April 10 2014 - The Mississippi Link
Transcription
April 10 2014 - The Mississippi Link
www.mississippilink.com Vol. 20, No. 24 April 10 - 16, 2014 50¢ VOTE Get out and 22 Heading into mayoral runoff April Yarber’s campaign call: ‘Prepared to Lumumba’s campaign call: ‘Continuing the lead…with everyday people’ Vision…, One City, One Aim, One Destiny’ By Ayesha K. Mustafaa Editor The next big thing: runoff day April 22, 2014. The political landscape has been cleared as of the special election held Tuesday, April 8, leaving two candidates in the runoff for the late Mayor Chokwe Lumumba’s unfulfilled three years of his term. Atty. Chokwe Antar Lumumba and City Councilman Tony Yarber came in neck-in-neck with 31 percent of the votes each. The morning after, Yarber was at his precinct office planning for the next leg of the race which will leave one man standing as mayor of Jackson. He and Lumumba being 30-something, Yarber was asked did he think the voters consciously wanted this to be a young man’s race. Yarber replied, “I’m not necessarily convinced it is a young man’s race. I am convinced that people are looking at those they think are more visionary. And it just so happens this race had some young men in it - like myself - who were able to articulate that vision maybe a little bit better than the other people.” Yarber said what resonates with the voters these days is that the peo- ple who lead them is someone they can identify with, and they want leadership that is able to get the ball moving and keep it moving. He was asked why would he want to take on the burden of being mayor of Jackson when the city has so many problems - infrastructure decline, crime, debt, and at the same time a mayor will be blamed for everything that goes wrong. Yarber responded, “When you are a servant, you are called to ‘servant leadership.’ Then you under- Yarber Continued on page 4 Mississippi icon calls for communities and churches to ‘educate, elevate and empower our children’ Inside The Mississippi Link Newswire LEXINGTON, Miss. - More than 200 attendees turned out for the Community Students Learning Center’s (CSLC) Fourth Annual Scholarship Awards Banquet, Saturday evening, March 29. Held in the J. J. McClain High School cafeteria, the banquet featured a “powerful” awakening by longtime news anchor and reporter Maggie Wade-Dixon of WLBT-TV3 / WDBD-TV40 of Jackson. Wade-Dixon is also widely known for her work with the segment, “Wednesday’s Child.” “She is a Mississippi icon and champion for the children,” said sixth-grader Eddie Brock, a J.J. McClain Middle School Students and CSLC After-School student, as he introduced Wade-Dixon. Brock then said, “Let’s put our hands together for Mrs. WadeDixon,” and the audience rose to its feet. A resounding urgency in her “spirit-filled message was for adults and churches to embrace children more with positive affir- CSLC Executive Director Beulah Greer, Maggie Wade, Leslie Greer mations. “Our children have not failed; we have failed our children,” Wade-Dixon said. “There is not a child that I have met who is not smart, intelligent, and can master anything we give them.” She also stressed, “We’ve got to teach our children that it is not about you, it’s about what you do for other people.” Wade-Dixon continued, “It amazes me that we will pay al- most any price to be entertained, yet we struggle to educate our children; we struggle to pay our teachers. Together, we can educate, elevate and empower our children.” Her title coincided with the scholarship banquet’s theme: CSLC Continued on page 5 IRS filing deadline April 15; local post office closing hours Fighting HIV/AIDS focus of Mississippi Faith Leaders Summit White House may ban ‘selfies’ with President Obama Page 2 Page 6 Page 18 By Stephanie R. Jones Contributing Writer Chokwe Antar Lumumba and his supporters celebrated his victory in the Jackson mayoral election Tuesday night, April 8, after he received the most votes in a field of 12 candidates to earn a spot in the April 22, runoff election. “April 22…, April 22…, April 22…. Make it clear that the people’s mission continues,” Lumumba told the jubilant crowd at the Jackson State University eCenter af- ter he garnered 10,910 votes slightly beating the second highest vote getter City Councilman Tony Yarber, who received 10,900 votes. “I want y’all to know that I love you. If you don’t love the people, you will betray the people. Lumumba thanked voters for going to the polls. I thank everybody for coming out in ran and being dedicated to purpose of moving Jackson forward,” Lumumba said. Lumumba, whose platform centers on connecting and empowering people, joined his runoff opponent Wednesday morning at City Hall to sign a pledge to honor a platform laid out by Working Together Jackson, a diverse group that works for betterment of the city. As for the next phase of the campaign he said: “I would like to ask the people that did not vote for me to inform us moving forward on what we need to do to earn your vote. Lumumba Continued on page 4 College Hill’s 107th Anniversary BY Daphne Higgins The weather was cold, it was a rainy day, and that could have been an excuse for the hundreds in attendance to stay home but instead, the members and guests of College Hill Missionary Baptist Church of Jackson filled the sanctuary to celebrate the church’s 107th anniversary. The congregants were present to hear the word from one of its own, Rev. I. D. Thompson, a long-time member of College Hill, who now pastors Metropolitan Missionary Baptist Church in Clarksdale, Miss. Thompson, who is known by many as an inspired and spiritual man of God accepted his call to preach the Gospel in February 2010. On Sunday, April 6, 2014, the message that he shared with his College Hill family showed evidence of why he is known as an inspirational man filled with spirituality. Using the scriptures of choice by the College Hill Anniversary Committee, Rev. Thompson read all three scriptures that were identified by the church leaders: 1 Thessalonians (Pray without ceasing), Corinthians 12:12 (For as the body is one, and that many members, and all the members of that one body being many, are one College Hill Pastor Michael T. Williams at podium with guest speaker Rev. I. D. Thompson (left) body, so also is Christ) and Ephesians 4:4 (There is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling), which summarized, is the chosen anniversary theme: “Uniting in Prayer, Understanding God’s Purpose, Unveiling Our Priority.” Thompson’s text was “You’ve got mail!” The preacher/teacher talked about his excitement when getting mail as a young man growing up McCool, Miss. He considered mail a connection to what many considered to be the real world. “I even got excited about receiving the Sears and Roebuck Catalog because it gave me dreams about what I could achieve.” While talking about his childhood excitement, Thompson expressed the real purpose of mail, with his focus being on letters. “A letter is a communication tool - it expresses our thoughts/ feelings. It makes a person to person connection or simply provides information.” College Hill Continued on page 10 Share this issue with a friend by mailing it to: LOCAL 2 • the mississippi link April 10 - 16, 2014 www.mississippilink.com Mississippi post offices ready for last minute tax filers Special to The Mississippi Link With the 2014 tax filing deadline fast approaching, Mississippi Post Offices are ready for last minute tax filers on April 15. Below is a list of Mississippi Post Offices open later than 5 p.m., as well as a list of self service kiosks available for customer use in retail lobbies. As in past tax seasons, The U.S Postal Service will provide customers with both timely tax return drop offs and special services, including Express Mail, Priority Mail, First-Class Mail, Certified Mail, and Return Receipt. Self Service Kiosks: Southaven - 7550 Airways Blvd. Madison - 990 Hwy. 51 Ridgeland - 611 S. Pear Orchard Rd. Jackson Lefleur - 1501 Jackso- nian Plz. Jackson MPO - 401 E. South St. Jackson Flowood - 105 Hogg Creek Dr. Hattiesburg MPO - 220 S. 40th Ave. Gulfport MPO - 11110 Hwy. 49 Ocean Springs - 1581 Bienville Blvd. The IRS accepts the FirstClass postmark as proof of filing by April 15. The Postal Service provides these tips for income tax filers mailing returns: If filing on April 15, mail early in the day at any Post Office. Be sure to verify Post Office hours of operation. If depositing returns in a collection box on April 15, doublecheck the pick-up schedule on the collection box. To ensure getting the April 15 postmark, deposit returns before the last scheduled pick-up time. Affix the correct postage Some returns include many forms and require additional postage. IRS does not pay postage due and will return items to sender. One ounce for letter size returns is 49 cents for stamp postage, 48 cents for metered postage. The second and third ounces are an additional 21 cents for each ounce, regardless of postage type. Large envelopes or letters weighing over 3.5 ounces are subject to an oversize rate of 98 cents for one ounce and 21 cents per additional ounce. When possible, use the envelope provided by the IRS and be sure to include a return address. If the envelope provided by the IRS is unavailable, be sure to verify the IRS address where returns should be mailed. The Postal Service offers flexible products and services for use when mailing tax returns. Priority Mail Express Service This gets your tax return to many locations the next day guaranteed or your money-back. Priority Mail Express includes signature at delivery and free USPS Tracking to confirm delivery to the IRS, online at usps.com or toll-free at 800-222-1811. Priority Mail Service This gets your tax return delivered in 1, 2, or 3 business days. Priority Mail also includes free USPS Tracking to confirm delivery to the IRS, online at usps.com or toll-free at 800-222-1811. First-Class Mail Service Efficient, economical option for mailing your return with the all-important postmark. Proof of Mailing Services These services provide you with peace of mind. You can prove you mailed your tax return, verify that it was delivered or both with the following services: Certified Mail This receipt proves that you mailed your tax return and gives you online access to verify the date and time of delivery. Return Receipt This receipt verifies both mailing and delivery, returning a post- card to you signed by the person who received your package. Online Services These services let you use the online technology to help you mail your tax returns Click-N-Ship From any computer with internet access and a printer, you can print Priority Mail and Priority Mail Express labels for all your tax returns, with or without postage, and save yourself precious time. The Postal Service receives no tax dollars for operating expenses and relies on the sale of postage, products and services to fund its operations. LOCAL www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 Rho Lambda Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. holds 4th Annual Women in Politics Summit Participants in the workshop included (left to right) Carolyn McNair Dampeer, Rho Lambda Omega member; Linda Dixon Rigsby, co-chairman, Rho Lambda Omega’s Social Justice and Human Rights Committee; Shannon Malone with the Foundation for the Mid South; Linda West, executive director of Mississippi Families for Kids; LeKeysha Greer Isaac, president of Rho Lambda Omega; Nsombi Lambright, chairman of Rho Lambda Omega’s Social Justice and Human Rights Committee; Leyser Hayes, Chairman of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. International Connection Committee; and Latrice Westbrooks, legal counsel for the Jackson Police Department who served as summit moderator. The Mississippi Link Newswire The fourth annual Women in Politics Summit for Rho Lambda Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. was held at the Mississippi State Capitol to address issues on gender inequality issues, including domestic violence, services to children, youth aging out of the foster care system, voter empowerment and other issues that impact women. SUBSCRIBE TODAY! The Mississippi Link THE mississippi link • 3 The Links receives more funding for ‘Cultivating Leaders – African American Male Initiative’ Jackson MS Chapter President Mavis Parkman James and Strategic Planning Chair Dr. Geraldine Kearse Brookins at the podium for the announcement of the new grant received. The Mississippi Link Newswire The Jackson MS Chapter of The Links, Incorporated has received a $40,000 grant from The Foundation for the Mid-South for their ‘Links Cultivating Leaders - African American Male Initiative.’ The Jackson chapter of The Links has worked with black males since 1986 to ensure they are prepared as young men to ease into a successful and well prepared adulthood. The young men participated in a six-month program of workshops designed for such a transition into leadership roles. This current grant will afford the Links’ Jackson chapter to expand the program from six months to 24 months. Young African American males will be accepted in the program from all seven of the high schools in Jackson Public School System, in addition to private and parochial schools. The program is designed to ensure these young males have workshops on career de- velopment, their rich heritage, the arts and its impact on their culture and growth, financial competency and individual leadership development. It is also designed to provide mentors to the young men to ensure their development has the impact necessary for sustained transformation The Links’ Jackson Chapter will also work with Jackson State University to assist in the evaluation of the progress of its ‘Links Cultivating Leaders’ project. Thank You Jackson! Jackson, your vote for me, Tony Yarber, was a vote for the passion we share for our great city. Thank you. Your vote says that you take the matters of this city seriously, and that there is absolutely no replacement for proven leadership and experience. As your mayor, from day one, I will use my experience to manage an operating budget of $500 million and a growing infrastructure budget of close to $1 billion. As a five-year city councilman, and the current budget chair, I have implemented and managed the city budget. The hallmark of my administration will be accountability, transparency, and accessibility. As city council president, I spearheaded on-line streaming of city council meetings to open city hall to you. As mayor, you will monitor our progress for infrastructure improvements via a virtual platform that you can access from work or home. There is only one candidate that has the demonstrated ability to unify all of Jackson. There is only one candidate with a body of work that exemplifies true leadership. There is only one candidate that you can trust to move Jackson forward. Jackson, we can’t get this wrong. Don’t risk the city to unproven leadership. The choice is clear. Vote Tony Yarber • Mayor of Jackson on April 22 Get out and 22 4 • the mississippi link April 10 - 16, 2014 www.mississippilink.com April Yarber Lumumba Continued from page 1 Continued from page 1 Morning Joe Sturgis stand that, and I think that once we are done with this job, there will be those things we will look back at as done well. And we will be able to count more people who were impacted positively than those counted who would have been impacted negatively. “We are running with the understanding that with service comes great responsibility. The candidates now in the race have the capacity to take that responsibility on and to bring the kind of results that people will be excited about.” Asked what got him motivated to get into politics even as a city councilman four years ago, Yarber said, “I attended a forum in 2005, and at that forum I was extremely frustrated because none of the candidates ever answered the questions asked. They would extend their time and talk over the question. “I just remembered thinking to myself, ‘I could do this and would tell the truth and answer the question.’ Then I began to get involved in a political campaign in 2009 and from there I actually got involved in my own campaign to run for city council.” The number one thing that distinguishes him from Lumumba, Yarber said, is “preparation to do this job; the ability to lead without the learning curve on the first day.” He added, “Jackson is at an interesting place. Although we have momentum, there are still some things we have problems with. We have a $500 million budget. We just had a $2 million deficit during the first quarter; our debt to income ratio is out of whack. We still don’t know how we are going to fund this $500 million budget in total. I am prepared to work with that.” Yarber said he has led schools and led churches, and his body of work is drastically broader than Lumumba’s. Asked about concerns that this be a clean mayoral race and some of the accusations swirling before the special election, Yarber said, “I know the Yarber campaign has been clean. We have focused on us and our issues. I can’t speak for Mr. Lumumba, but my hope is that he would want to focus on his merits versus attempting to exploit any negatives or weaknesses said about me. I’m definitely not going to do that to him.” Regarding Lumumba’s out-ofstate support, as also was received by his father, Yarber said, “I’m home grown. The support we had came from everyday people. And there are more everyday people in this city than there can be people transplanted here.” During breakfast this Wednesday morning at Krystal’s, a few diners were willing to express their perception of last night’s election outcome and what they hoped for in the April 22 runoff. “I am with Yarber 120 percent,” said Gilbert Sturgis, host of the talk radio show every Thursday night called “The Facts.” “Up to now,” Sturgis said, “there was a lot of nonsense and foolishness going around, but now I would like to see the actual facts and look at the candidate with experience. PHOTOS BY A.K. MUSTAFAA Experience counts, I don’t care how you look at it. If you are building a house and need foundation work, you look for experience. You don’t just ask anybody.” Sturgis said he does not have a problem with anyone who donates to or supports their candidate, whether that support comes from local folk or outside supporters. “Campaigning is expensive and most individuals do not have that kind of money to launch a successful campaign,” Sturgis said. Only referring to himself as “Morning Joe,” the diner said, “I’m with Yarber. I have my campaign material in the car right now. He has been doing real good on the city council for a long time.” Connie Winford observed the election and said she is proud of the outcome but unwilling to say which of the runoff candidates she will support going forward. But what she is looking for now is the man who will do the right thing for Jackson. With her was Rosie Veal, of ‘Kathy and Rose’ gospel recording artists. Veal said the election went well and she is asking God to put the right man in the office of mayor who will help the city. David Jefferson also was delighted with the outcome last night and said, “I’m going with the young folk. And I want someone who is going to take care of the whole of Jackson and not just one part of the city.” Yarber, 36, lists as his accomplishments: city councilman of Ward 6, 2009 to present; city council vice president in 2012; city council president in 2013; budget committee chairman and education/ youth ad-hoc committee chairman for the city council 2013 to present; founding member and co-chair of Alignment Jackson; and founded ‘Faith-Based Alignment’ to complete ‘needs assessments’ in the community. For more information, go to the website www.YarberForMayor. com; facebook/yarberformayor; instagram yarberformayor or call Angela Grayson, campaign volunteer coordinator., 601 2096112. PHOTOS BY Elliott James, Elite Images Bell Latham We are serious about moving Jackson forward. “The mission is to get the message to people. We are prepared, we have the plan, we have the best ideas to move this city forward. We are committed to the vision we have in place; a successful vision we’ve had in place for the last seven months. Lumumba said he’s ready to lead the city. “We are ready to hit the ground running and I want to let the people know that we’re prepared.” Moving forward, Lumumba said if his campaign didn’t get the message out, that is his campaign’s failure. “It’s going to take connecting with people. We believe in a grassroots approach. We need to know if people didn’t vote for us that’s our failure. We didn’t’ communicate our message strong enough. “We need to listen, see what people’s concerns are, so we’re dedicated to that. We want to know what they felt was missing in my mes- VOTE Pittman Mutope sage,” he said. Lumumba’s supporters echoed similar reasons for voting for him. It is his vision for the city and his commitment to what his father, the late Mayor Chokwe Lumumba, started during his short time in office, they said. “I think he is the person that knows best what his father initiated. He was a part of the plan and prepared the plan. No one else can execute that plan better than him,” said Ineva Pittman, a longtime civil rights advocate. “Plus if a city council person wins we are going to have to have another election and that will be very expensive to the city. We have a runoff coming up already,” she added. She said the city doesn’t have money to finance more special elections. “We need to be looking at that as well.” Willie Bell said he supported Lumumba’s father and has known the candidate all his life.” I was with his dad and I watched him grow up. The vision is what we have in common. That vision has to happen; it can’t turn into a nightmare,” said Bell. “It’s on now, we’re taking it to the streets,” he said. I believe in what he stands for and what his father stood for,” Mutope said. “We need a smart young man and he’s done everything we’ve asked a young man to do. He can move this city forward. Forward forever, backwards never,” he said. Harold Latham said the senior Lumumba during his time in office pulled the city together. “I believe in what he stood for and his son was instrumental in his father’s campaign,” Latham said. Lumumba’s uncle Jasiri Lumumba said his nephew is more experienced than people think. “It was always meant to be this way,” Lumumba said. Lumumba said he had thoughts of his parents Tuesday. “But more importantly, there were thoughts of the people. Seeing them standing out on those streets, knowing they are dedicated to what we are trying to accomplish, that touches your heart.” Lumumba, 31, is married to Ebony and has a newborn daughter. He attended public school in Jackson and Tuskegee University and Thurgood Marshall School of Law. For more information on the Lumumba campaign, go to www.chokweantarformayor.com and www.facebook.com/ElectChokweLumumbaMayorOfJacksonMs; follow him on Instagram. You may call the Lumumba campaign office at 601 3620021. Stephanie R. Jones can be reached at srjones13@gmail. com or (601) 260-4232. PHOTOS BY Stephanie Jones STATE www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 THE mississippi link • 5 CSLC Continued from page 1 “Education: Your Password to Success.” She encouraged the scholarship recipients and all students to do their best in getting a good education. Winning scholarship recipients were Matthew Blackmon, 1st Place, $1,000 award; Crystal Southern, 2nd Place, $200 award; and DeOnica Mitchell, 3rd Place, $100 award. Students had to compete in an essay writing contest where judges - not affiliated with the county - critiqued and scored them. Contestants with the highest overall points became first, second and third place winners. “We were extremely elated that Mrs. Wade-Dixon was able to take time out of her busy sched- ule to speak at our banquet,” said CSLC Executive Director Beulah Greer. “Her message was inspiring as well as a wake-up call for all of us to put more emphasis on investing in our children and their education.” Greer said CSLC was also blessed this year with the Silver sponsorships of Nissan of Canton Sponsors Earl Blackmon and wife Judge Jannie Lewis with Beulah and Leslie Greer Scholarship recipients DeOnica Mitchell of Durant High; Matthew Blackmon of McClain High; and Crystal Southern of McCLain High Pre-schoolers reciting the CSLC creed. LaTanica Friar singing Eddie Brock introducing guest speaker Wade-Dixon and Chapman, Lewis & Swan, PLLC Attorneys at Law of Clarksdale; Bronze sponsorships of Circuit Court Judge Jannie Lewis, Alfa Insurance Agent Earl Blackmon, Top Quality Computer Services, Nine’s Enterprises, WEM Consulting Group, and Porters and Sons Funeral Home, Inc. “Each year, our banquet seems to get bigger and bigger,” she said. “We are truly grateful to all the businesses, parents, community members and students who support us each year.” She expressed that they were pleased to have Teach for America to collaborate with them this year as well. CSLC Board treasurer Kathy Anderson was emcee. Anderson is also the recently installed senior pastor of Powerhouse Apostolic Deliverance Church of Hollandale, Miss. CSLC is a 501 © 3 non-profit organization. For information on how you can invest in the educational works of CSLC, call (662) 8340905. HEALTH 6 • the mississippi link April 10 - 16, 2014 Women in their 60s twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s than breast cancer Representatives from The MIND Center, Alzheimer’s Association Mississippi Chapter and the Department of Health Division of Alzheimer’s in Jackson for Alzheimer’s Awareness Day at the Capitol sharing with legislators the first draft of a collaborative State Strategic Plan on Alzheimer’s disease. The Mississippi Link Newswire According to the Alzheimer’s Association 2014 Alzheimer’s Disease Facts and Figures report released recently, a woman’s estimated lifetime risk of developing Alzheimer’s at age 65 is 1 in 6, compared with nearly 1 in 11 for a man. As real a concern as breast cancer is to women’s health, women in their 60s are about twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s over the rest of their lives as they are to develop breast cancer. “With women representing almost two-thirds of those diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and comprising 60 percent of the unpaid caregivers of family and friends with Alzheimer’s, women are at the epicenter of this epidemic,” said Patty Dunn, executive director of the Alzheimer’s Association Mississippi Chapter. According to the Alzheimer’s Association, adding to women’s Alzheimer’s burden, there are 2.5 times as many women than men providing intensive “on-duty” care 24 hours for someone living with Alzheimer’s disease. Among caregivers who feel isolated, women are much more likely than men to link isolation with feeling depressed (17 percent of women vs. 2 percent of men). The association also reports that strain of caring for some- one with Alzheimer’s is also felt in the workplace. Among caregivers who have been employed while they were also caregiving: • 20 percent of women vs. 3 percent of men went from working full-time to working part-time while acting as a caregiver. • 18 percent of women vs. 11 percent of men took a leave of absence • 11 percent of women vs. 5 percent of men gave up work entirely • 10 percent of women vs. 5 percent of men lost job benefits. There are more than five million Americans living with Alzheimer’s disease, including 51,000 here in Mississippi, but Alzheimer’s has far reaching effects that can plague entire families. There are 205,000 Alzheimer’s caregivers in Mississippi providing 233 million hours of unpaid care. The total national cost of caring for people with Alzheimer’s and other dementias is projected to reach $214 billion this year. In 2014, the cost to Medicare and Medicaid of caring for those with Alzheimer’s and other dementias will reach a combined $150 billion with Medicare spending nearly $1 in every $5 on people with Alzheimer’s or another dementia. These numbers are set to soar as the baby boomers continue to enter the age of greatest risk for Alzheimer’s disease. Unless something is done to change the course of the disease, there could be as many as 16 million Americans living with Alzheimer’s in 2050, at a cost of $1.2 trillion (in current dollars) to the nation. This dramatic rise includes a 500 percent increase in combined Medicare and Medicaid spending and a 400 percent increase in out-of-pocket spending. The country’s first-ever National Plan to Address Alzheimer’s Disease has a goal of preventing and effectively treating Alzheimer’s disease by 2025. Alzheimer’s disease is the sixth leading cause of death in the United States, yet it is still widely misunderstood and underreported. Nearly a quarter (24 percent) of both men and women agree with the mistaken belief that Alzheimer’s must run in their family for them to be at risk. When looking at certain ethnic groups, these numbers were even higher. A third of Latinos (33 percent) and almost half of Asians (45 percent) agreed with that incorrect statement. Realizing the impact Alzheimer’s has on women - and the impact women can have when they work together - the Alzheimer’s Association is launching a national initiative this spring highlighting the power of women in the fight against this disease. The Alzheimer’s Association is the world’s leading voluntary health organization in Alzheimer’s care, support and research. People should talk with their health Its mission care provider about when to begin is to elimiscreening for colorectal cancer, what nate Alzheimtests to have, the benefits and risks er’s disease of each test, and how often schedule through the appointments. If a screening reveals a advancement problem, diagnosis and treatment can occur promptly. In addition, finding of research; and removing polyps or other areas to provide and of abnormal cell growth may be one enhance care of the most effective ways to prevent and support colorectal cancer development. To for all affectschedule a consultation, please call ed; and to reTHE MISSISSIPPI CANCER INSTITUTE duce the risk at (601) 249-5510. We are located of dementia at 1501 Aston Avenue. According to a large study that began in1975, through the yearly fecal occult blood screening promotion of reduced the mortality associated with brain health. colorectal cancer by one-third, with Our vision is a benefits persisting over 30 years. world without Alzheimer’s. For more information, visit www.alz.org. OUT FOR BLOOD An annual fecal blood test is one of the tests used to screen for colorectal cancer, which is an abnormal growth of cancer cells in the large intestine. Colon cancer forms in the longest part of the large intestine, while rectal cancer forms in the last eight to ten inches. This test (which involves looking for blood in the stool) may find cancer early, when treatment works best. Anyone considering this test must understand that blood in the stool may be the only symptom of colorectal cancer, but not all blood detected in the stool is caused by cancer. Hemorrhoids, anal fissures, colon polyps, peptic ulcers, ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease, and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) may also be causes. www.mississippilink.com Fighting HIV/AIDS focus of Mississippi Faith Leaders Summit By Stephanie R. Jones Contributing Writer A group of Mississippi ministers came together Friday, April 4, 2014, to learn what role they could play in fighting HIV/AIDS in their communities, an area that often has put ministers in conflict with their Biblical teachings. Mississippi Faith Leaders Summit issued a call to action for ministers, as rates of HIV/AIDS continue to ravish the state, especially its African American community. About 60 ministers from across the state attended the half-day conference at New Hope Baptist Church. The leading speaker was Rev. Dr. Alyn E. Waller, pastor of Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church in Philadelphia, Pa. Waller has been a leader in engaging his congregation in the HIV/AIDS battle. His mission involves opening discussions of sex and the disease in his church and urging people to get tested. Getting tested, he said, is a primary way to stop the spread of the disease. If people know their status, they can adjust their behavior, he said. Dr. Amy Nunn, executive director of Mississippi Faith in Action and a professor at Brown University is working with Waller’s Greater Than Aids program to gather information from ministers about their views on the matter so researchers know what approaches are needed to reach them. Waller said ministers have to stop looking at the behavior issues that have stigmatized those with HIV/AIDS. He said they have to look toward ministering to the afflicted regardless of how they got that way. In his congregation, Waller said there was a “real starvation for conservation about human issues, about the disease.” To spur his members Waller himself was tested for the disease at his church. He said 800 of his members followed the first time and hundreds of others did so in subsequent services. “It is possible for varying religions, theologies to agree to fight this disease,” he said. Waller said his church purposefully caters to a young population and lifestyle issues are a routine part of services. “People want to talk about things such as living together outside marriage, sex before marriage and understand what it means Biblically, spiritually,” he said. HIV/AIDS is an extension of that conversation, said Waller, who makes clear that he thinks homosexually is not Biblical. “But it is a part of our society and we have to address it,” he said. “And HIV/AIDS is a critical part of our society and we have to address that, too.” Nunn, who said she is a scientist by trade and an activist at heart, said HIV/AIDS is a social crisis. “Why is that 30 years into this epidemic, we can’t tell why African Americans have a higher rate of infection,” she said. “African Americans don’t engage in higher risk behavior more than others. That is why, she said, through her work as a researcher at Brown she wanted to talk with people of power in the black community. “We are only experts in our own culture,” said Nunn, who is white. “We want to listen to pastors who better know the people in their communities.” Dr. Thomas E. Dobbs III had been treating HIV/AIDS in the state since 1999. “It has been miraculous seeing the transformation the evolution in treatment The Mississippi Link TM Volume 20 • Number 24 April 10 - 16, 2014 © copyright 2014. All rights reserved. Publisher.................................................Jackie Hampton Editor.......................................................Ayesha K. Mustafaa Online Editor...........................................Lonnie Ross Religion Editor........................................Daphne Higgins Sports Writer:.........................................Tim Ward Graphics..................................................Marcus Johnson Photographers........................................Kevin Robinson & Jay Johnson has brought to the state” said Dobbs, Mississippi state epidemiologist and district health officer, public health district 8. “We’ve transformed from people having no hope to HIV/AIDS being a manageable disease/ condition,” he said. “Treatment is available but the challenge is finding people who need it and linking them to it,” he said. Nunn said the project is counting on people to tell them what they need to do to scale up treatments in hotspot areas such as the Delta, Jackson area and the Gulf Coast. Host pastor Jerry Young of New Hope said he has struggled with addressing the HIV/AIDS issue. He said the conference was about education and compassion. “How I got here has been a journey as it undoubtedly has been for a lot of preachers,” Young said. “In the final analysis, with a greater knowledge of the doctrine of God and the doctrine of man, you come to understand. The same God that is over the church is over the community.” “Jesus never once asked how they got there, He saw them as sheep without a shepherd and He was moved with compassion. The church has to see people the same as Jesus saw them,” Young said. Mississippi has the 9th highest rate of HIV infection in the United States. Among new infections in the state, 76 percent are African Americans. The HIV/ AIDS mortality rate for blacks is nearly nine times that of whites. Jackson has among the highest prevalence of HIV infection in black men ages 14-24 of any U.S. city. Stephanie R. Jones can be reached at srjones13@gmail. com or (601) 260-4232. The Mississippi Link [USPS 017224] is published weekly by The Mississippi Link, Inc. Offices located at 2659 Livingston Road, Jackson, MS 39213. Mailing address is P.O. Box 11307, Jackson, MS 39283-1307 or e-mail us at: editor@mississippilink.com; Please visit our website at: www.mississippilink.com. Phone: (601) 896-0084, Fax 896-0091, out of state 1-800-748-9747. Periodical Postage Rate Paid at Jackson, MS. Deadline: The deadline for submitting items to be considered for publication is Tuesday at 10 a.m. Subscriptions are $32 per year; $64 for two years or $96 for three years. Postmaster: Send all address changes to The Mississippi Link, P.O. Box 11307, Jackson, MS 39283-1307. Advertising: For all advertising information, please call (601) 896-0084. The Mississippi Link accepts no responsibility for unsolicited materials and in general does not return them to sender. 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NATIONAL www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 THE mississippi link • 7 More pings raise hopes Police seek federal help plane will be found soon in highway shootings By Bill Draper The Associated Press In this April 9, 2014 photo provided by the Australian Defense Force, a Royal Australian Air Force AP-3C Orion flies past Australian Defense vessel Ocean Shield on a mission to drop sonar buoys to assist in the acoustic search of the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 in the southern Indian Ocean. AP Photo/Australian Defense Force, LSIS Bradley Darvill By Nick Perry and Kristen Gelineau Associated Press PERTH, Australia - The frustrating monthlong search for the Malaysian jetliner received a tremendous boost when a navy ship detected two more signals that most likely emanated from the aircraft’s black boxes. The Australian official coordinating the search expressed hope April 9 that the wreckage will soon be found. Angus Houston, head of a joint agency coordinating the search for the missing plane in the southern Indian Ocean, said that the Australian naval vessel Ocean Shield picked up the two signals on Tuesday, and that an analysis of two sounds detected on Saturday showed they were consistent with a plane’s black boxes. “I’m now optimistic that we will find the aircraft, or what is left of the aircraft, in the not-too-distant future. But we haven’t found it yet, because this is a very challenging business,” Houston said at a news conference in Perth, the hub for the search operation. The signals detected 1,645 kilometers (1,020 miles) northwest of Perth are the strongest indication yet that the plane crashed and is now lying at the bottom of the ocean in the area where the search is now focused. Still, Houston warned he could not yet conclude that searchers had pinpointed Flight 370’s crash site. “I think that we’re looking in the right area, but I’m not prepared to say, to confirm, anything until such time as somebody lays eyes on the wreckage,” he said. Finding the black boxes quickly is urgent because their locator beacons have a battery life of about a month, and Tuesday marked one month since the plane vanished with 239 people on board. If the batteries fail before the black boxes are located, finding them in such deep water - about 4,500 meters, or 15,000 feet - would be immensely difficult, if not impossible. The Ocean Shield is towing a pinger locator from a U.S. Navy that is designed to detect signals from a plane’s two black boxes - the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder. A data analysis of the signals the ship heard Saturday determined they were distinct, manmade and pulsed consistently, Houston said. “They believe the signals to be consistent with the specification and description of a flight data recorder,” he said. To assist the Ocean Shield, the Australian navy was using parachutes to drop buoys in a pattern near where the signals were last heard. Royal Australian Navy Commodore Peter Leavy said each buoy will dangle a hydrophone listening device about 300 meters (1,000 feet) below the surface. The hope, he said, is the buoys will help better pinpoint the location of the signals. Houston acknowledged searchers were running out of time, noting the last two signals were weaker and briefer than the first pair, suggesting the batteries are failing. One Saturday lasted two hours and 20 minutes and the second lasted 13 minutes; those heard Tuesday lasted just five and a half minutes and seven minutes. “So we need to, as we say in Australia, ‘make hay while the sun shines,’” Houston said. The weakening of the signals also could indicate the device was farther away, U.S. Navy Capt. Mark Matthews said. Temperature, water pressure or the saltiness of the sea could also be factors. Leavy said thick silt on the ocean floor also could distort the sounds, and may hide wreckage from the eventual visual search. Houston said a decision had not yet been made on how long to use the towed pinger locator while knowing the beacons’ batteries will likely fail soon, saying only that a decision to deploy an unmanned submarine was “not far away.” “Hopefully in a matter of days, we will be able to find something on the bottom that might confirm that this is the last resting place of MH370,” he said. When the pinger locator’s use is exhausted, the unmanned sub will be sent to create a sonar map of a potential debris field on the seafloor. The Bluefin 21 sub takes six times longer to cover the same area as the pinger locator. Matthews said the detections indicate the beacon is within about a 20-kilometer (12-mile) radius, equal to a 1,300-squarekilometer (500-square-mile) chunk of the ocean floor. That amounts to trying to find a desktop computer in a city the size of Los Angeles, and would take the sub about six weeks to two months to canvass. So it makes more sense to continue using the towed pinger locator to zero in on a more precise location, Matthews said. “It’s certainly a man-made device emitting that signal,” Matthews said. “And I have no explanation for what other component could be there.” The Bluefin sub’s sonar scans about to 100 meters and can “see” with lights and cameras only a few meters. Its maximum dive depth is 4,500 meters, and some areas of the search zone are deeper. The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 on a trip from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8 is one of aviation’s biggest mysteries. The black boxes’ data may be the only way to explain why the plane lost communications and turned sharply off-course, before ending up far to the south in the remote southern Indian Ocean. The audio search was narrowed to its current position after engineers predicted a flight path by analyzing signals between the plane and a satellite and investigators used radar data to determine the plane’s speed and where it may have run out of fuel. Houston noted that all four of the pings detected in recent days were near a final, partial “handshake” signal revealed earlier in the investigation. He also noted the surface search for any floating debris has been adjusted and intensified based on where the four pings were heard and where ocean currents might have caused debris to drift. Fifteen planes and 14 ships searched a 75,400-square-kilometer area that extends from 2,250 kilometers northwest of Perth on Wednesday. Despite the challenges still facing search crews, those involved in the hunt were buoyed by the Ocean Shield’s findings. “I’m an engineer so I don’t talk emotions too much,” Matthews said. “But certainly when I received word that they had another detection, you feel elated. You’re hopeful that you can locate the final resting place of the aircraft and bring closure to all the families involved.” Gelineau reported from Sydney. Associated Press writer Rod McGuirk in Canberra, Australia, contributed to this report. KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Federal authorities are investigating more than a dozen apparently random shootings targeting vehicles on Kansas City-area roads and highways to determine whether they are connected, a police spokesman said April 8. Darryl Forté, the Kansas City, Mo., police chief, met with the FBI April 7 to discuss the incidents and had scheduled other meetings this week with federal investigators, Capt. Tye Grant said. Thirteen shootings have been reported since March 8, most of them in an area on the city’s south side known as the Grandview Triangle, where three interstate highways and U.S. 50 intersect. Three people were wounded, but none were considered life-threatening, Grant said. While there are similarities in geography, time of day and the circumstances of the shootings, there is no physical evidence connecting them, Grant said. In all of the cases, someone fired shots just before reaching a highway exit ramp or road split, then veered off in a different direction from the victim’s vehicle. Detectives and police analysts started noticing a pattern last week after reports of shootings started coming in, and by Sunday had identified 13 that had occurred over a four-week span. Ten of them happened in Kansas City, Mo., with the other three in the suburbs of Leawood, Kan., Blue Springs, Mo., and Lee’s Summit, Mo. “Some of the people didn’t realize they were being shot at, so when the incidents were reported they were taken down as possible property damage,” Grant said. In the March 8 shooting, a 72-year-old man was driving south on Interstate 435 near the Interstate 470 interchange at 9:45 p.m. when he heard a loud noise and noticed a crack in the front windshield. He pulled over and found a bullet hole in his hood. The next shooting didn’t happen until three weeks later, when a 22-year-old woman was driving south on Ward Parkway with her 3-year-old daughter at 1 p.m. on March 29 when a car pulled up alongside and she heard a loud popping noise. She was taking her daughter out of the car at home when she noticed a large bullet hole in the door near where the girl had been sitting. The most recent shooting was Sunday, when a 57-year-old Blue Springs man was driving east on Interstate 470 when he heard two large bangs and thought he had run over something. About that time he also felt what he thought was a charley horse in his left leg, but when he put his hand down he found blood, pulled over and called 911. The man had been shot in the calf, and officers found three bullet holes in the driver’s side of his car. One other driver was shot in the leg, while the third was shot in the arm, police said. “This isn’t the first time I’ve heard of a random shooting reported, but as far as several of them possibly being linked, I can’t think of another situation that has occurred in the Kansas City area,” Grant said. Kansas City police already work closely with their federal counterparts, he said, so involvement by the FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives in the case isn’t unusual. No new shootings have been reported since Sunday. The police department, FBI and ATF are offering a $7,000 reward for information leading to an arrest in the shootings. GET YOUR CURRENT NEWS AND WATCH AP VIDEOS ONLINE AT: www.mississippilink.com 8 • the mississippi link April 10 - 16, 2014 www.mississippilink.com Bailey APAC Middle School inducts 129 students into the National Honor Society The Mississippi Link Newswire Bailey APAC Middle School inducted 129 Bailey Knights into the National Junior Honor Society during a ceremony held Thursday, March 20, 2014. These inductees demonstrated excellence in the five tenets of NJHS - Scholarship, Leadership, Service, Character, and Citizenship. Principal Christi Hollingshead confirmed the members. “It is an honor to serve as the principal and get to work with these amazing students,” said Principal Hollingshead. “Earning this recognition means they have character, citizenship and desire to serve others to truly be successful. We are going to hold these students to high expectations.” The parents of Darius Willington were also in attendance and accepted the honor chords and certificate in honor of their late son at the ceremony. The National Junior Honor Society was established in 1929 to honor exceptional middle-level students. Membership in this organization remains one of the highest honors a middle school student can achieve. 2014 National Junior Honor Society Bailey APAC Inductees Grade 7 Alexander Jaalyn Araujo, Matthew Aron, Nicole Baker, Victoria Baldwin, Kendarious Banks, Jarvis Beals Johaia Ben, Edward Beverly, Kamorie Bland, Taniya Blount, Charles Bolden Kelcie Bonds, Olivia Boone, Ke’Shawn Briggs Maleah Brown, Kelan Bryant, Amrya Burks, Mia Chambers, Kilando Chaney Jeremiah Clark, Haley Clemons, Charminder Collins, Sean Cook, Endia Cooper, Lucie Reginald Willington received the NJHS award in honor of his late son Darius. Jones, Cianna Kelly, Shauntea Knight, Khmeya Lacey, She’Neice Lee, Ahmad Lee, Shaddia Liddell, Kirstein Lowe, Nakengee Ludin, Keana Magandy, William Mallett, Daidrick Mason, Lateisha Morgan, David Myles, Jamel Peppers, Ja’Niya Pleas, Tafarri Powers, Carneilus Prince, Jasmin Pucheu, Reiley Purvis, Aja Randall, Joh’nis Reeves, Jaydin Robinson, Melody Rodgers, Shyuanna Rodgers, Tre’Vaughn Runnels, Jaida Craddieth, Hayley Creese, Mya Davis, Ava Davis, Brianna Davis-Stiff, Catera Deaton, Charles Dishmon, Paige Fisher, Daria Fleming, Ariel Fowler, Kaitlyn Garrett, Alandria Gibson, Tiara Gooden, Wiliford Grant, Armand Griffin Zinnaiyah Hairston, Matthew Hannah, Alexandria Hart, Eric Hill Ashton Hill, Trinity Holliday, Jayla Jefferies, Maggie Jenkins, Courtney Johnson, Elisabeth Johnson, Kaylyn Johnson, Tasheanna Sanders, Arielle Scott, Ane Simmons, Darylneshia Simmons, Makyla Smith, Cherish Smith, Jalen Smith, Jayden Smith, Kalia Summers, Falicia Taylor, Amanda Thompson, Shamia Trotter, Samuel Vanhorn, Cassidy Wade, Caleb Walker, Aryana Walker, Mikayla Wallace, Davion Walls, Jerel Warner, Corban Washington, Erica Wheat, Melody Whipps, Leon Wilbert, Kayla Wilson, Daija Wooten, Chandler Grade 8 Anderson, Celia Artis, Michael, II Bland, Mikiaya Bowley, Sophia Brinson, Charity Clay, Jalyn Curry, Jamiayah Darby, Aaron Gray, Jermany Gray, Madison Jefferson, Jamyracle Kelly, Aarionna Kessee, Autumn King, Ashley King, Jaylin Morrow, Alex Myles, Kayla Myles, Melvin Polk, Ariana Powell, Kaitlin Ross, Krystal Selassie, Aida Shelby, Reshaunna Thigpin, Faith Walker, Keimoya Bailey student accepting NJHS honor cord Jackson Public Schools seeking qualified employees The Mississippi Link Newswire Jackson Public Schools is hosting a Job Fair for prospective teachers, bus drivers, and cafeteria and maintenance workers. The event is scheduled for 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Sat- urday, April 12, 2014, at Cardozo Middle School located at 3180 McDowell Road Ext. Those who wish to teach in the Jackson Public School districts, the job fair is a great opportunity. Each year, a high percentage of our new teachers come from the JPS Job Fair. The district emphasizes strong academics, extensive support for new teachers, competitive salaries and good benefits. JPS will conduct actual in- terviews with applicants who attend the job fair. Prospective teachers and employees will interview with principals or assistant principals at the level they wish to teach - elementary, middle school or high school. After the job fair, as positions become vacant, the Human Resources department will select applicants for additional interviews. Before and after the job fair, be sure to visit the JPS website (www.jackson.k12.ms.us) each day for new job openings. For more information, contact the Office of Human Resources at (601) 960-8745. Jackson high school students assists at State Capitol Mikaela Jackson, Victoria Williams, and Keaundra Gavin join Lt. Governor Tate Reeves (right) and Sen. Hillman Terome Frazier, who sponsored their day as a page in the State Senate. The Mississippi Link Newswire Mikaela Jackson, Victoria Williams, and Keaundra Gavin of Jackson recently served as pages for the Mississippi Senate. Pages generally run errands for officials and Senate staff. Mikaela is the daughter of Bernard and Anita Jackson and attends Jim Hill High School. Victoria is the daughter of Pablo and Shirley Williams and also attends Jim Hill High School. Keaundra is the daughter of Stephen and Angela Gavin and attends Murrah High School. When asked about the week, the three students agreed: “Over the past week, we’ve learned a lot about the legal system of Mississippi. We’ve met many inspiring people and learned a lot about our peers in the page program. We would like to take this opportunity to thank Sen. Frazier for the chance to page.” EDUCATION www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 THE mississippi link • 9 Velma Jackson Falcons basketball team honored by State Senate The Mississippi Link Newswire On Wednesday, April 2, 2014, members of the reigning Mississippi High School Activities Association 3A State Champion Velma Jackson High School men’s basketball team visited the Capitol under the supervision of head coach Anthony Carlyle and members of his coaching staff. Velma Jackson High School’s 20132014 state championship, secured with a 50-35 victory over East Side High School, is its second consecutive statewide title. On the floor of the Senate, the Velma Jackson Falcons were presented with Senate Concurrent Resolution 636, commemorating their championship victory. State Sen. Kenneth Wayne Jones was the resolution’s principal author. Athletic director is Cedrick Wilder. Athletic managers are Corey Bacon, Patrick Fondren, Quentin McCullough, Mi- chael Arrington and Terrence Mabry. The team roster includes: Kendarius Smith, Justin Washington, Travius Brown, Nikolas Weatherspoon, Anfernee Brown, Jamuel Brooks, Ladarius Ousley, Quinndary Weatherspoon, Aaron Jones, Moses Greenwood, Arthur Eldridge, Nicholas Rivers, Janaurius Porter and Demarcus Grant, along with head coach Anthony Carlyle; assistant coach Randy Brown; scorekeeper Nykeem Liddell. Velma Jackson Falcons team members with State Sen. Kenneth Wayne Jones (front row, second from left) who presented the resolution celebrating their 3A championship. PHOTO courtesy of Joseph Latham, Mississippi Senate Senior Page Students from across state compete in TRAC Bridge Building Challenge The Mississippi Link Newswire On Monday, middle and high school students from around the state competed in the Transportation and Civil Engineering (TRAC) Bridge Building Competition at the Hilton Garden Inn (King Edward Hotel) in Jackson. The TRAC program introduces students to a wide variety of career opportunities in the field of engineering and teaches students how to apply math and science concepts to help identify and resolve engineering barriers in the transportation system. Initially, the Mississippi Department of Transportation (MDOT) provided each team with a TRAC Challenge Entry Kit, materials and guidelines to construct a bridge. Each participating team then submitted a portfolio with their bridge design, a PowerPoint presentation and the strengthto-weight ratio of the bridge. “This TRAC Competition gives students hands-on learning in bridge building and an opportunity to fully understand the purpose and function of bridges,” said MDOT Executive Director Melinda McGrath. “Participating students get an in-depth look at the functionality of bridges in transportation and how to improve them.” In yesterday’s state finals, the teams presented their PowerPoint presenta- tions and tested their bridge for mechanics and strengthto-weight ratio. Prizes were given to the top three teams in each grade category. The 2014 State TRAC Bridge Building Competition winners are: 7th and 8th Grade: First Place- Long Beach Middle School Second Place- Booneville Middle School Third Place- Guntown Middle School 9th and 10th Grade: First Place- Mantachie High School Second Place- Tupelo High School Third Place- Booneville High School 11th and 12th Grade: First Place- West Lauderdale High School Second Place-Tupelo High School Third PlacePontotoc Ridge Career and Technical Center. The competition is another way to showcase how Mississippi’s students are learning about transportation while studying science, technology, engineering and math. For more information about the TRAC Bridge Building Challenge competition or the TRAC program as a whole, please contact the MDOT Public Affairs Division at (601) 359-7074 or Linda Clifton, National and Mississippi TRAC program manager, at (202) 624-5267. Alpha Lambda Delta to It has been one year, 10, 2013, since initiate 91 JSU students April Jimmie Ray Lewis Sr. The Mississippi Link Newswire Ninety-one students will be initiated into National Alpha Lambda Delta Honor Society for First-Year Students at Jackson State University April 17. Ceremonies will be held in the Jacob L. Reddix building at 3 p.m. The event is open to the public. Founded in the spring of 1924 at the University of Illinois by Dean Maria Leonard, Alpha Lambda Delta is a national honor society that recognizes and encourages academic excellence among first-year students. Today, Alpha Lambda Delta has over 250 chapters throughout the United States, and more than 700,000 students have been initiated into membership since the first chapter was started more than 80 years ago. Membership in Alpha Lambda Delta is open to full-time freshmen students who earn a scholastic average of 3.5 or better at a four-year college or university. departed this world but his legacy still remains unrivalled. Today we commemorate his death anniversary. JSU students at the Alpha Lambda Delta initiation Alpha Lambda Delta emphasizes that educated persons have a responsibility to “have tolerance in your dealings with all persons, generosity in giving to those in need, and insight into the feelings of others” said Dr. Marie O’Banner-Jackson, faculty advisor of the society. Members are challenged to make a “meaningful contribution to society.” Students will take an oath to continue to “maintain high scholarship and to use my education for the benefit of my community, my nation, and the world in which we live.” For more information about National Alpha Lambda Delta Honor Society for First-Year Students, visit the national website at www.nationalald.org. Alcorn students attend Toyota career fair The Mississippi Link Newswire As part of a mutual cooperation between Alcorn State University and Toyota Motor Corporation, Alcorn students had a chance to attend a Historically Black Colleges and Universities Consortium Career Fair hosted by Toyota in Jackson, March 24, 2014. During the morning session, the company provided an overview of its operations and gave students an opportunity to dialogue with representatives from various departments within Toyota. The afternoon session was dedicated to interviewing selected students for cooperatives and full-time post-graduation employment. Students had an opportunity to network and gain information about potential employment opportunities. Dr. Valerie K. Thompson, assistant vice president for Professional Development and Readiness, attended the initial meeting to begin the path of building a talent pipeline between Alcorn and Toyota. Three Alcorn students selected for interviews were Dominick Fears, a senior robotics and automation technology major, Ka’Shield Shaw, a senior biology/pre-physical therapy major, and Justin Johnson, a senior agriculture business management major. Fears was elated when Toyota representatives offered him a coop position for summer 2014. He stated, “Attending this career fair is a significant step for me on my path to becoming an engineer. I gained a higher level of awareness of how Toyota operates and met its dedicated team members.” At the Fair, Alcorn students also met their peers from Coahoma Community College, Jackson State University, Mississippi Valley State University, Rust College, and Tougaloo College. Alcorn State University is a premier comprehensive landgrant university that develops diverse students into globally competitive leaders, and applies scientific research through collaborative partnerships that benefit the surrounding communities, state, nation, and world. Everyday his name has been mentioned. “I remember when Jimmie helped me through a storm,” “I remember Jimmie thought about me at Christmas,” or “I remember when he sang at my loved ones funeral, anniversary, wedding, graduation and on and on….” You get the picture, if a song could be sang, Jimmie was there. He will be truly missed by everyone he came in contact with. To celebrate his life, Audrey B. Wiley and Kenneth Smith established the Jimmie Ray Lewis Sr. Scholarship Fund in April of 2013. This Sunday, April 13, 2014 at 3 p.m., the first annual Jimmie Ray Lewis Sr. Scholarship Fund program will be at Terry Grove M.B. Church in Terry, Miss. If you would like to donate to the scholarship please contact the church at 601-878-2044 or www. terrygrovechurch.org. 10 • THE mississippi link N e w s April 10 - 16, 2014 f r o m t h e W o www.mississippilink.com r d The need for bad things to happen to God’s people By Rev. Leon Collier Special to The Mississippi Link gloated thinking they had finally found a way to get rid of him for good because there was nothing no one, not even the King himself, could do to stop Daniel’s approaching destruction, but his enemies didn’t know the magnitude of the God that Daniel served. This is exactly what God wanted. They unknowingly played right into God’s hands. They thought that Daniel’s favor had ended. The stone was placed in the mouth of the pit so that no one could get in and so that Daniel could not get out, but the good thing about this is that Daniel had been faithful to God and Jesus promised to never leave or forsake us. So, when Daniel was put in the den, God was already there waiting for him. Psalm 139:8, “If I go up to heaven, you are there: or if I make my bed in the grave, you are there.” Psalm 139:8 is saying that God is in all parts of earth, water, and space because He is omnipresence, but the question is, is He active in those places? Just because God is in all places does not mean He is active in all places. But those who are faithful to God, He will be active in those places of affliction, one way or another. This is why the King said in Daniel 6:16b, “The king said to Daniel, your God, whose servant you are at all times, will keep you safe.” The King knew how faithful Daniel was to God and therefore, he believed that Daniel’s God was obligated to show him favor. Daniel faithfully prayed three times daily. What I am saying is that faithfulness to God will ensure that God will be active in your situation when facing trouble. I don’t think God would not have been as active on Daniel’s behalf had he not been faithful. So, when they sealed Daniel Last week’s discussion of, “The need for bad things to happen to good people”, centered around Daniel 6:14 - 22. We will continue our focus with these verses as we learn “To manifest God’s favor on our lives.” In Daniel 6, his enemies tried to hurt him, but all they did was give God an opportunity to manifest His favor in Daniel’s life. As we deal with how God uses trouble to manifest His favor in our lives, let’s go to our first point. In Daniel 6:14 - 15, we learn that only God can deliver us from the impossible. “When this came to the king’s ears, it greatly displeased him, and his heart was fixed on keeping Daniel safe, and till the going down of the sun he was doing everything in his power to get him free. Then these men said to the king, be certain, O King, that by the law of the Medes and Persians no order or law which the king has put into force cannot be changed.” Daniel’s enemies knew the King favored him so they made sure they reminded the King that once a law was made not even the King himself could change it. At this point, there was absolutely nothing no human could do to change Daniel’s fate. In fact, Daniel 6:17 says, “Then they got a stone and put it over the mouth of the hole, and it was stamped with the king’s stamp and with the stamp of the lords, so that the decision about Daniel might not be changed.” One Bible scholar said having put the seal on the stone made it impossible for the King to rescue Daniel. Daniel’s enemies’ probably P a By Rev. Marcus Cheeks Special to The Mississippi Link s t o ra inside the lion’s den, God was sealed inside with him. God’s favor was obvious even when Daniel was condemned to the lion’s den in that even the King Darius was pulling for him to survive. The one who sealed his fate was the same one who encouraged him and fasted for him…that was favor. Transforming dens into wins is what occurred next. We know that Daniel was sent to a den (Daniel 6:16). The Aramaic word for the word den in this verse is gob (gobe) which is a pit for wild animals. So, you could say that Daniel was sent to a pit of wild animals, a pit of certain death. This is what Daniel faced in the natural, but in the supernatural Daniel faced something totally different as far as the lion’s den was concerned. In the English language, synonyms for the word den are hole, burrow, or retreat. I like the word retreat. So in the supernatural, Daniel was sent to a retreat. The word retreat is defined as haven, refuge, or sanctuary. A synonym for refuge is protection and a synonym for sanctuary is preserve. So, when Daniel was sent to the lion’s den, his enemies thought he was sent to a deadly lion’s pit, but by God Daniel was sent to an overnight retreat, he was sent to a haven of protection/a refuge. Daniel’s enemies thought he was sent to destruction, but Daniel was actually sent to preservation. Daniel didn’t die in the pit of wild animals, but rather he was preserved and was protected in the pit. Therefore, the den became a place whereby Daniel lounged around in his troubles. So, prayer didn’t get Daniel in trouble, but prayer put Daniel in a position to lounge around in his trouble without fear and insecurity. l P o i This was a manifestation of God’s favor on Daniel’s life. When you are in the midst of affliction or major challenges that would destroy most people yet you are preserved, this only manifests the favor of God on your life. Too often, we look forward to the prizes and blessings after the trial, but we have favor in the midst of our trials as well. If you are a Christian and you happen to be facing a trial, I want you to realize that right now you have favor even as you wait for God to change your circumstances. Notice also that Daniel’s enemies were more harmful to Daniel than the lions were in the den because the lions could not bite Daniel. So, when Daniel’s enemies sealed Daniel in the lion’s den they were actually protecting Daniel from themselves because the lions could not do him any harm. If you are faithful to Christ and people work against you, keep in mind all they are doing is protecting you from themselves. They are not hurting you; all they are doing is creating the circumstances whereby God can manifest His favor on your life. Rev. Leon Collier is the pastor of Makarios Worship Center, 464 Church Rd., Madison. He and wife, Minister Yolanda; are the proud parents of three daughters. He received degrees from Criswell College in Dallas; Southern Methodist University - Perkins School of Theology; and a Masters of Divinity from Memphis Theological Seminary. A pastor for 23 years, Collier serves as a volunteer chaplain for various law enforcement agencies in the metro area. He may be reached at 601.260.3016, 601.855.7898 or e-mail karab5@ live.com. nt My Anniversary Eight years, God is good indeed. Generally, this time of year we pause and collectively say “Thank-you!” Thank-you to our Lord for all He has done. We stop and look back at successes, as well as failures. The shepherd/flock relationship is made visible by recognizing growth; growth in families, faith and fortitude. We view the First Family and see no more babies moving from one lap to another, but young men supporting the ministries of church. We see a growing pastor, striving to enhance family relationships. We have heard the saying; “if you don’t stand for something you will fall for anything.” However, in the eyes of God standing is not about position or individual views. With God there is structure, order, and vision of a brighter day. It is my prayer, while celebrating God’s gift, that we spend time embracing the view of God by remembering the Word. It is the Word, which sustains us. The Word is pricking our hearts and minds while challenging the status quo. The Word is reflecting on yesterday as a new day is dawning. A day filled with a growing faith. A day we collectively press on-ward to the mark of our high calling. According to the Word, we are “Kingdom builders, steadfast and unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord” (1 Corinthians 15:58). In eight years, we have shared laughter and tears. We have shared meals and through fellowship, increased our faithfulness. My God has supplied all of our needs while rewarding our faithfulness. So with great expectancy, the faith of a mustard seed, and the love of Jesus, we say, “thank you!” We are excited about the work God is yet to reveal. We embrace His power in equipping us for our mission. The songwriter proclaims a season for grace, for favor, to reap what we have sown. Join me in continuing to reap the blessings of the Lord knowing all things work together for our good. Rev. Marcus Cheeks, pastor of True Light M. B. Church, 224 East Bell St., Jackson, is a native of Jack- s son but currently resides in Canton with his wife, DeVonda, and their three children. He has an extensive background as a counselor and educational guide to high-risk youth. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in humanities with an emphasis in philosophy and religion from Tougaloo College and a Master of Science from Jackson State University in guidance and counseling. Rev. Cheeks has served as an officer in the Mississippi National Guard and is currently employed with the State of Mississippi as a State Title I director. He may be reached at 601607-7011, 601-353-7364 or e-mail the church at infotlmbc@yahoo. com. Message from the Religion Editor By Daphne Higgins Religion Editor One of the most sacred days of believers of Christ is fast approaching - Easter. Children and adults everywhere will soon fill church properties parks, and even their own backyards in search of a colorful small bundle of joy the Easter Egg. The Easter Egg Hunt is one of a couple of traditions that has developed over the years as Christians prepare to celebrate the Resurrection of Christ. But why an Easter Egg hunt? This is one of the traditions that I decided I’d research to better understand the connection of an egg and Christianity. I’m sharing my research with you and I pray that you find it enlightening. A document written several years ago: the Decorated Easter Egg, provides many of the details of the origin and symbolism of the Easter Egg tradition. It reads: The egg is nature’s perfect package. It has, during the span of history, represented mystery, magic, medicine, food and omen. It is the universal symbol of Easter celebrations throughout the world and has been dyed, painted, adorned and embellished in the celebration of its special symbolism. Before the egg became closely entwined with the Christian Easter, it was honored during many rite-of-Spring festivals. The Romans, Gauls, Chinese, Egyptians and Persians all cherished the egg as a symbol of the universe. From ancient times eggs were dyed, exchanged and shown reverence. In Pagan times the egg represented the rebirth of the earth. The long, hard winter was over; the earth burst forth and was reborn just as the egg miraculously burst forth with life. The egg, therefore, was believed to have special powers. It was buried under the foundations of buildings to ward off evil; pregnant young Roman women carried an egg on their persons to foretell the sex of their unborn children; French brides stepped upon an egg before crossing the threshold of their new homes. With the advent of Christianity the symbolism of the egg changed to represent, not nature’s rebirth, but the rebirth of man. Christians embraced the egg symbol and likened it to the tomb from which Christ rose. Old Polish legends blended folklore and Christian beliefs and firmly attached the egg to the Easter celebration. One legend concerns the Virgin Mary. It tells of the time Mary gave eggs to the soldiers at the cross. She entreated them to be less cruel and she wept. The tears of Mary fell upon the eggs, spotting them with dots of brilliant color. Another Polish legend tells of when Mary Magdalen went to the sepulchre to anoint the body of Jesus. She had with her a basket of eggs to serve as a repast. When she arrived at the sepul- chre and uncovered the eggs, lo, the pure white shells had miraculously taken on a rainbow of colors. Decorating and coloring eggs for Easter was the custom in England during the Middle Ages. The household accounts of Edward I, for the year 1290, recorded an expenditure of eighteen pence for four hundred and fifty eggs to be gold-leafed and colored for Easter gifts. The most famous decorated Easter eggs were those made by the well-known goldsmith, Peter Carl Faberge. In 1883 the Russian Czar, Alexander, commissioned Faberge to make a special Easter gift for his wife, the Empress Marie. The first Faberge egg was an egg within an egg. It had an outside shell of platinum and enameled white which opened to reveal a smaller gold egg. The smaller egg, in turn, opened to display a golden chicken and a jeweled replica of the Imperial crown. This special Faberge egg so delighted the Czarina that the Czar promptly ordered the Faberge firm to design further eggs to be delivered every Easter. In later years Nicholas II, Alexander’s son, continued the custom. Fifty-seven eggs were made in all. Ornamental egg designers believe in the symbolism of the egg and celebrate the egg by decorating it with superb artistry. Some use flowers and leaves from greeting cards, tiny cherubs, jewels and elegant fabrics, braids and trims, to adorn the eggs. They are separated, delicately hinged and glued with epoxy and transparent cement, then when completed, they are covered with a glossy resin finish. Although the omens and the mystery of the egg have disappeared today, the symbolism remains, and artists continue in the old world tradition of adorning eggs. To reference information visit http://www.geocities.com/ Heartland/8149/egg.html. As we enjoy the excitement of the Easter egg hunt with young ones, let us not forget God’s love for His children is so abundant. As we look for that coveted egg, let us always look to “Our Father” for ultimate joy. If you will, please recall the verse that I often share with you - Isaiah 52:7 (NIV), which reads: “How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of those who bring good news, who proclaim peace, who bring good tidings, who proclaim salvation, who say to Zion, Your God reigns!” The Mississippi Link, a messenger for news in and around the state of Mississippi, would like to not only share your news but all who would like to tell others about the Lord’s goodness and about their places of worship. Contact Daphne M. Higgins at religion@mississippilink. com. Fax 601-896-0091 or mail your information to The Mississippi Link, 2659 Livingston Road, Jackson, MS 39213. organized in 1907. The current building sets approximately 100 yards from its present site on the south side of Florence Ave. After a stint of services in Robinson Hall, located on Rose and Pascagoula Streets, the present site was set aside by Dr. L. G. Barrett, the second president of Jackson College (now Jackson State University), as a gift to the people of west Jackson for religious services theory. Thus the bond between the church and the college was formed. The designated tract was to be used for none other than religious purposes. Throughout its growth, College Hill has experienced many changes, but, it remains a sanctuary for those seeking the Lord. College Hill members promise to proudly observe the church’s rich origin and progress thus far, while embracing and overcoming any challenges of the future. See photos on page 16. College Hill Continued from page 1 He continued, “In Scripture, we find that Paul wrote letters to the Thessalonian because he was concerned about the people of Thessalonica and Corinth. He felt he needed to do something although he was in prison. Remember, it was a different time; he wanted to communicate, so he wrote a letter and sent them by his friends. Paul cared about the people. He told them to stop fighting. He let them know that they had been called by God to serve and urged forgiveness and support for one another.” The Clarksdale minister reminded the congregation that these letters were written almost 2,000 years ago but these are letters that were addressed to all mankind; to the people of Jackson and beyond. He pointed out that we should all be concerned about one another. Thompson ended his sermon by saying, “Paul wrote his letter because he could deliver a message to the people. The more he wrote, the better he got at communicating - his gift. Use your gift for God. Bring those gifts together for oneness in Christ and always thank God for your gifts. You’ve got mail, College Hill and it’s in the Book!” Thompson’s message resonated with the congregants. Several expressed after the worship service that God had blessed College Hill for 107 years because of the message it shares with everyone, a mes- sage of salvation. The church emerged from humble beginnings under an old oak tree and has made continual advancement in all phases of development: spiritually and physically. This institution of God has become known as a mainstay to the metro Jackson area, as it remains dedicated to the west Jackson community and those seeking a place of worship as believers. Located at 1600 Florence Ave, Jackson, College Hill was www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 Reaching out to others By Pastor Simeon R. Green III Special to The Mississippi Link We are living in a world that needs God’s Love. In the Bible, you can read about the Good Samaritan who had compassion upon his fellowman. Many times, the Scriptures speak of Jesus looking upon the people with compassion. As you go around your surrounding community, how much compassion do you have when you look upon the people? Is there something within you that compels you to do something for them? Shouldn’t there be? God is working through the church. It is our responsibility to help the needy, the lost, the sick and the dying. It is our responsibility to have divine compassion upon others. Friends, may God help us to realize that we are saved to tell others about Christ. We are saved to win ‘the lost.’ That is the reason we are here. Psalm 126:5-6 says: “They that sow in tears shall reap in joy. He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.” When was the last time you wept over a soul? Do you suppose if there would be more weeping, there would be more rejoicing? More sowing brings more reaping. As Saints of God, each of us should be more involved in the harvest of souls. Some plow the field, some sow the seed and others reap the grain. May God help us. How much divine compassion do you have? When Jesus wept over Jerusalem, He wept over the spiritual condition of those people. The Apostle Peter said in First Peter 3:8, “Finally, be ye all of one mind, having compassion one of another, love as brethren, be pitiful, be courteous.” You ought to ask God to examine you to see if you are short in compassion, and then ask God for a little more. In Matthew 25:40 Jesus said, “And the king shall answer and say unto them, verily I say unto you, inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.” Everything that we do for others, we are doing for God. Church, we ought to be bringing forth new converts on a regular basis. How is your compassion? Do you really have a heart that reaches out to the fallen? First John 3:17 says, “But whoso hath this world’s good, and seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him?” You ought to have a divine love within your heart, and that love ought to be reaching out and working with some individual. Every child of God can be a soul winner. When you come in contact with people, you should look for an opportunity to talk to them about their greatest need, and their greatest need is Jesus Christ. Your prayer ought to be, “God, help me. Make me a vessel of mercy. Fill my heart with your compassion so that I can reach out and work with the lost, the needy, and the dying.” In Matthew 9:35-38 it says: “And Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every sickness and every disease among the people. But when He saw the multitudes, He was moved with compassion on them, because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no shepherd. Then saith He unto His disciples, the harvest truly is plenteous, but the labourers are few; pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest, that He will send forth labourers into His harvest.” Rev. Simeon R. Green III is pastor of Joynes Road Church of God, 31 Joynes Road, Hampton VA 23669. He is married to Velma L. Green. He honorably served in the U.S. Army for 20 years. Rev. Green is a member of the National Association of Evangelism Church of God, Anderson, Ind. He serves as chairman of the Southeastern Association of The Church of God, Inc. PSA College Hill Missionary Baptist Church The Top 10 Gospel Songs from the Billboard Gospel Charts for the week of April 10 B I B L E B A S E D • C H R I S T C E N T E R E D • H O LY S P I R I T L E D Since 1907 MONDAY: Intercessory Prayer 9:00 a.m. 1600 Florence Avenue Jackson, MS 39204 Ph: 601-355-2670 ARTISTS ALBUM WEDNESDAY: Prayer Service 6:30 p.m. Fax: 601-355-0760 Classes: Children • Youth • Adult - 7:00 p.m. 1. Beautiful Day 2. Beautiful 3. Help Erica Campbell featuring Lecrae 4. Every Praise Hezekiah Walker 5. Break Every Chain Tasha Cobbs 6. It’s Working William Murphy 7. I Can Only Imagine Tamela Mann 8. Amazing Ricky Dillard & New G 9. Live Through It James Fortune & FIYA 10. Nothing Without You Jason Nelson p reser v e d God’s pruning By Shewanda Riley Columnist A few years ago, I was at the University of North Texas Equity and Diversity Conference in Denton, Texas where CNN special correspondent Soledad O’Brien was a keynote speaker. As part of her presentation, O’Brien used vivid details to share about issues of race in her professional and personal life. One Story she shared was about her looking through the personal papers of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. She was able to closely examine the words of Dr. King and study how he edited some of his most important speeches. She then added how the progression of Dr. King’s thoughts and ideologies was evident not just in what was left in the speech but mostly by what his handwritten comments had taken out. The transformation from anger to a more reflective hope was one of the things she noticed. She added that she learned more about him not by what was left in the speeches but by the words that he deleted. In that instance, it dawned on me that some recent shifts in relationships and friendships was God’s way of doing the same thing in my own life. I place so much value on friendships and I’d spent much time recently saddened by the loss of a once valued friendship. As I was working through the loss, God placed some very encouraging people around me who gave me words of support when I needed them most. But there were still times when I felt that the loss was greater than the comfort of their words. In the past, I’ve said that when people leave your life, it’s because God no longer has a purpose for them in your life. But sometimes I wondered if there was another reason why God allowed those shifts to happen. Especially in relationships, God respects our free will and works through our choices, consequences and circumstances. Hearing Soledad’s words gave me a new way of looking at others who were no longer a part of my life. Her words made me think about what I learned about myself when other relationships and friendships ended. I’d been so focused on what I’d lost when the relationship or friendship ended that I couldn’t see that in the process of the loss, God had allowed me to become both stronger and more compassionate. The transformation found described in the words of Jesus in John 15:1-3 was what God also wanted in me: “I am the true grapevine, and my Father is the gardener. He cuts off every branch of mine that doesn’t produce fruit, and he prunes the branches that do bear fruit so they will produce even more.” Just like Soledad could see transformation in Dr. King’s deletions, I could now look at my own life and see that deletion is a part of God’s process of transformation. Shewanda Riley is the author of the Essence best-seller “Love Hangover: Moving From Pain to Purpose after a Relationship Ends.” She can be reached at lovehangover@juno.com, at www.shewandariley.com or www.anointedauthorsontour. com Worship Services 8:00 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. SUNDAY: SONGS THE mississippi link • 11 Jamie Grace www.collegehillchurch.org • chmbc@collegehillchurch.org Mali Music Shekinah Glory Baptist Church “Shining the Radiant Light of His Glory” W E E K LY A C T I V I T I E S NewSunday Bethel Missionary Baptist Church 9:30 a.m. Fulfillment Hour (Sunday School) Pastor, Dr. F. R. Lenoir 11:00 a.m. MorningSunday Worship Service School - 9:15 a.m. To listen to snippets of these songs, please visit billboard.com/charts/gospel-song Sunday Morning Worship - 10:30 a.m. Tuesday 6:30 p.m. Prayer Time & Bible Study Thursday6:30 p.m. WOAD AM 1300 - 11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Adult Choir Rehearsal Live Radio Broadcast Saturday 11:00 a.m. Youth & Young Adult Choir Rehearsal Moving the Masses Toward the Mission of the Master Bishop Ronnie C. Crudup, Sr. 1770 Ellis Avenue • Jackson, MS 39204 OFFICE. 601-371-1427 • FAX. 601-371-8282 www.newhorizonchurchms.org S U N D A Y Please join us in any or all of these activities. You are WELCOME! “A Church Preparing for a 485 W. Northside Drive • Jackson, MS Home Not Built by Man” 601-981-4979 • Bro. Karl E Twyner, pastor New Bethel M. B. Church • 450 Culberston Ave. • Jackson, MS 39209 601-969-3481/969-3482 • Fax # 601-969-1957 • E-Mail: Serenitynbc@aol.com 9:00 a.m. - Worship Services W E D N E S D A Y 7:00 p.m. - Bible Class 1750 Sunday T V B R O A D C A S T www.nhcms.org 8:00 a.m. - Channel 14 (Comcast) Worship Services 8:00 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Prayer Everyday: 6 a.m. and 6 p.m. H oly Temple M.B. Chur ch 5077 Cabaniss Circle - Jackson, MS 39209 (601) 922-6588; holytemplembchurch@yahoo.com Sunday School - 8 a.m. Sunday Morning Worship - 9:30 a.m. Tuesday Bible Study - 6:30 p.m. Monday Intercessory Prayer 9:00 a.m. Wednesday Michael T. Williams Pastor Prayer Service 6:30 p.m. Classes: Children • Youth • Adult - 7:00p.m. “The Church That’s on the Move for Christ for Such a Time as This” ________________________ REV. AUDREY L. HALL, PASTOR REV. DR. AVA S. HARVEY, SR., OVERSEER Opinion 12 • THE mississippi link April 10 - 16, 2014 www.mississippilink.com Declaring ‘Class War’ The power of on ‘the least of these’ the Black Press The Bible’s injunction that we shall be judged by how we By Rev. Jesse Jackson NNPA Guest Columnist have treated the “least of these” (Mathew 25:40) appears in different forms in virtually every religion or faith. And surely the measure of a country is how it treats the most vulnerable of its people - children in the dawn of life, the poor in the valley of life, the ailing in the shadows of life, the elderly in the dusk of life. Recently, the House of Representatives is scheduled to vote on the Republican budget proposal put together by Rep. Paul Ryan, chair of the Budget Committee, and Mitt Romney’s running mate. The vast majority of Republicans are lined up to vote for it, with possible exceptions for a handful that think it does not cut enough. It is a breathtakingly mean and callous proposal. The Republican budget would cut taxes on the wealthy, giving millionaires, the Citizen for Tax Justice estimates, a tax break of $200,000 per year. Ryan only tells us what tax rates he would lower, noted the loopholes he would close to make his proposal revenue neutral. But CTJ shows that even if he closed every loophole claimed by the wealthy, it wouldn’t make up for the revenue lost by lowering their top rate). The Ryan plan would extend also tax breaks for multinationals, moving to make the entire world a tax haven. He would raise spending on the military by about $500 billion over the levels now projected over the next decade. Republicans are pledged to balance the budget in 10 years. To achieve this, the Republican budget would turn Medicare into a voucher program (but only for those 55 and younger). It would repeal the Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”). It would gut Medicaid, turning it into a block grant for states and cutting it by more than one-fourth by 2024. The result, as estimated by the authoritative Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, would be to deprive 40 million low and moderate income Americans of health care insurance. The Republican budget also devastates domestic programs and investments, cutting them by one-third of their inflation-adjusted levels over the decade, ending at an inconceivable one-half the levels of the Reagan years as a percentage of the economy. Infant nutrition, food subsidy, Head Start, investment in schools, Pell Grants for college, public housing, Meals on Wheels and home heating assistance for seniors or the confined all would suffer deep cuts. The poorest children will suffer the worst cuts. The Republican budget also savages investments vital to our future - not just education, but research and development, renewable energy, modern infrastructure. House Republicans will vote for this budget while refusing even to allow a vote to extend unemployment benefits to the long-term unemployed who have lost their job through no fault of their own. They also refuse to allow a vote on raising the min- imum wage. It is hard to see this as anything other than a declaration of class warfare. Republicans declare the country is broke, against all evidence to the contrary. But they still want to cut taxes for the rich and corporations, and hike spending on the military. So they lay waste to support for working and poor people. Ryan argues that cutting programs for the poor will set them free, removing a “hammock” and forcing them to stand on their own feet. That might be worth debating if jobs were plentiful, schools received equal support, housing was affordable and jobs paid a living wage. But none of these things are true. In today’s conditions, with mass unemployment, savagely unequal schools, homeless families, and poverty wage jobs, Ryan’s words simply ring false. Of course, the wealthy and corporations reward Republicans for arguing their case. As the Koch brothers are showing, their campaigns will be lavishly supported; their opponents will face a barrage of attack ads. But most Americans are better than this. Majorities oppose these cruel priorities. And we now have the right to vote. The majority can speak if it chooses. It has to sort through annoying ads, poll-tested excuses, and glib politicians. We can decide that we aren’t going to stand by and allow the wealthy to protect their privilege and the poor to pay the price. And it’s time to revive a citizen’s movement to engage people and get them out to vote. Jesse L. Jackson Sr. and founder and president of the RainbowPUSH Coalition. By George E. Curry NNPA Columnist Whenever there is a steady series of public questions being raised about the “power” of black Americans, you should always first consider the motive and purpose of the questions. Such was the case recently when Richard Prince wrote a column, which was posted on The Root titled, “Is the black press still powerful?” Of course, the answer is: “Yes, the black press in America is still powerful.” What was the underlying motive for this question being asked? I wonder if Prince, a long-time employee of the Washington Post, has ever written a column titled, “Is the white press still powerful?” I seriously doubt it. There is a larger contextual reality that also needs to be considered. The truth is that during past year, there has been a consistent series of so-called “mainstream” news articles, editorials, and blogs that have questioned the relevance, power and legitimacy of black-owned businesses and institutions. In addition, during this same time period, the effectiveness and contemporary purpose of our traditional civil rights organizations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) have been called into question. A few months ago, the New York Times published a story that questioned whether Howard University and other Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) were still relevant and worthy of continued existence. It is not a mere coincidence that some of these news articles and blogs are being written again by supposedly “well-intentioned” Af- rican Americans. We certainly support and defend the right to freedom of the press and the right of all people to express themselves. Of course, the press has the right to be wrong. With that right, however, goes a responsibility not to distort the truth. This is not about neither freedom of the press nor freedom of speech. This is about the issue of racism and its proclivity to define and question reality. This is about the fact that we still live in a society that continues to be undergirded by the ideology of white supremacy that presupposes the false notion of black inferiority. And as long as that is the case, there will be a need for powerful black institutions. The ‘black church’ is powerful. The ‘black press’ is powerful. HBCUs are powerful. The NAACP and SCLC are still needed. While we have made considerable progress in the last 50 years, we still have not overcome racism and its negative impact on black America. And that fact is sometimes conveniently overlooked by black journalists who work for such white-owned outlets, such as the Washington Post and The Root. For me and my co-defendants in the civil rights case known worldwide as the Wilmington Ten, this is a personal matter when someone takes issue with the present-day “power” of the black press. In 1972, the Wilmington Ten were unjustly sentenced to a combined total of 282 years in prison in the state of North Carolina. We were falsely accused and wrongly convicted of arson and conspiracy to assault charges doing a 1971 racial riot over public school desegregation in Wilmington. A little more than a year ago, the National Newspaper Publishers Association (NNPA), the Black Press USA, launched an effective national campaign to get an official “Pardon of Innocence” for the Wilmington Ten. For more than 40 years, many in the established media in the U.S. had published articles about the alleged “guilt” of the Wilmington Ten. In fact, the New York Times published a story in the late 1970s under the headline: “The case against the Wilmington Ten.” By the end of 2012, however, North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue agreed with the NNPA-led effort as she issued an unprecedented Pardon of Innocence to each member of the Wilmington Ten. Gov. Perdue courageously stated, “This was a case of naked racism.” We are, therefore, grateful to Gov. Perdue for her historic act and for her candor. We are also very grateful to all of the black newspaper publishers and writers throughout the United States who continue to uphold the proud banner of the black press. Let’s us never underestimate the enduring value and respect of all our black-owned businesses and institutions. Of course, we always open to constructive criticism and recommendations concerning how to strengthen the economic status of the businesses that are vital to our forward progress. However, it would be a tragic error to assume that because we now have a black American as president of the United States, there is no longer a need to sustain the very institutions, organizations and businesses that have contributed so much to our progress. I thank God for the powerful black press in America. We all should be more supportive of the black press, black church, HBCUs, and our ongoing struggle for freedom, justice and equality not only for black Americans, but also for all people across the nation and world. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr. is president of Education Online Services Corporation and the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network and can be reached for lectures and for other consultations at http://drbenjaminfchavisjr.wix.com/drbfc African diplomats who shun black businessowners By George E. Curry NNPA Columnist Recently, I attended a very nice reception hosted by two of my friends, Rosa Whitaker and Bernadette Paolo. Rosa is CEO and president of the Whitaker Group, a Washington, D.C.- based consultancy specializing in trade and investment in Africa. Whitaker previously served as the first assistant U.S. Trade representative for Africa in the administrations of Presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton. In 2010, she was named one of Foreign Policy’s Top Global Thinkers. Paolo succeeded the former president and founder of The Africa Society, Leonard H. Robinson Jr., in 2006, after his untimely death. Prior to assuming her new position, Paolo served as vice president of The Africa Society and vice president of The Sister Megan Rice By Eric Garcia. Chicago, IL, courtesy of BlackCommentator.com National Summit on Africa. The event was promoted as “Reception, Tribute and Discussion for East Africa’s Four New Female Ambassadors to the U.S.” The ambassadors honored were Mathilde Mukantabana of Rwanda, Liberata Mulamula of Tanzania, Oliver Wonekha of Uganda, and Jean Kamau of Kenya. Each of these women has a fascinating background and sterling accomplishments. However, for those who are not followers of Africa, it’s important to remember that the continent of Africa is extremely patriarchal. Women are barely beginning to be welcomed into decision-making positions in government, business, and politics, etc. In many African countries, women’s roles in society are clearly defined, with most being relegated to motherhood and the raising of the children. In foreign affairs, to be posted as ambassador to the U.S. is like winning the Super Bowl; it is a crowning achievement for any diplomat. So, to have these four women from East Africa posted in the U.S. is a historic development in diplomatic circles. Therefore, for now I want to speak directly to these four distinguished ambassadors: I have spoken to many of your male predecessors about the role of an ambassador in a foreign country. The main objective of an ambassador is to be the voice and the face of their home country’s foreign policy towards the U.S. They should be the head cheerleader for their country and engage with as many Americans as possible. However, I am very optimistic about the long term future of Africa. I have travelled and done work in many countries on the continent. But I am and have been very critical of Africa and many of their ambassadors for their lack of engagement with Blacks in the U.S. Since women claim to be better listeners than men, let’s put this theory to the test. Madam Ambassadors, each of you stated that you wanted Americans, especially blacks, to invest in your respective countries. Why should we? What is the business case for such an investment? Most African ambassadors have little engagement with the black community, especially the businessman. People all over the world tend to do business with people they know. There are black businessmen who have created and run multi-billion dollar companies and have never had an African ambassador come to meet with them. Businessmen are not just going to magically show up in your country and want to invest millions of dollars in your country and you have never found the need to establish a relationship with these successful businessmen. When your presidents come to the U.S., they always meet with the same group of white organizations: the Corporate Council on Africa, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, or the U.S. Institute for Peace, etc. Madame Ambassadors, why is it that your presidents refuse to meet with these successful black entrepreneurs when they are in the U.S.? These same presidents would miss their own mother’s funeral to meet with Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, or Mark Zuckerberg, but when it comes to meeting the black owner of a $ 6 billion IT firm, they can’t find time. Madame Ambassadors, how many of you know that there are more than 200 black newspapers in the U.S.? When you are allocating money to promote tourism to your country, why do you never consider partnering with these black media outlets? Do you think blacks can’t afford to travel or have no discretionary income? Madame Ambassadors, how many of you have made yourself available to be interviewed by those who own black newspapers, magazines, or websites? Do you not believe that blacks read or care about the motherland? Before there can be an investment of money; there first has to be an investment of time. Madam Ambassadors, remember, when all is said and done, there is more said than done. Raynard Jackson is president & CEO of Raynard Jackson & Associates, LLC, a Washington, D.C.-based public relations/government affairs firm. He can be reached through his website, www.raynardjackson.com. You can also follow him on Twitter at raynard1223. Editorials and Letters to the Editor may be e-mailed to editor@mississippilink.com or mailed to 2659 Livingston Road, Jackson, MS 39213. The views and opinions expressed on the Op/Ed pages are not necessarily the views and opinions of The Mississippi Link. The Mississippi Link also reserves the right to edit all material for length and accuracy. CLASSIFIED www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 THE mississippi link • 13 Legal HELP WANTED ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Jackson Convention Complex HELP WANTED – ENGINEERING/TECHNICAL Advertisement for Bids SMG, manager of the Jackson Convention Complex, has issued a request for quotes (RFQ) for Ballroom Carpet Repairs and Cleaning. Project Technician Sr. – Mississippi Public Broadcasting has an immediate opening for the position of Project Technician Senior. Duties: Maintain and repair microwave and transmitter equipment; maintain technical adjustments according to FCC Rules; ensure proper tower, building and grounds maintenance; and computer knowledge needed. Duties include monitoring and maintenance of digital microwave and transmitter equipment. Some duties must be performed within a high voltage and power environment. Lifting/weight requirement 75 pounds. A General Radiotelephone Operator License (GROL) or SBE certification desired, but not required. Salary: $34,274.51. For complete job description/req. go to www.mpbonline.org. SUBMIT: State of Mississippi application to Personnel, Mississippi Public Broadcasting, 3825 Ridgewood Road, Jackson, MS 39211 received by April 25, 2014. Resumes not accepted in lieu of applications. MPB is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Bid 2283 – Food Service Warehouse Paper & Stock Supplies Bid 2284 – Food Service Warehouse Food Products For more information and instructions on how to respond, please visit http://www.jacksonconventioncomplex.com/about/business/ . 04/3/2014 04/10/2014 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS SECTION 00 11 13 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The City of Jackson, Mississippi is soliciting bid proposals from qualified firms to provide short term sanitary sewer wastewater flow monitoring in various sewersheds within the City limits. Sealed bids will be received by the City Council at the office of the City Clerk, City Hall, 219 South President Street, P.O. Box 17, Jackson, Mississippi 39205 until 3:30 P.M. Local Time, May 6, 2014, for supplying all labor and materials (as specified) necessary for the SEWERSHED EVALUATION FLOW MONITORING, CITY PROJECT NUMBER 3B0500902. The scope of services shall include installation of 46 flow meters, installation of 4 rain gauges, maintenance of all installed equipment, weekly data collection, data processing, and reporting for a 90-120 day period for each meter. Flow meters and rain gauges will be installed within sixty (60) days and the Contract time shall be 180 consecutive calendar days from the effective date shown in the Notice to Proceed. After all meters are installed, ninety (90) days of continuous operation and data production is required for each flow meter and rain gauge prior to the completion date, with an option to extend the monitoring for an additional thirty (30) days. Rain gauges will operate throughout the entire period that flow meters are being operated. Because the City of Jackson faces stipulated penalties from U.S.E.P.A. if the flow monitoring is not timely completed, liquidated damages will be assessed for each consecutive calendar day the Work has not achieved Final Completion after the 180 day performance period. The amount of liquidated damages per day will be as follows: Period: 1 - 30 days 31 - 60 days 61-180 days More than 180 days Penalty Per Day: $500 $1,000 $2,000 $5,000 Cindy Stevenson Human Resources Director Sealed, written formal bid proposals for the above bid will be received by the Board of Trustees of the Jackson Public School District, in the Business Office, 662 South President Street, Jackson, Mississippi, until 10:00 A.M. (Local Prevailing Time) April 24, 2014, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids, to waive informalities, and to withhold the acceptance of any bid if approved for forty-five calendar days from the date bids are opened. Proposal forms and detailed specifications may be obtained free of charge by emailing acrossley@ jackson.k12.ms.us, calling (601) 960-8799, or documents may be picked up at the above address. 04/10/2014 , 04/17/2014 04/3/2014, 04/10/2014 LEGAL PUBLIC NOTICE City of Jackson’s Office of Housing and Community Development DEPARTMENT OF PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT Community Housing Development Organization (CHDO) Application for Certification and Workshop The Office of Housing and Community Development of the City of Jackson will be accepting Community Housing Development Organization (CHDO) applications for certifications. Applications will be available on Thursday, April 17, 2014 at the CHDO application workshop. This CHDO Workshop will provide an overview of the CHDO Certification Process and will provide participants an overview of all U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) certification requirements. The workshop date and times are as follows: DATE: Thursday, April 17, 2014 TIMES: PLACE: 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Richard Porter Building 218 S. President Street 1st Floor Conference Room Jackson, Mississippi 39201 In addition, CHDO applications will be available at the Office of Housing and Community Development located at 218 S. President Street; 2nd Floor; Jackson, MS 39201 and on the City’s website: http://www.jacksonms.gov. The application submission deadline is Friday, April 25, 2014 at 5:00 p.m. If there are any questions, contact the Office of Housing and Community Development, 601-960-2155. City of Jackson, Mississippi Charles Tillman, Acting Mayor 04/10/2014 plus any additional actual costs incurred by the Owner. These actual costs include, but are not limited to, engineering, inspection, and other project related costs resulting from the Contractor’s failure to complete the work on schedule. The City of Jackson is committed to the principle of non-discrimination in public contracting. It is the policy of the City of Jackson to promote full and equal business opportunity for all persons doing business with the City. As a pre-condition to selection, each contractor, bidder or offeror shall submit a completed and signed Equal Business Opportunity (EBO) Plan, with the bid submission, in accordance with the provision of the City of Jackson’s Equal Business Opportunity (EBO) ordinance. Failure to comply with the City’s ordinance shall disqualify a contractor, bidder, or offeror from being awarded an eligible contract. For more information on the City of Jackson’s Equal Business Opportunity Program, please contact the Office of Economic Development at 601-960-1638. Copies of the ordinance, EBO Plan Applications and a copy of the program are available at 218 South President Street, 2nd Floor, Jackson, Mississippi. The City of Jackson hereby notifies all bidders that in compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 2000d to 2000d-4, that all bidders will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex, in consideration for an award. The City of Jackson, Mississippi (“City of Jackson”) is committed to cultivating and ensuring the quality of life of its citizens, through various programs, employment, initiatives, and assistance. The City encourages all persons, corporations, and/or entities doing business within the City, as well as those who seek to contract with the City on various projects and/or conduct business in the City to assist the City in achieving its goal by strongly considering City residents for employment opportunities. Bids shall be made out on the bid proposal form to be provided, sealed in an envelope and plainly marked on the outside of the envelope: “Bid for SEWERSHED EVALUATION FLOW MONITORING, CITY PROJECT NO. 3B0500902.” Bids and EBO plans shall be submitted in triplicate, stapled individually, sealed and deposited with the City Clerk, City Hall, Jackson, Mississippi prior to the hour and date hereinbefore designated. No bidder may withdraw his bid within 90 days after the actual date of the opening thereof. Each Bidder must submit with his bid a separate attachment stating his qualifications to perform the work. The Statement of Qualifications shall list past projects of similar size and nature, a list of references with name and telephone number, a list of key personnel who will perform the work, and other information supporting the bidder’s qualifications as required by the project specifications. A Pre Bid Meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, April 16, 2014 at 1:30 P.M., local time in the 5th Floor Conference Room of the Department of Public Works at 200 South President Street, Jackson, Mississippi. Attendance by Contractors intending to bid on the project is strongly encouraged. All potential Subcontractors and other interested parties are invited to attend. Each Bidder must deposit with his bid a Bid Bond or Certified Check in an amount equal to five percent of his bid, payable to the City of Jackson as bid security. Bidders shall also submit a current financial statement, if requested by the City of Jackson. Contract Drawings, Contract Specifications, Instructions to Bidders and Bidders Proposal forms are on file and open to public inspection in the office of the (1) Water/Sewer Utilities, Department of Public Works, Jackson, Mississippi; (2) City Clerk in Jackson, Mississippi; and (3) Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality, 515 East Amite Street, Jackson, Mississippi (first contact Jerome Vaughan, P.E., 601-961-5083). Copies of the Instructions for Bidders and Bidder’s Proposal, Bid Bond, Contract Drawings and Contract Specifications may be procured at the office of the Engineer between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Local Time, Monday through Friday, upon payment of $25.00 for each set, which will not be refunded. Checks are to be made payable to the Engineer. Additional information and assistance regarding this bid opportunity, the MS Procurement Technical Assistance Program, and local contract procurement center may be found at: www.mscpc.com The City of Jackson hereby notifies all Bidders that minority and women business enterprises are solicited to bid on this contract as prime contractors and are encouraged to make inquiries regarding potential subcontracting opportunities, equipment, material and/or supply needs. The Engineer is WEI/AJA, LLC, 143-A LeFleurs Square, Jackson, MS 39211, Telephone (601) 355-9526, Fax No. (601) 352-3945. For technical questions please contact Clyde Burnett at (601) 352-6800. The City of Jackson reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive any informalities or irregularities therein. 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CLASSIFIED 14 • THE mississippi link April 10 - 16, 2014 www.mississippilink.com ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS legal NOTICE TO BIDDERS City of Jackson Jackson, Mississippi ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS FOR CONSTRUCTION AND RELATED SERVICES IN CONNECTION WITH THE CONSTRUCTION OF A CENTRAL INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION FACILITY AT JACKSON-MEDGAR WILEY EVERS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT (JMAA PROJECT NO. 014-11-A) Legal Notice Department of Public Works Infrastructure Project Management Services Sealed, signed bids are invited and will be received by the City of Jackson, Mississippi, until 3:30 P.M. in the City Clerk’s Office of Jackson, the bid must be stamped in by 3:30 P.M. Tuesday, May 20, 2014, at which time said bids will be publicly opened at the City Hall located at 219 South President Street (City Council Chambers) in City Hall for the following: 74567-052014 - Twelve-Month Supply of Asphalt Pavement Milling BIDS ARE NOW AVAILABLE ON THE CITY OF JACKSON’S WEBSITE, WWW.JACKSONMS.GOV The above must comply with the City’s specifications. Copies of proposal forms can be obtained from the Purchasing Division, 200 South President Street, Room 604, Hood Building, Jackson, Mississippi 39201. Copies of bid specifications are filed with the City Clerk for public record in accordance with House Bill No 999, 1986 Regular Session of the Mississippi Legislature. The City of Jackson is committed to the principle of non-discrimination in Public Purchasing. It is the policy of the City of Jackson to promote full and equal business opportunities for all persons doing business with the City. As a pre-condition to selection, each contractor, bidder or offer shall submit a completed and signed Equal Business Opportunity (EBO) Plan Application, with each bid submission, in accordance with the provisions set forth by authority of the City of Jackson’s EBO Ordinance. Failure to comply with the City’s EBO Ordinance shall disqualify a contractor, bidder or offer, from being awarded an eligible contract. For more information on the City’s EBO Program, please contact the Office of Economic Development at (601)960-1638. Copies of the EBO Ordinance, EBO Plan Application and a copy of the EBO Program are available with the Office of Economic Development at 218 South President Street, Second Floor, Jackson, Mississippi. The City reserves the right to reject any and all bids. The City also reserves the right to waive any and all informalities in respect to any bid submitted. Bid awards will be made to the lowest and best bidder quoting the lowest net price in accordance with specifications. The award could be according to the lowest cost per item; or to the lowest total cost for all items; or to accept all or part of any proposal. Delivery time may be considered when evaluating the bid proposal. In those cases where it is known prior to advertising that the City’s intention is to award according to the lowest total cost for all items, or in some variation thereof, statements to this affect will be included on the proposal form. Absence of such statement means the City will make that determination during the bid review. Hellene Greer, CPPB, NPCA, Manager Purchasing Division (601)960-1025 04/3/2014 , 04/10/2014 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Advertisement for Bids Bid 2281 - Food Service Kitchen Equipment Bid 2282 – Food Service Walk-In Freezers Sealed, written formal bid proposals for the above bid will be received by the Board of Trustees of the Jackson Public School District, in the Business Office, 662 South President Street, Jackson, Mississippi, until 10:00 A.M. (Local Prevailing Time) April 21, 2014, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids, to waive informalities, and to withhold the acceptance of any bid if approved for forty-five calendar days from the date bids are opened. Proposal forms and dcetailed specifications may be obtained free of charge by emailing acrossley@jackson.k12.ms.us, calling (601) 960-8799, or documents may be picked up at the above address. 04/3/2014, 04/10/2014 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Advertisement for Bids Bid 2285 – Dairy Products Sealed, written formal bid proposals for the above bid will be received by the Board of Trustees of the Jackson Public School District, in the Business Office, 662 South President Street, Jackson, Mississippi, until 10:00 A.M. (Local Prevailing Time) April 30, 2014, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids, to waive informalities, and to withhold the acceptance of any bid if approved for forty-five calendar days from the date bids are opened. Proposal forms and detailed specifications may be obtained free of charge by emailing acrossley@ jackson.k12.ms.us, calling (601) 960-8799, or documents may be picked up at the above address. 04/10/2014 , 04/17/2014 The Jackson Municipal Airport Authority (“JMAA”) will receive sealed bids at the Jackson-Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport (“JAN”), Main Terminal Building, Suite 300, in the City of Jackson, Rankin County, Mississippi, until 2:00 p.m. on May 13, 2014 (the “Bid Deadline”), for construction and related services in connection with the construction of a Central Information Distribution Facility at JAN (the “Work”). JMAA will publicly open and read aloud all bids at 2:05 p.m. on May 13, 2014 (the “Bid Opening”), in the Staff Conference Room, Third Floor of the Main Terminal Building at JAN. The outside or exterior of each bid envelope or container of the bid must be marked with the bidder’s Mississippi Certificate of Responsibility Number and with the wording: “Central IDF Facility at JAN, JMAA Project No. 01411-A.” Bid proposals, amendments to bids, or requests for withdrawal of bids received by JMAA after the Bid Deadline will not be considered for any cause whatsoever. JMAA invites Bidders and their authorized representatives to be present at the Bid Opening. JMAA will award the Work to the lowest and best bidder as determined by JMAA in accordance with the criteria set forth in the Information for Bidders. The Information for Bidders contains, among other things, a copy of this Advertisement for Bids, Instructions to Bidders and an Agreement to be executed by JMAA and the lowest and best bidder. Plans and specifications related to the Work are considered a part of the Agreement. The Information for Bidders is on file and open for public inspection at JAN at the following address: On January 14, 2014 the City of Jackson passed a 1% sales tax referendum to fund needed infrastructure improvement projects throughout the City of Jackson Corporate Limits. The City of Jackson intends to employ a consulting engineering firm to assist with the development of a master plan specific to projects funded by the 1% sales tax revenue and to provide infrastructure project management services to manage infrastructure projects within the master plan including, but not limited to drainage improvement projects, street resurfacing/street reconstruction projects, water system distribution/waterline replacement projects, limited sewer system improvement projects, limited engineering design/construction administration services, and right of way services utilizing a Cost plus Fixed Fee, Labor Hour/Unit Price or Lump Sum/Firm Fixed Price for services rendered. In addition the consulting firm will manage other professional design engineering firms monitoring their design progress, payment invoices, and other contractual obligation outlined within their scope of work. Consulting engineering firms interested in providing these services may so indicate by furnishing the City of Jackson Engineering Division seven (7) copies of the following: 1. A cover letter specifying the name and complete description of project, the name of the project manager, and the location and address of the office to be assigned the majority of the work; and 2. A resume for each principal member, the project manager, and employee(s) of the firm anticipated to be assigned to the project. Also, provide an organizational chart and list each person’s experience and qualifications, including proof that the Project Manager is licensed as a Mississippi Professional Engineer and that the firm has met state licensure and certification requirements*; and 3. A description of similar type work completed during the past five (5) years which qualifies the consultant for this work; the cost and schedule completion (or actual completion) of this work; and 4. A response containing the information upon which the consultant will be evaluated. The City reserves the right to reject any and all Proposals and/or to discontinue contract execution with any party at any time prior to final contract execution. Jackson-Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport Suite 300, Main Terminal Building 100 International Drive Jackson, Mississippi 39208 Telephone: (601) 664-3522 Facsimile: (601) 664-3523 Attention: Will Dickson, Airport Security Manager All questions related to this Legal Ad shall be submitted in writing by April 25, 2014 directed to: A copy of the Bid Documents (including plans and specifications for the Work) may be obtained upon payment of $50.00 refundable fee per set. Payment for the Bid Documents is to be in the form of a company or cashier’s check made payable to Faith Group, LLC. The check may be presented upon pick-up of the Bid Documents at the following address or may be mailed to the following address. Jackson Blueprint & Supply, Inc. 699 Monroe Street Jackson, Mississippi 39202 Telephone: (601) 353-5803 Facsimile: (601) 353-0207 Email: pdbraddy@comcast.net Attention: Paul Braddy Bid Documents may be picked up or shipped to the person making the request. Documents will not be distributed or mailed, however, until payment is received. JMAA will hold a Pre-Bid Conference at 2:00 p.m. on April 24, 2014 in the Staff Conference Room, Third Floor of the Main Terminal Building at JAN. Attendance at the Pre-Bid Conference is mandatory for all those submitting bids for the Work. Charles Williams Jr., P.E., Ph.D. City of Jackson Engineering Division P.O. Box 17 Jackson, MS 39205 The City will evaluate the Expressions of Interest based on the following factors listed in their relative order of importance: 1. Experience of the firm in performing specific services and experience in preparing projects as it relates to the service requested within this advertisement. 2. Qualifications and experience of staff to be assigned to the project based on requested scope of services. 3. Size of the firm’s professional and technical staff with respect to the capacity to provide the needed scope of services. 4. Resume of the firm’s current and completed projects of a similar nature. 5. Local presence of the firm (i.e., local headquarters, office, or other investments within the City of Jackson). The City reserves the right to select one (1) consultant or select a short list of consultants from whom more information will be required. Minority participation is strongly encouraged. To be considered, all replies must be received by 3:30 p.m., Tuesday, April 29, 2014, in the Office of the City Clerk, 219 South President Street, Jackson, Mississippi, 39201 JMAA reserves the right to amend the plans and specifications for the Work by Addendum issued before the Bid Deadline and delivered to all bidders by facsimile, mail, electronic mail or other reliable means; to reject any and all bids; to waive informalities in the bidding process; and to hold and examine bids for up to ninety (90) days before awarding the contract for the Work. JACKSON MUNICIPAL AIRPORT AUTHORITY DATE: April 3, 2014 /s/ Dirk B. Vanderleest Dirk B. Vanderleest, Chief Executive Officer 04/3/2014, 04/10/2014 04/10/2014 , 04/17/2014 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Advertisement for Bids Bid 2280 - Lanier High School Window Restoration Project Sealed, written formal bid proposals for the above bid will be received by the Board of Trustees of the Jackson Public School District, in the Business Office, 662 South President Street, Jackson, Mississippi, until 10:00 A.M. (Local Prevailing Time) May 5, 2014, at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read aloud. A Pre-Bid Conference concerning the project will be held at Lanier High School Cafeteria, 833 W. Maple Street, Jackson, MS 39203, on April 28, 2014, at 3:30 P.M. Attendance at the pre-bid conference is non-mandatory but strongly suggested. The Board of Trustees reserves the right to reject any and all bids, to waive informalities, and to withhold the acceptance of any bid if approved for fortyfive calendar days from the date bids are opened. A $50.00 deposit shall be required on each set of plans and specifications, to be refunded upon return of all documents in good condition, returned by 4:30 p.m. the day before bid opening. Proposal forms and detailed specifications may be obtained from Burris/Wagnon Architects, P.A., 500L East Woodrow Wilson Avenue, Jackson, MS 39216, Phone: 601-969-7543, Fax: 601-969-9374. Email: stan@burriswagon.com 04/3/2014, 04/10/2014 www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 THE mississippi link • 15 The Mississippi Link Pick Up Goldberg PASS PASS Vicksburg CVB 4 days of affordable 2x6 Sat & Sun All attractions, shows, rides and activities are included in the low admission price! April 12-13 Fri & Sat April 18-19 family fun! Freedom Ridge Park www.kidfestridgeland.com 601-853-2011 Free Parking! 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All new customers are subject to a one-time processing fee. Week of April 6, 2014 16 • the mississippi link April 10 - 16, 2014 College Hill’s 107th Anniversary April 6, 2014 • Jackson, Miss. Photos By Jay Johnson www.mississippilink.com www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 THE mississippi link • 17 ENTERTAINMENT 18 • the mississippi link April 10 - 16, 2014 White House may ban selfies after David Ortiz’s Samsung hustle eurweb.com “Selfies” with President Obama may no longer be allowed after baseball star David Ortiz orchestrated one for a Samsung publicity stunt. “Maybe this will be the end of all selfies,” White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer said about the incident Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “(Obama) obviously didn’t know anything about Samsung’s connection to this.” Ortiz, a.k.a. Big Papi of the World Series champion Boston Red Sox, took the shot on April 1 when his team was invited to the White House to be congratulated by the President. It was revealed a day later that the photo, taken with Ortiz’s Samsung Galaxy Note 3 phone, was actually organized by the Korean telecom giant. “Someone who uses the President’s likeness to promote a product… that’s a problem with the White House,” Pfeiffer added Sunday. “We’ve had conversations with Samsung about this and have expressed our concerns.” Ortiz snapped the seemingly unplanned shot while onstage with Obama, as the Red Sox celebrated their 2013 World Series title. Ortiz tweeted the picture, prompting more than 42,000 retweets, including one by the official Samsung account - to the company’s more than 5.2 million Twitter followers. After the stunt, Samsung revealed it had a marketing deal with Ortiz and admitted that company officials had “worked with David and the team on how to share images with fans.” Spike Lee directs video for new Eminem single ‘Headlights’ Ortiz and President Obama LeBron James aligns with Sprite for limited-edition flavor eurweb.com You know you’ve made it when you have a hand in creating your own flavor of soda. LeBron James can mark that off his list of things to do as the NBA all-star joins forces with Sprite to create a limited-edition flavor of the soda brand known as the “Sprite 6 Mix.” Media sources report that the new drink combines a splash of cherry and orange to the original Sprite mix. The packaging for the “Sprite 6 Mix” will include James’ name, initials and #6 jersey number. Fans can purchase the drink in 19.2-ounce cans and 20-ounce bottles. James James’ new Sprite flavor is the latest in a series of alliances the Miami Heat player has built to create limited shoes and gum. www.mississippilink.com For his latest venture, Sprite is promoting the “Sprite 6 Mix” campaign with the tagline “LeBron Has Changed The Game. Again.” Lee and Eminem eurweb.com Eminem’s video for new single “Headlights” is a Spike Lee Joint. The two worked together on the video in Detroit with the rapper tweeting, “Spike came out to The D for the ‘Headlights’ video…Coming soon,” and shared a picture of them together on Instagram. Lee also confirmed his in- volvement in the project when he tweeted: “Detroit’s Finest Eminem And Me Working Together On His Short a Film. Historic. Who Woulda Thunk It.” ‘Headlights’ is the latest single from the rapper’s 2013 album “The Marshall Mathers LP 2” and sees Eminem apologizing to his mother, Debbie, for things that went down in their volatile past. www.mississippilink.com April 10 - 16, 2014 THE mississippi link • 19 Dear Friends, I am humbled by your love and support. I am truly appreciative that the citizens of Jackson took time out to volunteer their time and also their talent and resources. It means a great deal to know that you stood in the rain to support me. I want to extend my sincere and eternal gratitude to everyone who worked tirelessly and gave their gracious support to my campaign. Your dedication made it possible for me to present my case to the citizens of Jackson. I am profoundly humbled that the people of our great City havedeemed me a worthy candidate in this Mayoral Runoff. I invite EVERYONE who believes in our City and is dedicated to playing an active role in continuing Jackson’smovement forward to join me as we continue on the road to the general election. Our work is not done and I still need your support. With unity, Jackson can reach the highest heights! Now is the time to work together for a better Jackson. The general election will be held on Tuesday, April 22nd. We MUST return to the polls one last time. And when you do, I ask that you cast your vote for Chokwe Antar Lumumba. Let’s show-up and finish strong on April 22nd! This victory is a people’s victory. We should ALL be excited for the greater Jackson that lies ahead. I continue to ask for everyone’s prayers, support and their vote. And to the members that have been here each step of the way, thank you for your hard work. TOGETHER, WE WILL make Jackson RISE!!! Sincerely and in gratitude, Chokwe A. Lumumba, Esq. 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