) Email: wm_cme@bellsouth.net (Church} pastorCal50@yahoo.com (Pastor)
Rev. Cal Hopkins. M.Div) Senior Pastor/Teacher
The WITNESS of “The WILL” Sunday Worship Experiences ................................................................ 7:45 and 11:00 a.m. Sunday School ................................................................................................................. 9:30 a.m. Tuesday Night Triumph {Prayer, Praise and Power} Prayer Meeting ................................................................................................................ 7:00 p.m. Bible Study ........................................................................................................................ 7:30 p.m. We STRIVE to PROVIDE Ministries that matter TODAY to Whole Body of Christ, not only the Believers, but also for those stranded on the “Jericho Road”! “Celebrating over 85 Years of FAITH and FAVOR! Come to the WILL ... We’ll show You the WAY: Jesus the Christ!”
KIDS TALK ABOUT GOD
How do you Worship God in spirit and truth? By Carey Kinsolving and friends “I worship in truth by reading the word of God and having faith that the word of God is 100 percent true, and that God is within me,” says Grace, 10. Thank God that he has revealed himself in writing. Bible study is one of the most productive things anyone who wants to know God can do. On all the major issues of life, God has provided answers. Grace has more to tell us: “Spirit is the heart of God and the heart of God is love. I worship in spirit with love. I also worship God in spirit by praying, which is communicating with God. It brings me closer to God because he is revealed to me through prayer.” As Jesus told the Samaritan woman at the well, “God is spirit” (John 4:24a). Like so many today, the woman Jesus spoke with at the well wanted to focus on the visible. When the woman perceived that Jesus was at least a prophet, she asked him a question about the proper place to worship. The Samaritans said it was at Mount Gerizim in Samaria where Abraham had offered a sacrifice. The Jews said the temple in Jerusalem was the place to worship. In so many words, Jesus said the physical location of worship doesn’t matter. It’s the condition of the heart that matters. Those who worship God must worship him “in spirit and truth” (John 4:24b). One would think after nearly 2,000 years since Jesus walked the earth that all Christian ministers would stop referring to a church building as the “house of God.” A beautiful church building is no more the house of God than my kitchen. At one time, God’s presence dwelt in the Jerusalem temple, which was destroyed in A.D. 70. Today, the Jerusalem temple has been replaced by millions of living temples. God indwells all who trust the Lord Jesus as their savior (I Corinthians 6:19-20). “I worship God in Spirit and truth mostly by singing and praying,” says Rebecca, 6. When singing is mentioned, I think of David, the sweet Psalmist of Israel. Why did God call David a man after his own heart? David had a habit, a very intentional habit: “I have set the Lord always before me; because he is at my right hand I shall not be moved. Therefore my heart is glad, and my glory rejoices; my flesh also will rest in hope” (Psalm 16:8-9). David set the Lord before him constantly. As you read the Psalms that he composed, you see a man totally imbued with God. David cultivated a habit of always setting the Lord before him in his thinking, singing and actions. Yes, David sinned a few times when he failed to set the Lord before him, but he recovered. He finished life well. Singing godly songs is one way to keep your heart and mind on the Lord. If you don’t know it, all the Psalms were originally set to music. “You can worship God anywhere!” says Karris, 5. “I can even worship God in my bedroom by praying to him, thanking God for my sisters, brothers and toys, or asking him for help when people are mean.” Think about this: The condition of your heart (the inner condition of your soul) is far more important to God than your physical location. Memorize this truth: “God is Spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth” (John 4:24). Ask this question: Are you worshiping God in spirit and truth? (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
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Page 10 • www.thewestsidegazette.com • July 30 - August 5, 2015
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We truly understand the importance of securing money and resources. At the same time we Pearl and Mel Shaw caution against a “money first” approach to fundraising. We believe that fundraising should be grounded in a nonprofit’s values. We offer six fundraising values for your consideration. 1. The goals and visions of a nonprofit should first meet the needs of the community served. We all have individual dreams and a vision for a better tomorrow. When crafting or reviewing the vision and goals for your nonprofit make sure they meet community needs and are more than a vehicle for your personal aspirations. Make clear how your nonprofit will benefit your community, and keep community benefit as a priority at all times. 2. Leadership should fully understand and sup-port the nonprofit’s vision and goals. There should be no question about the organization’s or institution’s vision for the future, and how it will progress towards that vision. The executive staff and board should use the nonprofit’s vision and goals as a compass to guide their individual and collective work. 3. A successful non-profit should be volunteer led. While the nonprofit sector is increasingly professionalized with staff hired to support the implementation of a nonprofit’s vision and goals, each nonprofit should have strong volunteer leadership. Professional staff help ensure a full-time focus on the nonprofit’s work by individuals who believe in the vision and have the professional qualifications to deliver the services promised in the mission and goals. Volunteer leaders help keep the organization grounded in its vision and focused on its goals. When volunteers take the lead in raising funds, the impact can be far greater than a fundraising initiative that is staff driven. 4. Fundraising should start with the strengths and resources that are currently available. Start where you are and take advantage of the opportunities available to your nonprofit and then extend your reach. Many nonprofits have relationships with individuals who want to provide resources, make introductions, or host home/office events. Start there. Make your case. 5. A fundraising initiative should be guided by a plan that is derived from the organization’s strategic or business plan, and influenced by market research (feasibility study). (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
remains under attack By Charlene Crowell, NNPA Columnist In everyday life, birthdays and anniversaries of many sorts are observed and celebrated. When it comes to consumer finance, there are two more anniversaries worth celebrating. Congress enacted the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform Act on July 21, 2010 in response to the largest national economic challenge since the Great Depression. A key goal was and remains to protect the nation and its taxpayers from ever again bearing the financial burdens of risky deals by Wall Street and other private financial players. The following year, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) opened its doors to serve the needs of America’s consumers. Before the CFPB, no single federal agency had consumers as its sole priority and focus. To date, the Bureau has benefited 17 million consumers through a total of $10.1 billion in financial relief. More than 650,000 consumers have chosen to use its flexible complaint system that includes the options of online, written and telephone complaints in multiple languages. On the enforcement side, CFPB’s actions have addressed multiple violations in different lending areas: · In 2013 Chase Bank USA, N.A. and JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. was ordered to refund an estimated $309 million to more than 2.1 million
customers for illegal credit card practices. · The following year, Flagstar Bank CROWELL was fined $37.5 million for violating the CFPB’s mortgage servicing rules by illegally blocking 6,500 borrowers’ attempts to save their homes. · That same year, Colfax Capital Corporation and Culver Capital, LLC, also collectively known as “Rome Finance,” was ordered to pay $92 million in debt relief to 17,000 service members and other consumers for masking high-cost financing charges on artificially-inflated costs for goods and services. · ACE Cash Express, operating over 1,500 storefront payday locations in 36 states, was ordered in 2014 to pay $10 million in restitution and penalties for its threats of criminal prosecution and intimidating phone calls that “create a sense of urgency” when contacting delinquent borrowers. · Earlier this year, $480 million in debt relief to student loan borrowers who were wronged by the now-defunct Corinthian Colleges. In recent days, the CFPB announced two additional enforcement actions involving illegal and deceptive credit card violations, and another for illegal private student loan servicing practices. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
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Fakeness tarnishes Hip Hop By Jineea Butler, NNPA Columnist WASHINGTON, D.C. (NNPA) — Curtis ’50 Cent’ Jackson recently filed for bankruptcy and testified in court that despite his flashy public persona, he is only worth $4.4 million. LOL. Not that there is anything wrong with that. The dilemma is the art of the illusion. So often we see Hip Hop personalities fabricate their status to appear bigger than life. Rocafella Records’ co-founder Dame Dash even admitted in an interview with Boyce Watkins, “We would always pretend that we had more than we had, so we would always make something look bigger.” And of course many of us have used the saying, “Fake it until you make it.” Well, 50 Cent just blew the cover off of that never-ending Hip Hop fantasy. Whether he is lying under oath and hiding his money in offshore accounts to avoid paying the mother of
Rapper Rick Ross’ daughter five million dollars for releasing a sex tape BUTLER without permission or to dodge Sleek Audio, who won a $17.2 million-judgment alleging 50 stole some of their designs. The news exposes the art of what Hip Hop has become – an illusion. According to multiple media outlets, 50 Cent testified he doesn’t own the expensive cars and jewelry we consistently see him sporting. He claims he rents, borrows and leases instead. Besides making him look like a fraud, the bankruptcy filing and court hearing qualify this as a Hip Hop Dilemma. The distasteful physical, emotional and/ or mental trauma people experience when coming in contact with the Hip Hop Culture. It puts a bad taste in your mouth and emotionally traumatizes and confuses the culture yet again. Forbes magazine published in May of 2015
Book Review: Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates By Herb Boyd, Special to the NNPA NEW YORK, NY – What is immediately essential for me about Between the World and Me, Ta-Nehisi Coates’
LEGAL NOTICES PUBLICATION OF BID SOLICITATIONS Broward County Board of County Commissioners is soliciting bids for a variety of goods and services, construction and architectural/engineering services. Interested bidders are requested to view and download the notifications of bid documents via the Broward County Purchasing website at: www.broward.org/ purchasing. July 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, 2015 IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE 17TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR BROWARD COUNTY, FLORIDA GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISON CASE NO: CACE-14-021171 PAULINE HENRY, Plaintiff, v. EVELYN HENRY Defendants.
NOTICE OF ACTION CONSTRUCTIVE SERVICE IN RE: CIVIL ACTION FOR DAMAGES TO: EVELYN HENRY YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a CIVIL ACTION for DAMAGES has been filed against you. You are required to serve a copy of your written answer, if any, to it on Jermaine Thompson, Esq., Attorney for the Plaintiff, whose address is 2400 University Dr., Ste. 209, Pembroke Pines, Florida 33024, and file the original with the Clerk of the above styled Court on or before 30 days after first publication2015. otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Petition or Complaint. This notice shall be published once each week for four consecutive weeks in Westside Gazette. WITNESS my hand and the seal of said court at Broward County, Florida, on this June 22, 2015. Howard C. Forman, As Clerk of the Court Novella Lopes, Deputy Clerk July 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, 2015
lengthy epistle to his son is that “past is prologue.” But this is less an invocation of Shakespeare BOYD or Ralph Ellison’s quote than the way his book summons the work of Richard Wright and James Baldwin, two of Ellison’s most distinguished contemporary Black authors. The title of the book is taken from Wright’s poem of the same name, a portion of which appears as an epigraph in the book. Baldwin comes into play because, we learn, from a conversation Coates had with his editor Christopher Jackson at Spiegel & Grau to use Baldwin’s letter to his nephew as a template, a blueprint by which to append his message. Many readers and viewers are convinced that Coates took this advice and ran with it. Nobel laureate Toni Morrison, in her blurb for the book said, “I’ve been wondering who might fill the intellectual void that plagued me after James Baldwin died. Clearly it is TaNehisi Coates. The language of Between the World and Me, like Coates’s journey, is visceral, eloquent, and beautifully redemptive. And its examination of the hazards and hopes of Black male life is as profound as it is revelatory. This is required reading.” Author Isabel Wilkerson is equally impressed that Coates is the Baldwin of our era, “and this is his cri de Coeur. A brilliant thinker at the top of his powers, he has distilled 400 years of history and his own anguish and wisdom into a prayer for his beloved son and an invocation to the conscience of his country.” The book, she concludes, is “an instant classic and a gift to us all.” (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
that Mr. Jackson was Number 4 on ‘The Forbes Five: Hip Hop’s Wealthiest Artist 2015 at $155 million. They also referenced that he was deservedly “still enjoying the fruits” of his epic $100 million Vitamin water deal that he banked in 2007. He deserves an Oscar for keeping up the $155 million dollar front or for fronting like he doesn’t have as much money as we perceived.
July 30 - August 5, 2015 • www.thewestsidegazette.com • Page 11 Nevertheless, how are people supposed to take us serious if everything we live by is fake? If the most visible around us are fronting, what does that say about the rest of us? We are already plagued with fake butts, fake hair, fake boobs, and fake jewelry. How can we advance our cause if the majority of the culture is misrepresenting itself and making terrible decisions on behalf of Hip Hop?
From Baby being implicated in a murder plot to kill Lil Wayne to Rick Ross assaulting his gardener to Puffy hitting his son’s football coach with a kettlebell, the Hip Hop lifestyle doesn’t seem so attractive. I assume that that was the objective in hiring all these artists to run amuck and act a fool. This however, may be a breakthrough for the community at large; the imaginary -i-
mage that is portrayed and glorified in Hip Hop has been tarnished. We have an opportunity to usher in the next school of Hip Hop that includes intellectuals, doctors, lawyers, activists, responsible artists, entrepreneurs and business executives. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
Page 12 • www.thewestsidegazette.com • July 30 - August 5, 2015
Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper
The significance of Million Man March tour in Miami billboards, and various community leaders helped promote the event. Community leaders such as T. Willard Fair, who is currently the President and CEO of the Urban League of Greater Miami, worked with the Minister Abdul Bey to get the
word out. “He was very instrumental in rounding all of the clergy and activists in the city for bringing Minister Farrakhan in,” said Minister Bey of T. Willard Fair. “He tried to take it out of our hands and promote it him-
Pathways to Partnerships needed to reduce suspicions, fears and deaths Martin Luther King met with the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad in 1966. (Photo: AP/ Wide World Photos) By Janiah Adams Minister Louis Farrakhan will be speaking in Miami at Mount Zion Baptist Church on Thursday, July 30, 2015. His message is expected to center around Justice Or Else, the theme for this year’s 20th anniversary of the Million Man March. Little is known about the history of the Nation of Islam (NOI) in Miami, particularly in Overtown where Farrakhan will speak. When the first mosque was established in Miami, Brother Lucius Bey was the minister, and it was located on 17th Avenue, across the street from Range Funeral Home. In 1962, the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, Farrakhan’s teacher, purchased what used to be a Baptist church on Seventh Avenue to become the new home of the mosque. He had one of his ministers by the name of Abdul Bey Muhammad, who was serving in Detroit, Mich. at the time, relocate to Miami to take over the mosque in Miami. Shortly thereafter, in 1964, Muhammad Ali registered into the NOI in Miami. “The first time I made contact with
Muhammad Ali was in Overtown,” recalls Minister Abdul Bey Muhammad. “We were selling the Final Call newspaper,” he added. Ali asked: “Why are we called Negroes?” At that time Minister Rahman Muhammad, who was my captain at the time, started talking to him. We pulled him in right there. He began attending the mosque in Miami.” Joseph Arrington, Jr., who was a famous musician in the '60s and '70s known as Joe Tex, came into the NOI a little bit after Muhammad Ali, and eventually became a minister of The Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad. Over the years, the mosque in Miami truly thrived. Members of the community knew the brothers and sisters of the mosque, and the mosque worked hand in hand with various organizations and people such as churches, cityofficials, and activists. The last time Minister Farrakhan came to town, promotion was very aggressive. The members of the NOI worked tirelessly to make sure they word got out. An endless amount of flyers were printed, the advertisements also went on
As a result of negative encounters between law enforcement and theAfrican-American community The Democratic Black Caucus of Florida (DBCF) will ask our local chapters to discuss options on how to advance a pathway to partnership with law enforcement in their local jurisdictions. The alleged suicide of Sandra Bland in Texas is the most recent incident involving law enforcement and the AfricanAmerican community. This case and others like it, challenges all Americans, regardless of race, to understand root causes and identify effective and sustainable remedies. “The individual cases of Sandra Bland, Michael Brown, Tamir Rice, Eric Gardner and others are each, tragic.” declares Henry Crespo, Sr., DBCF president. “However, it’s their collective impact on our shared community that compels us to find pathways to partnership to reduce the suspicions, fears and deaths they represent.” he added. DBCF shares the frustrations and concerns of most Americans over these troubling incidents. Accordingly, we seek and advocate for remedies that can be sustained over time to move us back to a point where mutual respect, trust and civility will, again, define and govern interactions between African-American citizens and law enforcement. “All citizens are expected to take personal
CRESPO responsibility for their behavior,” says Crespo. “However, law enforcement officer must be held not only to a personal standard of behavior, but also to the standards of their profession,” DBCF expects law enforcement officers to be courteous, forgo biased suspicions and limit inappropriate profiling which reflects a ‘guilty till proven innocent’ standard. We expect law enforcement officers will not prematurely deploy deadly force, especially in responding to seemingly minor infractions. Additionally, we expect law enforcement to utilize body cameras and dash cams and never alter or otherwise manipulate tapes or written documents associated with citizen arrests and detentions. DBCF suggest a few additional actions be adopted to advance a pathway to partnership. Officer body cameras and vehicle dash cams should simultaneously broadcast video to police headquarters and a neutral, secure and approved third party. Appropriately empowered, joint citizen and law enforcement review panels should be established. And finally, officer training programs should be revised to include tools to assist officers who, more than their peers demonstrate or claim to ‘fear for their lives’ when in the line of duty they come into contact with Black males or other demographics subsets of the community. Collectively, these options can begin to heal the wounds and build community.
self because it was such a thrill to him,” he exclaimed. With everyone working together, regardless of creed, class or color, Minister Farrakhan had an audience of fifteen thousand people at the Miami Arena. Rasul Muhammad, a son of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, took on the post as Student Minister of the mosque in 1995. Under his leadership, they were able to establish relationships with Reverend Moss. They also helped to put Michelle Spence Jones into office by promoting her campaign door to door. Due to health issues, Student Minister Rasul Muhammad had to take a sabbatical to focus on bringing himself back to health. Minister Louis Farrakhan then appointed Student Minister Patrick Muhammad, originally in charge of the mosque in Phoenix, Ariz., to be the student minister in Miami. He has been serving in this capacity for the past three years. Just like his predecessors, he is helping the mosque and the community to prosper. His latest endeavor is bringing the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan to speak at Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Overtown. “Recently in Atlanta I had the honor to have dinner with him,” said Brother Patrick. “At the end of dinner, I went and shook his hand, and it came to mind to ask him if we could have him in Miami. He responded to me with a smile, saying that it was a possibility. Two days later, I received a phone call that it was approved.” Brother Patrick sees that the community is very excited to see the Minister. “The buzz is like a tidal wave of a spirit,” he said. “I’ve heard
Since it’s passage in 2002, the debate around ESEA has become a political cesspool. Some Democrats seem dead set on making sure that relaxing the Department of Education’s involvement in punishing state systems for failing to meet standards curtailing the use of standardized testing in evaluating whether a school is “good” or “bad”. On the other side of the aisle, some Republicans want to completely remove the federal government from the process by eliminating the “Common Core” standards altogether and reducing the Department of Education’s ability to punish failing schools. Keep in mind that each side needs to be able to claim some legislative victory when the bill ultimately passes, often times determined by semantics. Maybe, however, as the political posturing over ESEA escalates, lawmakers could benefit from conversations with working class families like Martha’s family. These families are not tied to the political party caucus platforms, legislative wins and losses or grandiose policy proposals that promise change in the far distant future. Nor do they care about how they are
that last time the Minister spoke here was approximately 20 years ago. The community is saying they’re thankful that the Minister is coming again. They are hungry for it as well.” Mt. Zion Baptist Church was one of the first meeting places for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other Civil Rights’ leaders. Minister Louis Farrakhan speaking there, that speaks volume about his message of unity within the community, regardless of religious backgrounds. “Miami is a place with so much diversity,” said Brother Patrick. “We come from all across. The historical thing is that the church is located directly across from a building where Muhammad Ali accepted the Teachings of the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad. This is the city where the Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad appointed Minister Abdul Bey Muhammad. I’m just honored to strive and serve in that capacity as we are blessed to be on the shoulders of our pioneers.”
HBCU grad named President of Peoples Energy By Charles Matthews Special to the NNPA from The Florida Sentinel Wisconsin Energy’s (WE) purchase of Integrys was approved and has moved the power company beyond the state’s border. The deal expanded Wisconsin Energy’s footprint, adding a natural gas utility business that serves greater Chicago and parts of Michigan and Minnesota. Wisconsin Energy Corp.’s $9.1 billion deal, created a four-state utility with 4.3 million customers. Charles Matthews has been named the president of Peoples Energy and a member of the board of directors for its subsidiaries, Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas. As president, Matthews will oversee the daily operational
A good education by any means necessary (Cont'd from Page 2)
Muhammad Ali, Feb 26, 1967. (Photo Credit: Los Angeles Times)
viewed by others as they fight to find a good school for their kids. Without the options provided through the Milwaukee Parental Choice program, young Mical would be trapped in a failing school. In reauthorizing ESEA, Congress needs to create an environment where similar school choice options will be made available for other kids as well. For these kids, being on the right school dictates whether they thrive, flourish and develop the love of learning that will serve them for life. As Martha Presley said, “I wanted to know why Mical was suddenly enjoying school, so I started sitting in on his classes and just saw so much love there. They let the kids know that they are important, that they are somebody and that they have the ability to accomplish great things,” says Martha. “Mical is now in the third grade and has grown leaps and bounds. I’m really grateful for this school.” While the debate over ESEA continues, let’s hope that the members of Congress grasp the immediate benefit of school choice for families, like Martha’s family, who just want their kids to succeed - by any means necessary.
Charles Matthews, new president of Peoples Energy. and administrative activities of Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas – regulated natural gas utilities serving residential, commercial and industrial customers in Chicago and many of its northern suburbs. Peoples Gas has 1,300 employees and serves approximately 828,000 customers in the city of Chicago. North Shore Gas has 170 employees and serves approximately 160,000 customers in 54 communities within the northern suburbs of Chicago. Previously, Matthews served as senior vice president – wholesale energy and fuels, customer solutions for We Energies, the largest electric and natural gas utility in Wisconsin. Appointed to that position in January 2012, Matthews led the development and implementation of market resource strategies to minimize the net cost of serving the energy needs of We Energies customers. In support of We Energies’ electric generation business, Matthews managed interactions with the Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO), an integrated regional nonprofit entity that operates the bulk power transmission system and associated energy market. He also oversaw the annual purchase and delivery of more than 12 million tons of coal, 35 million dekatherms of natural gas (A dekatherm is equivalent to 10 terms or a million British thermal units) and other related commodities for plant operations. (Read full story on www.thewestsidegazette.com)
July 30 - August 5, 2015 • www.thewestsidegazette.com • Page 13
Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper
HE’S GOT THE WHOLE WORLD IN HIS HANDS FT. LAUDERDALE, FL - Yves Gabriel has the whole world in his hands. He found himself in the throws of arguments with family and friends over all social and political topics that keep our community from thriving. The things that is so big in life whereas one individual could not solve, but as a collective could be prevented or even eradicated. Some of his topics for visual creation are addiction, rape, racism, homelessness DQG FKLOG DEXVH 7KLV LV GH¿QLWHO\ WKH SRLQW RI H[SUHVVLRQ IRU Yves Gabriel’s art.
His title “Child Abuse� is a child’s bicycle with training wheels; it has been painted all over with red paint and has a weight as the front wheel. He indicated that he used the bike to represent the innocence of the children and the iron weighted wheel to represent their sufferings. Nothing shiny is on this bike because it is all covered up with the paint that represents their pain. This pain shows up WKURXJKRXW WKHLU OLYHV DV IHDU RI H[SUHVVLRQ JXLOW or shame that has been displaced upon them.
Yves was born in Haiti and moved to the United States to study Fine Arts and Graphic Design. His artistic journey He indicated that “child hood should be began over 10 years ago as an Organic Sculptor and Digital about reminiscing and remembering innoArtist. He later evolved as a painter by embracing abstraction cence.â€? The point of this piece Yves says is for DQG FRQFHSWXDO LVP DV YHKLFOHV WR DGGUHVV VLJQLÂżFDQW LVVXHV the community to not forget the children. of our times, whether social or political, without compromising the essence of his inspiration. “There is a common thread that binds us together whether one realizes it or not. I believe we He found that when he started to create these subjects as have the ability to unlock its full potential, despite Yves Gabriel, shown art the arguments stopped and the conversations began. He RI WKH FRPSOH[LW\ RI WKH LVVXHV E\ LQFHVVDQWO\ with his works, Racism & I Am Not takes objects that may have been discarded in someway and ÂżQGLQJ ZD\V WR PHQG RXU GLIIHUHQFHV &RQVHCharlie assembles them to create his message. quently, I have been using most of my paintings as a means to keep the dialogue alive on matters , ZDV UHFHQWO\ DW DQ H[KLELWLRQ ZKHUH KLV DUW ZDV RQ GLVSOD\ that continue to weaken that thread. Through my I observed the viewers as they approached his art. From one work, I hope to engage individuals in a way that of my observations in particular, a woman indicated they she RSHQV XS WKHLU PLQG WR DQ XQÂżOWHUHG ZRUOG ZKHUH did not understand the point of Yves art. It left me with the WKH\ DUH FRPSHOOHG WR SDXVH DQG GHHSO\ UHĂ€HFW thought did she really get the point? And did not want to deal on the subject matter during the viewing and bewith the thought? If this is so, then it would be the very type yond.â€? of behavior we as a community have when the news comes RXW RI DQ\ RQH VXEMHFW WKDW LV GHVWUR\LQJ WKH PRUDO ÂżEHU RI RXU Yves work includes “The Mandela Project “, community. We embrace it for a moment and then have to let “Haiti: Unity is Strengthâ€?, which was featured in it go. the International Contemporary Masters V, and VXEVHTXHQWO\ H[KLELWHG DW the Southern Nevada Museum of Art. It also includes the “Diary of a Straight Guyâ€?’ which won him an award for best in its category at the Art Bravo Juried Show held at ArtServe.
Perhaps, she just did not understand? In order understand art one must know what stands under the subject. Art is intended to evoke an emotion and give the YLHZHU DQ H[SHULHQFH WR HLWKHU delight or provoke thought. In the interview with Yves we had a chance to have an in depth discussion about his work.
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a bust of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw. Sales of copies of the bust allowed her to sail to Rome, Italy, where she mastered working in marble. She quickly achieved success as a sculptor. Source : http:// www.biography.com
Arts Beat Calendar Highlights
eMail us your best young artist ages 6 t0 12 and we will pick a lucky winner to showcase in an upcoming edition. Please include the following: •Photo •Name •Age •Grade •School
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The Florida Arts License Plate Program was created by the Legislature in 1994. Funds collected through the sale of these specialty plates are distributed to the counties where the plates are sold and are used to support arts organizations, programs, and activities within that county.
<RX FDQ ÂżQG RXW PRUH DERXW WRU (GPRQLD /HZLV HDUQHG FULWLFDO SUDLVH IRU ZRUN WKDW H[SORUHG UHOLYves by visiting his website gious and classical themes. Edmonia Lewis was born around 1844 LQ *UHHQEXVK 1HZ <RUN +HU ÂżUVW QRWDEOH FRPPHUFLDO VXFFHVV ZDV www.yvesgabriel.com
New to art and would like to know more ?
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Artist Yvette Michele Booth
send email to arts@TheWestsideGazette.com
ART on AIDS & HIV
There is a monthly series here in South Florida called â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;Cafe Societyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; on the 3rd Thursdays each month, the Art Salon features an evening of performance, education and engagement. The event is free and generously sponsored by landscape architects TBG Partners , Whole Food Market Fort Lauderdale, Original Bartenderâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Selections, JBS Marketing Group. Community partners include: Broward100, Bloggerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Block, Venetian Arts Society and South Florida Black Professionals Network.
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6:30-9pm â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Broward Art Guild â&#x20AC;&#x153;Portalsâ&#x20AC;? - RSHQ WKHPHG DUW H[KLELWLRQ 6: 2 2SHQLQJ 5HFHSWLRQ Âą 1( QG 6WUHHW )RUW /DXGHUGDOH )/ ([KLbi bition Run Dates: July 1st to July 23rd, 2015 http://www.browardartguild. org or
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D P WR S P -0 /H[XV Sunday Jazz Brunch @Riverwalk First Sunday of the month. Riverwalk Park (954) 828-5363 F i
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6 6-9:00 6pm Icons of Warhol, Haring & Friends :Forre & Co Fine Art Gallery Opening reception Cey Adams Guest Lecturer 1007 E. Las Olas G B Blvd, Ft Lauderdale, FL. 954-463-0011
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6 6:30 6: pm Every 4th Tuesday of the month musicians, singers, poets, and performers take the stage at ArtServe for Open Mic Tuesdays. Sign up p e or come out and enjoy some awesome talent. Hosted by SOSOSâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Chris Monteleone.Doors open at 6:30 for sign-up. Performances begin at 7:30. M http://www.artserve.org ht
South Florida has Highest AIDS Rates in USA. Artist of all ages have a message to share in helping this epidemic that is affecting our community.
SCRUBBING OUT THE STIGMA
by joining the World AIDS Museum & Educational Center and Artist Yvette Michele by sharing images of these artistically created Medical Scrubs in Social Media
What is Stigma?
HIV-related stigma and discrimination refers to prejudice, negative attitudes and abuse directed at people living with HIV and AIDS.
Why? It is because of fear and judgment for those who are infected and attitudes toward their lifestyles.
This weekâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s scrub is No 27 Love Is Greater Than Stigma Yolonda Reed #worldaidsmuseum #SOS27 @bigpiclady @_westsidegazett
Photography Credits: ART on AIDS & HIV, Yves Gabriel ARTIST Yvette Michele Booth
Inclusion to Arts Beat Calendar Call for advertising opportunities at 954-525-1489
Art on AIDS/HIV will be featured weekly from the voice of an artist on this very important awareness and health issue.
This Ad could be yours ! Are you an Artist or an Arts Organization? Advertise your programs and events with us. Press Releases send to arts@thewestsidegazette.com Advertising Call 954-525-1489
Page 14 • www.thewestsidegazette.com • July 30 - August 5, 2015
Broward County's Oldest and Largest African American Owned and Operated Newspaper
Stay 'Cation' a series on fun things to do in South Florida take the kids! By Don Valentine
Westside Gazette BROWARD COUNTY'S OLDEST AND LARGEST AFRICAN AMERICAN OWNED AND OPERATED NEWSPAPER 1971 -- A PROUD PPAPER APER FOR A PROUD PEOPLE -- 44 YEARS
AUGUST 24, 2015 It’s that time again to join the Westside Gazette as we design and market our annual Back to School Guide. The guide is created as a tool to assist students and parents with helpful information they can use in preparation for the incoming school year in addition to being a resource throughout the year. Our goal is to cover a variety of topics filled with materials that can bring relief for both students and parents for making informed choices in relation to their learning. Because South Florida students come from all different socio-economic, ethnic and cultural backgrounds, we try to address surrounding issues related to their educational concerns for the entire community. The Westside Gazette Newspaper is calling upon all community stakeholders concerned about the total education of our children to offer their support. We hope that, with the collective assistance from the entire community, this will be the best and most informative Back to School Guide to be featured in the Westside Gazette ever. This year’s guide will be published on Here’s how you can join us:
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NON CAMERA READY ART WORK DEADLINE
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CAMERA READY ART WORK DEADLINE
AUGUST 13, 2015.
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Miami has a quietly kept gold mine of a scientific treasure in the Frost Museum of Science. This is a must see on your South Florida excursions. It has everything from a live Bald Eagle exhibit to a state-of-theart planetarium. Make sure when you visit that you schedule the planetarium experience into your day. When I saw it they had up-to-date pictures of the recent Pluto pass by the “New Horizons” space craft. A terrific indicator of the top of the line quality exhibits we have
in our own back yard. When you consider our fastest capabilities, it still took 10 years to get pictures of the dwarf planet. It’s conveniently located at the last exit of I-95. This is just on the west side of U.S.1 across from the Vizcaya Museum. For the modest price the Frost Museum charges this is one of the best academic bargains you
can get on the Treasure coast. It has multiple interactive exhibits that teach you and your children about the physics we live with here in South Florida. Take advantage of participating in the exhibits they feature a lot of the nuances we inhabit in our subtropical home. At just $15 for admission and no parking charge you cannot beat this understated treat. The museum contains the afore-
mentioned Space-Transit Planetarium, Weintraub Observatory, a Sea Lab, and the Falcon Batchelor Bird of Prey Center. The museum is currently working to transplant the facility from its current location to Park West at Bicentennial Park in Downtown Miami, along with the new Pérez Art Museum Miami. Your kids will be enthralled with this atteraction.
Crockett Foundation hosts seventh annual Family Health and Community Awareness Festival Crockett Foundation host seventh Annual Family Health and Community Awareness Festival, Empowering Today’s Youth with Healthy Lifestyle Choices Saturday, Aug. 8, 2015 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Pompano Citi Center Presenting, 1955 N. Fed. Hwy., Pompano Beach, Fla. This event is free and is sponsored by Broward Health in Partnership with local sponsors which include the Florida Department of Health, Keith and Associates, Omega Psi Phi Fraternity and Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated Zeta Rho Omega Chapter invite locals to come for a day of family fun and health education. With a commitment to improving quality of life and building strong communities locally and internationally wherever needed, the Crockett Foundation is led by Henri Crockett, a native of Pompano Beach, Fla. and former NFL player with the Atlanta Falcons and Minnesota Vikings; and his brother Zach Crockett, a retired NFL player and current scout for the Oakland Raiders. Free health screenings, immunizations and physical exams and a backpack giveaway. The festival is family focused with fun-filled activities which include games, live en-
tertainment and a marketplace with local vendors. “The Crockett Foundation has been working to build strong, educated and healthy communities through our various programs since our inception in 2002,” said Henri Crockett, founder and executive director of the Crockett Foundation. “The Family Health and Community Awareness Festival provides the perfect platform to teach our local youth and their parents how to take ownership of their health.” About the Crockett Foundation The Crockett Foundation is a South Florida-based nonprofit organization committed to improving quality of life and building strong communities locally and internationally, wherever there is a need. Its mission is to provide educational opportunities, increase health and awareness, and inspire and equip today’s youth that they may overcome social limitations and realize their full potential, growing to become productive and contributing members of tomorrow’s global community. For more information, visit www.crockettfoundation.org, e m a i l info@crockettfoundation.org, or call (954) 200-1924.