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WI Web Staff

'Wall of Fame' Unveiled at Beltway Plaza Mall

Thursday, 28 March 2013 20:39 Published in Local

Inductees Include 3 Local Sports Personalities

 

 

 

The Beltway Plaza Mall has dedicated its new “Wall of Fame” in honor of the many citizens in the Prince George’s County community who’ve achieved success in their careers.

The first three inductees included Seth “Mayhem” Mitchell, local heavyweight boxer, Walt “Wizard” Williams, former NBA star and Lara Aribisala, DC DIVAS defensive end.

The dedication took place March 23 and was attended by Greenbelt Mayor Judith F. “J” Davis, now in her 10th term on the Greenbelt City Council, and Mayor Pro Tem Emmett Jordan.

“This is a special day for all of us at Beltway Plaza Mall as we honor three special individuals who’ve made a mark in our community,” said Marc “Kap” Kapastin, who rendered remarks said during the ceremony. “We intend to grow our Wall of Fame with new honorees in the future in all walks of life.”

Attendees enjoyed refreshments and short presentations from each of the honorees and special guests which also inclded Rich Daniels manager of the DC Divas football team.

 About The Inductees:

Omolara "Lara" Aribisala

Her name is Omolara but everyone calls her Lara. She’s a single mother of two beautiful girls ages 14 & 11 and was born the youngest of five children in Ibandan, Nigeria and emigrated to the U.S. 27 years ago. Lara proudly became a U.S. citizen just last year. As a professional football player with the Divas, Lara earned the Most Improved Player Award in 2008. The Divas won the Northeastern Division Championship in 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012.

 Seth “Mayhem” Mitchell

Mitchell’s superb football play brought him recognition and many high school football awards, including his selection as one of the top 20 linebackers in the nation. Seth graduated from Michigan State University and his nickname, "Mayhem," was given to him by his football teammate at Michigan State. In 2008, Mitchell began his professional boxing career. After only his second professional fight, he signed with Oscar De La Hoya's Golden Boy Promotions. Currently, Mitchell’s record stands at 25-1-1 with knockouts.

Walter 'Wizard" Williams

A sharpshooting 6'8" forward/guard, Williams attended school at the University of Maryland from 1988 to 1992, and is credited by many for resurrecting the school’s basketball program. Williams was selected by the Sacramento Kings with the seventh pick of the 1992 NBA Draft and was on the 1992-93 NBA All-Rookie Second Team. He went on to play 11 seasons in the NBA, with the Kings, the Miami Heat, the Toronto Raptors, the Portland Trail Blazers, the Houston Rockets, and the Dallas Mavericks.

 

Edwards to Host Women's Health Expo

Thursday, 28 March 2013 19:55 Published in Local

 

Congresswoman Donna F. Edwards (MD-4) will host a Women's Health Expo On Saturday, April 13 at the Prince George's Ballroom & Kentland Community Center, located at 2411 Pinebrook Ave., in Landover, Md.

The expo will feature health tests and screenings, dance and health exercises, and healthy meal demonstrations.

For more information, visit www.donnaedwards.house.gov or call (301) 516.7601.

THEARC Celebrates Life of Donald Byrd

Thursday, 28 March 2013 18:02 Published in Arts & Entertainment

Come and celebrate the life and music of Dr. Donald Byrd at this spirited concert featuring The Blackbyrds with special guest Bobbi Humphrey. Two performances at 7pm and 9:30pm.

 

Double Time Jazz at THEARC is proud to present Walking in Rhythm: A Tribute to the Life of Donald Byrd. This one-night-only concert will be nothing short of phenomenal - with performances by local soul legends, The Blackbyrds and special guest; flautist, Bobbi Humphrey. This event will happen at THEARC Theater on April 12, 2013 with two seatings at 7:00 pm and 9:30 pm.

The Blackbyrds came together in the early 1970's at Howard University. At the time, their mentor - Donald Byrd - was the college's chairman of the Jazz Studies Department. Byrd, a post-bop era trumpeter, became the producer of the five-man group's debut album. The band was signed to Fantasy Records in 1973 and are best known for their 1975 hit "Walking in Rhythm", which not only received a Grammy nomination, but also sold over one million copies that year.

After experiencing great success throughout the decades, The Blackbyrds were devastated in February of 2013 after the death of their mentor and friend - Donald Byrd. Their performance at THEARC will be a celebration of his life and the music that invigorated so many.

Double Time Jazz is musical performance series, presented by THEARC Theater, bringing world-class jazz musicians east of the Anacostia River throughout the year. This effort is made possible through THEARC's collaboration with WC Smith, The Washington Informer, Washington Informer Charities and WPFW Radio. Each year, THEARC brings programs like this to inspire children and adults residing in the Ward 8 community.

General admission is $20/person. VIP tickets are $35 and include reserved seating and admission to a special wine and cheese reception.

Parking for this event is free.

For tickets visit: http://www.thearcdc.org/events/donald-byrd-tribute-concert

2013 Spelling Bee Prize List

Thursday, 28 March 2013 17:56 Published in Spelling Bee News

THE AWARD WINNING AFRICAN AMERICAN NEWSPAPER

2013 PRIZE LIST

First Place Winner:

• First Place Trophy – courtesy by Champion Trophy

• Four Tickets anywhere Southwest Airlines flies – courtesy of Southwest Air

• Check for $1000 – courtesy of Jack H. Olender and Associates

• 1 hour session with Doris McMillon on effective public speaking

• Hotel stay for the national bee at the Grand Hyatt – courtesy of The Washington Informer

• Washington Nationals tickets & Invitation to be honored at Home Plate of a Nationals game and a meet and greet with a player and Screech.

• Giant gift card

• Washington Informer gift bag with assorted gifts from sponsors

• Washington Nationals 2012 souvenir playoff program

• Coca Cola Backpack

Second Place Winner:

• Second Place Trophy – courtesy of Champion Trophy

• Check for $500 – courtesy of Jack H. Olender and Associates

• Washington Nationals tickets & Invitation to be honored at Home Plate of a Nationals game and a meet and greet with a player and Screech.

• Giant gift card

• Washington Informer gift bag with assorted gifts from sponsors

• Washington Nationals 2012 souvenir playoff program

• Coca Cola Backpack

Third Place Winner:

• Third Place Trophy – courtesy of Champion Trophy

• Check for $300 – courtesy of Jack H. Olender and Associates

• Washington Nationals tickets & Invitation to be honored at Home Plate of a Nationals game and a meet and greet with a player and Screech.

• Giant gift card

• Washington Informer gift bag with assorted gifts from sponsors

• Washington Nationals 2012 souvenir playoff program

• Coca Cola Backpack

All other finalists:

• Finalist Trophy – courtesy of Champion Trophy

• Giant gift card

• Washington Informer gift bag with assorted gifts from sponsors

• Washington Nationals 2012 souvenir playoff program

• Coca Cola Backpack

The Washington Informer

3117 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave SE

Washington DC 20032

202-561-4100 FAX 202-574-3785

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The Award-Winning African-American Newspaper

Thursday, 28 March 2013 17:39 Published in Spelling Bee News

We consider each and every finalist to be a winner, and our sponsors and partners have helped us to reward every one of them. We humbly ask that you support our sponsors, partners, and advertisers.

2013 Spelling Bee Sponsors and Partners

Amtrak

Coca Cola

Champion Trophy

DC Public Schools

Giant Food

Jack H Olender and Associates

McMillon Communications

NBC4

Pepco

The Foundation for the Advancement of Music & Education Inc. (FAME)

The Nielsen Company

Southwest Air

Washington Gas

Washington Nationals

Wells Fargo

Lunch Provided by Inspire BBQ and Catering

Please feel free to contact The Washington Informer with any questions, concerns, suggestions for next year, or if you would like to personally thank any of our sponsors.

Denise Rolark Barnes, Publisher

Ron Burke, Advertising and Marketing Director

The Washington Informer

3117 Martin Luther King Jr. Ave SE

Washington DC 20032

202-561-4100 FAX 202-574-3785

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Message from the Washington Nationals

Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:26 Published in Spelling Bee News

 

Before the April 13th game (Saturday) vs. the Atlanta Braves at 1:05, the Nationals will honor the winners of the 31st Annual Washington Informer Spelling Bee. The Nationals are providing all winners and their families, complimentary tickets to the game, and will honor the following on the field before the game with a "Spirit Award" in front of the entire crowd.

• First Place - Donovan Rolle

• Second Place – Alex Togneri-Jones

• Third Place (tie) Justin Atwood and Eric Wright

Congratulations to all the winners and the participants and

please accept the souvenir playoff programs that have been provided.

History of the City-Wide Spelling Bee

Thursday, 28 March 2013 16:15 Published in Spelling Bee History

 

The Washington Informer began sponsoring the D.C. City Wide Spelling Bee during the 1981-82 school year. The late Dr. Mary E. White, supervising director, D.C. Public Schools Division of Instructional Services, Department of English, sought participation for D.C. Public Schools students in the Scripps National Spelling Bee held annually in Washington, D.C. While Scripps was willing to include the District of Columbia in the national competition, it could not do so based upon its requirement that a daily newspaper must serve as the official sponsor of the local competition.

Many years prior, The Washington Daily News sponsored the local spelling bee. Subsequently, The Washington Star purchased the Daily News, and subsequently ceased sponsorship of the spelling bee. Thus, for more than 15 years, District of Columbia public, private and parochial school children could not participate in the national competition for lack of a sponsoring newspaper.

Dr. White solicited support from the Washington Post, hopeful that the publisher would agree to become the District's official sponsor. According to Dr. White, Post officials told her that since the daily newspaper was a regional publication; their sponsorship would have to include not only the District of Columbia, but suburban Maryland and Virginia, as well. However, at that, the Journal newspaper chain had served as the suburban sponsor for several years, resulting in the Post's refusal to sponsor the bee solely for students enrolled in District schools.

Dr. White then appealed to Dr. Calvin W. Rolark, a friend and supporter of the D.C. Public Schools, president and founder of the United Black Fund, Inc. and publisher of The Washington Informer newspaper. It was Dr. White's hope that Dr. Rolark would exercise his influence over the Post officials and persuade them to agree to sponsor the spelling bee. However, as publisher of a weekly newspaper, which served more than 25,000 readers in the District of Columbia, Maryland and Virginia, Dr. Rolark volunteered his publication to serve as a sponsor. With that, he brought in his daughter, Denise Rolark, managing editor of The Washington Informer, to assist in coordinating the District's first spelling bee along with Dr. White and other D.C. Public Schools officials.

The first city-wide spelling bee was held at Backus Junior High School in March, 1982. The winner was a sixth grade student, John Krattenmaker, who attended Mann Elementary School. Unbeknownst to Dr. Rolark, John was not permitted to participate in the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee held the following May because The Washington Informer was and still is not a daily newspaper.

As an officer of the National Newspaper Publishers Association, a trade organization of nearly 200 African American-owned newspapers across the country, Dr. Rolark concluded that the Scripps National Spelling Bee was maintaining an inherently racist policy because there were and still are no African American-owned daily newspapers in the country. He argued that in a jurisdiction, like Washington, D.C., where the majority of the student population is African American, students who might otherwise be eligible to participate in the spelling bee would be precluded from doing so unless a white-owned daily agreed to become the official sponsor.

Dr. Rolark called in his legal counsel and wife, Attorney Wilhelmina J. Rolark, who threatened Scripps with an injunction that would forbid the national competition to take place in the District of Columbia until the court ruled on the merits of the case alleging discrimination. Scripps complied, and changed its rules allowing weekly newspapers sponsorship privileges in the national competition. That year, the Loudon County Times, a weekly newspaper based in Loudon County, Virginia and the only other weekly newspaper to participate along with the Informer in the national spelling bee that year, produced the national spelling bee winner.

Each year, more than 4,000 students enrolled in nearly 200 D.C. public, private, parochial, charter and home schools participate in the spelling bee. For the past 31 years, the City-Wide Spelling Bee has been held at the studios of NBC4, where it is taped and later aired for general viewership.

Purpose

Scripps, a diversified multi-media company, established the National Spelling Bee to help students improve their spelling, increase their vocabulary, learn concepts, and develop correct English that will help them all their lives. Spellers experience the satisfaction of learning language not only for the sake of correct spelling but also for the sake of cultural and intellectual literacy.

The Washington Informer's participation in Scripps-Howard National Spelling Bee helps to further the goals of Scripps in the District of Columbia and to address the issue of illiteracy, particularly among African American youth. "If we want to improve the quality of life for all Americans," the late Dr. Calvin W. Rolark said, "then we must begin by teaching our children to read, which they will not be able to achieve until they can learn to spell."

April 4 – America's History Lesson

Thursday, 28 March 2013 00:14 Published in Opinion / Editorial

On April 4, 1968, while Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., stood on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tenn., a gunman fired a fatal shot with a rifle that ended King's life and what some believed would also end the non-violent movement for civil rights in the U.S.

Today, with the median age of males in the United States at 35.8 years old and females at 38.5, it's safe to say that more than half of the current population wasn't even born when King was assassinated, nor did they witness the reaction or experience the immediate impact of his death in America or across the globe. What they do in fact know, is that King is an icon, and that gun violence continues to wreak havoc in America. They know that the tragic murder of men, women and children due to the widespread access and use of guns and other more deadly semi-automatic weapons remains a prevalent issue in this country.

Thursday, April 4, will mark the 45th anniversary of King's assassination. It's a moment to reflect upon the work King was preparing for at the time of his death. He and other members of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference were preparing to hold a Poor People's March in the nation's capital. King had moved from the fight for civil rights to a struggle for "silver rights" and economic justice for poor people in America.

The Poor People's Campaign had already begun, by May 12, 1968, thousands of poor people from cities in both the North and South converged upon the National Mall and set up a shantytown called, "Resurrection City." They were there to tell America's leaders that the country's poor had grown weary of asking and now "demanded meaningful jobs at a living wage; [and] a secure and adequate income for all those unable to find jobs [along with] access to land for economic uses; [and] access to capital for poor people and minorities to promote their own businesses; and the ability for ordinary people to play a truly significant role in the government."

King's death didn't stop the Poor People's March from occurring. And, the march didn't eliminate the disparities that exist between the nation's rich and its poor, which is expanding daily. The generation of American's born after King's death, are experiencing first-hand the issues King fought so vehemently against. What a perfect history lesson for them on the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Readers' Voice

Wednesday, 27 March 2013 17:23 Published in Opinion / Editorial

Ending the School-to-Prison Pipeline

In her March 18 story, Dorothy Rowley correctly highlighted how inadequate public school policies on truancy and discipline are helping place young black males in the school-to-prison pipeline. But [an individual], whom Ms. Rowley quoted, was seriously wrong to claim that 'for-profit' public charter schools are part of "a dangerous mix that is a direct attack on our little black boys."

Every chartered public school in the District of Columbia is, by law, not-for-profit. And D.C.'s charters serve a higher share of African-American students than the city's traditional school system. The key to ending the school-to-prison pipeline is high-school graduation and college. Some 77 percent of D.C. charter high school students graduate on time – a critical component of college acceptance – compared to 56 percent in the city's regular public high schools.

The District's chartered public schools, which are tuition-free and open to all D.C.-resident students, have taken pioneering steps to help make college affordable for boys of color. Some 195 students at District charters such as Friendship Collegiate Academy, Thurgood Marshall Academy and Maya Angelou PCS recently earned DC Achievers Scholarships, which pay up to $55,000 in tuition and other supports. D.C.'s chartered public schools are building a school-to-college pipeline.

Ramona H. Edelin, Ph.D.

Executive Director

DC Association of Chartered Public Schools

Washington, D.C.

 

Keeping Dreams Alive!

So many of our young people who have talent never get the positive re-enforcement they need and desire in order to feel confident enough to pursue their dreams. Those dreams quickly become passing thoughts for them as they search endlessly throughout their lives trying to find themselves.

Michelle Phipps-Evans article, "The Emergence of a Young Artist" in the March 21, 2013 edition, about the seven-year-old artist Aqeel Qasir was very healing to me. Many years ago, I once thought of myself as a young artist at the age of 10, but unlike Master Qasir, I didn't have the support of my family or friends. To others my talent for art was looked upon as just a childhood notion for passing the time away, and not to be taken seriously as a career possibility.

As I grew into manhood I struggled, not knowing who I was or what path I should take. It wasn't until some 20 years later while I was sitting at my part-time job doodling on a piece of paper that it occurred to me – "this is what I am suppose to be doing." From that day forward I started reconnecting with the creative spirit that lives in me. Today, my life has meaning and direction.

After reading the article I just had to share my story with you and let you know how important supportive family and friends, and especially a newspaper like The Washington Informer can be to a young creative person. Hopefully someday a mature, master artist, Aqeel Qasir will look back on this article and smile.

Vincent L. Stafford

Suitland, Md.

Baker Wants Control of PG Schools

Wednesday, 27 March 2013 17:09 Published in Opinion / Editorial

The wave of mayoral school takeovers across the country has Prince George's County Executive Rushern Baker diving in, as well, as he makes plans to take control of the county school system, its budget and oversight of the superintendent.

Baker seems confident that his intervention will provide what is needed to improve the county's troubled school system. He hopes by taking control of the 125,000-student school system and its $1.7 billion budget that he will be able to improve the quality of education the county offers. Good schools, Baker suggests, are necessary to attract residents and businesses to the county.

The proposal presented to the state legislature last Saturday received significant pushback and the final bill introduced by lawmakers keeps the school system's budget in the hands of the school board. While Prince George's students are showing some academic progress, critics don't agree that a takeover by the county executive at this time will result in any significant improvements, at least not any time soon. For the first time in recent years, the county's 2013 budget saves teachers from furloughs and reportedly includes raises for teachers, greater flexibility in how principals can manage their budgets and provides for more programs for students in select schools. But the problem facing the schools, critics say, rests in the increasing population of low-income and special needs students. It will take time and additional resources to get these students up to speed, they say, and a takeover, does not address these issues or others.

So, why the urgency to control schools now? Many parents, teachers and education leaders want to know.

Like mayors in big city school districts including the District of Columbia, Boston, New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, Baker is frustrated and he believes a takeover will do much to save children from under-performing schools. He's willing to let the responsibility rest with him when it comes to improving the county's schools.

But the jury is still out when it comes to determining the success of school districts controlled by mayors. Mayoral takeovers have, in select cases, resulted in more stable school districts with fewer superintendent turnovers and less derision from appointed school boards that replaced formerly elected school boards.

We agree with some who argue that Baker needs to present a plan and not just assume a takeover is needed because other jurisdictions are doing it. What do they have to show, not just in maintaining leadership but also in improved student academic achievement? That's what really matters. Are children matriculating through school better equipped academically under a mayoral or county controlled leadership? If so, why; if not, why not. That's what Prince George's Country residents want to know, and in order to garner their support; Baker needs to demonstrate he has a plan that will produce positive and significant results.

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