Saturday, May 28, 2011

Frederick Alexander Meade - Mondays with Meade

Earl Ingram Jr. and Frederick Alexander Meade Discuss the Black Church
Mondays with Meade - WMCS 1290 AM (4:00 - 6:00 p.m. CST)

Friday, May 27, 2011

Apologize Oprah!

Oprah left someone pivotal to her success out of her finale. Find out who it is by visiting www.MichaelJacksonInsider.com

Does she owe an apology?

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Emergency Update Regarding Michael Jackson and Oprah



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Sunday, May 15, 2011

Ancestor “Brother” George Welch is honored

“Brother George” (1932-2011) Considered Friend And Mentor To Many In Hampton Roads
By Leonard E. Colvin
Chief Reporter
New Journal and Guide
About Brother George



For more than two decades, “Brother” George Welch owned and operated the Self-Improvement and Educational Center on 35th Street in the Park Place section of Norfolk.

Welch, 79, died recently at Sentara Bayside Hospital, according to family members.

Known as “Brother George” by most of the people who knew him, he was born in the Liberty Park section of Norfolk. His father worked for the railroad and his mother was a housewife who raised eight children.

A graduate of Booker. T. Washington High School, he enlisted into the U.S. Air Force and served his country 22 years at various posts around the world, including Great Britain and a tour of duty in Vietnam.

After retiring in 1972, he then worked as a longshoreman as a member of Local Union 1248.

Welch opened the Self-Improvement and Educational Center in 1979, according to his daughter, Francisca Welch-Stidham of Virginia Beach. She described him as a quiet and thoughtful man and a strong believer of the Nation Of Islam (NOI).

“My father noticed that many of the people he encountered here did not know enough about themselves as Black people or their culture or history,” Welch-Spidham said. “Most people understood only what people had told them. He always believed that people should be given a chance to improve and elevate themselves to improve their outlook on themselves and their environment.”

The Self Improvement and Educational Censer was more than a bookstore filled with Afro-centric books and other educational and cultural materials.

It was also the cultural and social nerve center for many who lived in Park Place and all over the region.

Welch sold the center last year. But for the last few years, he ran the shop with the help of his now 11-year-old grandson, Malcolm Stidham, who “knew every book in the store, like his grandfather,” said his mother Welch-Spidham.

“Over the years and recently I have run across people who knew my father and they told me about how he inspired them,” she said. “He never talked about it, but he also shared knowledge and inspiration for countless people. He was also a mentor to many. Many people even defined him as the father they never knew.”

Angel Pye works at the St. Bride Correctional Censer and counsels at-risk youth. In 1994, while attending Norfolk State University, she was assigned to write a college paper comparing the practices of African American and White businesses. She interviewed George Welch and his wife on the subject.

“Brother George taught me about integrity,” said Pye. “If you gave him $5 to hold in 1995 ... in 2005 he would give that same $5 back to you ... because it was yours. How many people can you say have that much integrity? That was Brother George and his legacy.”

Farrell Watson, 26, met George Welch on his last day as an enlisted man in the military. Watson was born in Norfolk, too, and unknown to him, “Brother George” knew his entire family. Watson is now a graduate student at George Washington University and a social worker for the city of Hampton.

“He was an inspiration to me. He always gave me words of wisdom and some of the things he taught me kept me out of trouble,” said Watson. “I attended Old Dominion University, got my degree in political science. On the day I graduated, he could not attend because he was busy at the center. But after the ceremony, all of my 50 family members drove over to the center and saw him and we had a small celebration. I appreciated his being my inspiration. I will miss him.”

Mr. Welch was married to Mary Softly Welch, who now lives in Washington, D.C. He had three daughters, Francisca Welch-Stidham of Virginia Beach; Rosemary Omesietie of San Antonio; and Judieth Welch of Washington, D.C. Other survivors include four grandsons and a host of relatives, extended family and friends.

Mr. Welch’s funeral will be at 2 p.m. Saturday May 14 at the Metropolitan Chapel on Granby Street in Norfolk. It will be a cultural ceremony with Afrikan dancers and drummers. Yoruba priest Baba Orisa officiated at the burial.

This article was published in the New Journal & Guide.
Subscribe to the Journal & Guide !
http://njournalg.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4767


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About the New Journal & Guide
The New Journal & Guide is Hampton Roads’ oldest, most widely read and most respected weekly source of information. Our paper is a broadsheet and is published each Thursday. We are especially proud of our 100-plus-year-old legacy as a Hampton Roads institution.

When you read our paper, you will know that this is a medium seeking to inform, enhance, encourage, and inspire the community we serve to move ahead, in spite of the odds. We place a special emphasis on local concerns and features. We are well aware of the competitive business environment. We believe advertisers should get the highest return possible on their advertising dollar when targeting Hampton Roads’ Black Consumer Market. The New Journal and Guide has a weekly circulation of approximately 15,000 and the paper stays in the home a full seven days. With the pass around factor, our paper is seen by an estimated 45,000 people each week.

We feature special editions and supplements to the New Journal and Guide throughout the year. We kick off the year with a special edition saluting Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. During February and March, we salute Black History Month and Black Press Month. Our Minority Business Supplement in October is also a popular edition designed to get our advertisers’ message to the target audience.

COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT: We take pride in being an active part of our community. We lend support to our organizations and provide a number of free services for our audiences, such as free publication of their church news, social news and area news hotline. Our newsroom staff volunteers during the summer to tutor reading and math to area children. We provide a Speaker’s Bureau which is available free of charge to community groups.

POLITICAL INVOLVEMENT: We take an active role in the political process. We encourage participation in the political process among our audiences, and try to present the issues in a manner that relates to their concerns with emphasis on how it affects them so they can make a clear decisions.

CHURCH AFFILIATION: The Black newspaper was born out of the Black Church. and gospel music has been the root of the Black experience, thus our very existence is connected into that of the church. Weekly, we have a religious page that encompasses the Southside as well as the Peninsula and features religious columns, news items and church services.

SOCIAL ISSUES: Major issues directly affecting the Black community are also of prime concern to us. What the social clubs, the civic and community groups and individuals are doing to support America’s system of freedom and justice is important to our readers. The motto of the New Journal and Guide is: “Dedicated to the cause of the people...no good cause shall lack a champion and evil shall not thrive unopposed.”





She's Baaaaacckk! Raymone Bain's Michael Jackson's spokesperson/manager



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Monday, May 9, 2011

Frederick Alexander Meade on the Black Church


Author and human rights activist Frederick Alexander Meade provides analysis on the failures of the black church as an instrument in promoting social justice. An excerpt from the syndicated columnist's weekly two hour segment - Mondays with Meade - on WMCS 1290 AM, hosted by Earl Ingram Jr. (4:00 - 6:00 p.m. CST) www.frederickmeade.com


Friday, May 6, 2011

OPEN LETTER: TO ALL MICHAEL JACKSON FANS



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The Prison Industrial Complex - Mondays with Meade - Frederick Alexander Meade


Author and human rights activist Frederick Alexander Meade provides analysis on the prison industrial complex. 

Follow the link to listen.

 

The Prison Industrial Complex - The Evening Rush 1290 AM - Mondays with Meade

 

An excerpt from the syndicated columnist's weekly two hour segment – Mondays with Meade - on WMCS 1290 AM - The Evening Rush hosted by Earl Ingram Jr.  (3:00 – 6:00 p.m. CST) 

 

www.frederickmeade.com

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