׉?4ׁB! בCט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://8xZjyPt2_m3TCPUWFri5PNhPdfv-cPn67g5vrKnw3MA N`׉	 7cassandra://vXCY8CLuNIUvFWFdNKarC9DlCGNJXwzgOIrOEZShvfEL`S׉	 7cassandra://vmIU-dFKoii5pXSo8rC0KFTr4utGkXQ80p614fCcreI`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://9u8RUSbHKy0J3IV7EXzkt6Vltr--UDcfBFwnEZV9A54  E͠`Bv4~=@Wט   {u׈   CNSvu  ׈E`Bv3~=@׉E A National
b Landmark
y Celeste and Gary Lawson
Inside
Arts & Music
Artist Feature:
Laura Wheeler Waring
Interview with Ms.
Courageous Fire
Interview with
Lyric Sellers
Iowa African
American Hall of
Fame
February 2021 ISSUE
׉	 7cassandra://vmIU-dFKoii5pXSo8rC0KFTr4utGkXQ80p614fCcreI`̵ `Bv3~=@`Bv3~=@{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://aSY9RIugL9ruTYiFwkzyLDsOETt-sVYXnc011Qa3DU0 'S`׉	 7cassandra://IWNpCRd4zwSfRJlmmPGqONWBX5mrwXBRY4namnoSx6MC:`S׉	 7cassandra://H4XJTRy8teFIpmwDCk5gHq2AZZEO6S5mlFFleZRXNjA`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://PrLoOC_TKzz6ahYhFFlaVn5WcIzA3qloWyQn0yrIjoY͂ ͠`Bv4~=@Zט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://bAsCTb7KQ7llQKPZN6rO-8m1TceHn2uqGAu29WIfv8Y ^`׉	 7cassandra://YDEZ6-Vtc139mZxEmZL7JNiiqBZM55NSBVS3Knsw3pYB`S׉	 7cassandra://CacuPHGOS1G7HPbqOZDdDalTktH1evNBnmbb-jS978Q`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://VDzp-GNtc0ZSNSbUyibcfFuEjAog0KSeGIuBuhBTvpI͏(͠`Bv4~=@[׉E׉	 7cassandra://H4XJTRy8teFIpmwDCk5gHq2AZZEO6S5mlFFleZRXNjA`̵ `Bv3~=@׉EThe URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 3
׉	 7cassandra://CacuPHGOS1G7HPbqOZDdDalTktH1evNBnmbb-jS978Q`̵ `Bv3~=@`Bv3~=@{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://Ue898q7p9HovmhIQzAz_zgQAgIzJHlTQbGd4gLEbdyk +`׉	 7cassandra://1PKFg973sSJgMsnNvn4f_hF_5kPgKLMxAlE2ndOR0aQb"`S׉	 7cassandra://O6VtCcD8HL4E0WNVlz5b8N8y7fM9_htL01kMmnygYyA`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://w8Ea975cdr9_QxmPffSLVAUcElzu0ia9dVZufs4Zrag o^h͠`Bv4~=@^ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://0oFVSIfmPYHvO-pLHzETEmcOolDsG3JGkT-1hlbrxU8 `׉	 7cassandra://f0mDBc-St6BUflZC854q6eX3meBPFmvVstqxfN8LtZ0b`S׉	 7cassandra://Qzz6nEbXWh__ebKO8xMqEuk5A8W1QgkSdc-pooWtwIg$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://tvhajss1FU1ALbhWVarzqwKC2M4-H-fb_e3_KqoS444ͪl͠`Bv4~=@_נ`Bv4~=@e G9ׁH  mailto:contactdsmurban@gmail.comׁׁЈנ`Bv4~=@d ܁o9ׁHhttp://dsmurban.orgׁׁЈנ`Bv4~=@c ZG	9ׁHmailto:dsmurbannews@gmail.comׁׁЈנ`Bv4~=@b &G9ׁHmailto:joindsmurban@gmail.comׁׁЈ׉EWRITERS & STAFF
Editor-In-Chief
Dwana Bradley
Contributors
Copy Editor
Virgina Smith
Creative Director
Ash Easley
Donnetta Austin
Debra Carr
Terence Haynes
Angela Jackson
Celeste Lawson
Gary Lawson
Bert Moody
Lori Young
DeMarcus Hamilton
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׉	 7cassandra://O6VtCcD8HL4E0WNVlz5b8N8y7fM9_htL01kMmnygYyA`̵ `Bv3~=@׉EwFeatures
09
13
ARTIST of
Month
Love Thy
Neighbor
15
Interview with
Lyric Sellers
20
23
No More
Iowa African
American Hall
of Fame
26
Making a
Difference in
the Fight to End
Alzheimer’s
32
Drake University
Donors Support
Affordable Access
to John Dee Bright
College
40
45
A National Landmark
Interview with
Ms. Courageous
Fire
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 5
What’s
Inside?
׉	 7cassandra://Qzz6nEbXWh__ebKO8xMqEuk5A8W1QgkSdc-pooWtwIg$`̵ `Bv3~=@`Bv3~=@{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://D8tDIHHg6iHDA2gR7UU7aAvSdi8loabzHG-8t1OCdPM B`׉	 7cassandra://CdMxRnCU9NK8-BJek8IeCDl-iMZYAZUhttuTRifK9q4kx`S׉	 7cassandra://fj5YPPqKzBR4guFWs5R2I9KJhE0llTyjK4nuhfXK4Mg!`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://2D_chApXjsOZBOFXcoYqI_AJUO4U_4_ZP785ImWg148(͠`Bv4~=@fט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://wsEFA23ZUDdf9QT7fG7OkTiyDpdhyxYKqlIKYL-g-xE {`׉	 7cassandra://4F6zjKCz0neaHBgKMdqLlR2OJdzs-o82pw1YmJnQKzs͈`S׉	 7cassandra://BeTjBuNVuQc0H9Yg8PtZhxdgN5CwBAemM2VqCvGpLDM%`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://M3ZHfQxy5X4FobtJPSeLX5DlpRATt7UYNV1cLJC4xKgͦ	(͠`Bv4~=@g׉E׉	 7cassandra://fj5YPPqKzBR4guFWs5R2I9KJhE0llTyjK4nuhfXK4Mg!`̵ `Bv3~=@׉E	hI urge you all to pay attention
to the world moving around us.
At a time when we celebrate
Black History month an
important curriculum is being
threatened. As an educator
I believe teachers should
be able to use a variety of
sources to teach and students
should hear a variety of views
to decide how they view the
world.
The 1619 project provides a
supplemental way to teach
history in America.
who look like me in the areas
of criminal justice, education,
jobs, wealth, and health. It’s
been hundreds of years battle
just to get equality in a place
that says, One Nation Under
God. Would God be happy in
the path that the United States
is going?
I urge you to not look at the
1619 project as a threat,
but a help, a help to provide
information to people to have a
better understanding of slavery
and the United States and
what the impact of slavery had
on Blacks living in America and
continue to have this very day.
Thanks to Nikole HannahJones
and The New York
Times we have another
perspective, another view that
is different then what we’ve
been taught in school and it’s
refreshing to have a curriculum
to teach Blacks who have
always had to stare into books
that don’t represent them.
I ask that you vote against
this bill if you don’t you will
strip the very voice away from
people who look like me. It’s
time that America atones for
the sins that have taken place
in this country. You can begin
redeem yourself and allow
Very rarely do we take a deep
dive into slavery and many
times we would prefer to act
like it didn’t exist because it
would show a side of America
we rarely want people to see.
We refer to America as land of
the free and home of the brave
and while there isn’t slavery
going on like that is mentioned
in 1619, we still have issues
that take place in the United
States that impact people
I believe fear sets in when
we feel something is trying to
be replaced or taken away. I
imagine you are experiencing
the same type of fear when
my ancestors were sold and
treated as property. Well
maybe no one can relate to
that fear. They had no voice
and if they dared speak up it
would cost them their life. Just
think about that it would cost
them their life to speak up.
another perspective of history
to be taught in our classrooms
across the state of Iowa.
Change starts with us, and
I ask you to be that change
today.
Blessings,
Dwana B
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 7
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9ׁH !http://paintingwithatwist.com/desׁׁЈ׉EGFebruary 2021
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׉	 7cassandra://HFt5XiyV5AvAQvYvUS_KFJKdeGfGZ4krxLKcwWorEOg8`̵ `Bv3~=@!׉E THE GREAT FRAME UP SUPPORTS
AFRICAN-AMERICAN ARTISTS
ARTIST FEATURE:
CELEBRATES 15 YEARS & SUPPORTS BLACK, AFRICAN
AMERICAN AND AFRICAN ARTISTS FEBRUARY
FEATURE: Laura Wheeler Waring
Written by Angela Jackson
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 9
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to supporting local artists in the community. Our February tribute features artist and painter Laura Wheeler Waring.
An African-American artist and painter, Laura Wheeler
Waring created portraits of many well-known figures from
the NAACP and the Civil Rights Movement.
Synopsis
Laura Wheeler Waring (May 16, 1887 – February 3, 1948)
born in Hartford, Connecticut, was an African-American
teacher and artist who became known for her portraits;
the subjects she painted include W.E.B. Du Bois and
Marian Anderson. A member of the NAACP, Wheeler also
contributed many illustrations to its magazine, The Crisis.
She died at age 60 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Early Life and Career
Laura Wheeler Waring was born Laura Wheeler on May 16,
1887, in Hartford, Connecticut. Her father was the pastor at
a historic African-American church while her mother was a
teacher and amateur artist; Wheeler herself began drawing
and painting at a young age. Bolstered by her parents’
encouragement, she left home in order to pursue her interest
in art.
In Pennsylvania, Wheeler became a part-time instructor in
art and music at the Cheyney Training School for Teachers
(now known as Cheyney University). She also studied at
Philadelphia’s Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. In
1914, she received a scholarship to continue her art studies
in Europe. She managed to visit museums in England and
France, but had to cut her tour short when World War I
erupted.
After returning to the United States, Wheeler resumed
working at Cheyney, where she would eventually head the
department of art and music. To learn how to best instruct
her students in drawing, she took summer classes at Harvard
and Columbia universities. In addition to teaching, she also
traveled overseas again; on one trip, she was able to study at
the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris.
Harlem Renaissance
Outside of painting, Wheeler—who was a member of
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People—created illustrations, usually pen-and-ink drawings,
for the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People’s magazine, The Crisis, and for its children’s
publication, the Brownies’ Book, throughout the 1920s.
Though she enjoyed working with African-American
activists like W.E.B. Du Bois, her teaching commitments
in Pennsylvania kept her from deeper participation in the
Harlem Renaissance.
Artistic Success
Wheeler’s paintings included landscapes and still lifes, but
she is best known for her work in portraiture, in which
she captured both unknown and famous figures. In 1927,
the Harmon Foundation—an organization created to
acknowledge the achievements of African Americans in
the United States—honored her with a gold medal for the
portrait Anne Washington Derry (1926).
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her marriage to Walter Waring, a fellow teacher.
In the late 1920s, several of Waring’s paintings were part
of a Harmon Foundation exhibit that featured the work
of African-American artists. She was singled out by the
foundation once more when eight of her portraits were
shown in a 1944 exhibit entitled “Portraits of Outstanding
American Citizens of Negro Origin.” The well-known figures
she painted for this display included Marian Anderson,
Jessie Fauset and James Weldon Johnson.
Legacy
Her work, which often fought stereotypes and portrayed
accomplished African Americans, was another step on
the road toward civil rights. In her lifetime, she had her
paintings shown at institutions such as the Brooklyn
Museum and the Art Institute of Chicago. Today, many of
the portraits that make up part of her artistic legacy are in
the National Portrait Gallery’s permanent collection.
Credits —Adapted from Biography.com, A&E Network
The Great Frame Up currently features originals, prints,
sculptures and framed artwork of numerous African
American and Iowa artists in the gallery. To view some
of the prior artists featured visit westdesmoines.
thegreatframeup.com and our Facebook page at facebook.
com/tgfuwdmiowa. Please follow us on Instagram
instagram.com/thegreatframeup_wdm, Pinterest pinterest.
com/tgfuwdm and Twitter @tgfuwdm.
About The Great Frame Up
The Great Frame Up, Inc. is a custom picture framer, offering
more than 1,000 custom frames, mat styles, ready to
hang framed art and local artwork. The West Des Moines
location of The Great Frame Up opened in 2005 and is
located at 5515 Mills Civic Parkway in the West Glen and
is open Monday through Saturday 10- 5pm. Appointments
preferred. Virtual Zoom design available. Following CDC
guidelines, masks required.
CE | 2021 11
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9ׁHhttp://mosaicinfo.org/getׁׁЈנ`Bv6~=@{ o̪9ׁHhttp://mosaicinfo.org/getׁׁЈנ`Bv6~=@z 9ׁHhttp://mosaicinfo.org/getׁׁЈנ`Bv6~=@y /h9ׁHhttp://mosaicinfo.org/getׁׁЈנ`Bv6~=@x ̻́9ׁHhttp://mosaicinfo.org/getׁׁЈ׉E	National Intellectual and Developmental
Disabilities Awareness Month
Bulletin Announcements
To help develop awareness and respect for people with disabilities, please use the following messages in
your bulletins at worship during the weekends in March.
• MARCH 1
March is National Intellectual and Development Disabilities Awareness Month. There are more
than 6.5 million people with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the United States. During
the pandemic, they’ve worked to stay connected with their communities. Learn what you can do to
help. Visit mosaicinfo.org/get-involved for more information.
• MARCH 8
Like everyone else, people with intellectual and developmental disabilities want to feel connected
with others. Barriers like transportation needs, communication differences and limited support
systems sometimes make it hard for them. Your helping hand can be day-changing for someone
with a disability – and for you, too. March is National Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Awareness Month. Visit mosaicinfo.org/get-involved to explore volunteer opportunities.
• MARCH 15
Jesus’s miracle multiplying the loaves and fishes to feed thousands proves there’s always room
for one more at the table. During March, National Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Awareness Month, learn how you can help make sure there’s always room for people with
disabilities in our community. Visit mosaicinfo.org/get-involved to become an advocate for people.
• MARCH 22
Connection, the sense of being in relationship with others and your community, is important
to people’s overall health. During March, National Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Awareness Month, learn how you can help people with disabilities feel like an important part of our
community and experience better health through meaningful relationships. Visit mosaicinfo.org/getinvolved
to learn more.
• MARCH 29
The Kingdom of God is not just a future reality; we shape it every day. Standing with the poor, with
the stranger, with those who are different – each of those actions builds the kingdom. It is both
humbling and rewarding. People with disabilities long to feel connected to their communities and
you can make it happen. To find out how, visit mosaicinfo.org/get-involved.
׉	 7cassandra://GNYCvEbPlw5gdgnOrYRITafm_UAmxFodNZ41WGyO8Xs-`̵ `Bv3~=@%׉E\by Donnetta Austin
Two of the greatest commandments
of the law located in the Bible are
listed under Matthew 22:36-40.
Love the Lord your God with all
your heart and with all your soul
and with all your mind.
The second is to Love your neighbor
as yourself.
As we develop, grow, and continue
to stay connected closely to God
we learn what is important to him.
God’s view and perspective should
also reflect and matter to each of us.
The love of God is available to all
of us and begins from within. It is a
spiritual sense. There are requirements
within the word “the Bible”
that come directly from the heart
of God and not of the world. As an
example Exodus 20 “The Ten Commandments”.
God’s
reflection of love is demonstrated.
It is an action and not passive.
It is expressed by exhibiting and
revealing itself outwardly.
Love is a need each and everyone of
us are given the ability to cross paths
of meeting the needs of others. Let
us not forget 1 John 4:19 We Love
because He First Loved Us!
This month take the opportunity to
experience more of God and assist,
aid, contribute, or help those who
may be in distress.
By Author Donnetta Austin
Email be.encouragedbyone@gmail.
com
Book on Amazon “Never Retire God”
Matthew 22:36-40.
Love the Lord
your God with all
your heart and
with all your soul
and with all your
mind.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 13
׉	 7cassandra://NPgmq14nlvUntNxH5l-xjZ9zs1NY8vs2NBpjjFrj0OU&`̵ `Bv3~=@&`Bv3~=@%{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://EeiZP2mVsTufY_0tchc1Km4vbD-srBNbt-B1NHWblb4 `׉	 7cassandra://PQWXAcgnAD9ZFVt_DWODEQaDa1pUKNWZCJvEdyC5fwË́`S׉	 7cassandra://fpIdqUcLc5wYs4xYz1V9Jp1pieEZtD89bFNxc0YMSwU.`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://_m9K8g93x02gAXLGvO3_Z4UB3Fp4WK063Q7-bNTnS-kL͠`Bv6~=@}ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://XTceh1OUV4CJ1eYDteMWAE47GRxkI_EV_nokI6K4VIc ڇ`׉	 7cassandra://Zwa98TMQC6UBYSCtL8zIoP-pJ7iKW_3FZJMVeRKpJVcn`S׉	 7cassandra://MB9P3vw2wSSl3Wj7rig-TjpmYYq2JaCu40atQ8vy99k"`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://eXszOu8mGN-9QXe0S_HH49sSW6DF2wBCCu-vCLWjC_s 2I͠`Bv6~=@~׉E׉	 7cassandra://fpIdqUcLc5wYs4xYz1V9Jp1pieEZtD89bFNxc0YMSwU.`̵ `Bv3~=@'׉EBy Dwana Bradley
I had the pleasure of interviewing
Lyric Sellers. She received the Making
a Difference Award. She has been
doing great work in our community
and is deserving of this great
accomplishment. Our interview is
below.
Interview with Lyric Seller
Making a Difference in
Des Moines, Iow
1. Share with our readers a little about Lyric Sellers.
I’m a Junior at East High School. I’ve grown up in Des
Moines Public Schools all my life. I’ve always been
invested in my community and a lot that comes
from who my mom is (Tiffany Johnson, Pyramid
Theatre). I have been in her shadow through it all.
At a young age I really started getting involved and
figuring out what I was interested in. I’ve done a
little bit of theatre, basketball, but my heart went
towards activism that’s where is has always led me
and guided me.
2. What was it about your mother that made you
want to get into this work?
I think seeing my mom do everything she did
unapologetically and never compromising herself
when doing it so if she was in any situation where
she didn’t feel like she was representing herself
the way she wanted to she would get out of the
situation or address it until it was where she
could express herself the way she wanted and to
represent her community so everything she has
done has always been rooted in service to other
people and I just took after that and admired it and
sometimes to the point where she forgets to take
care of herself so that’s where I would grow in that
area and see how I could be a better version of what
I learned from my mom.
3. Talk about the Martin Luther King, Jr. Award
I received the Martin Luther King; Jr. Make a
Difference award. This award is to honor the work
I’ve done with my community and engaging them,
so I received the award on MLK Day on January 18th
2021. I will be honored amongst other people as
well Judge O’Dell McGhee whom I admire so much
and Kameron Middlebrook whom I also admire. It
is truly an honor to be represented amongst those
people.
4. What is the work you are involved with in our
community?
Most of my work has been centered around my
school district working with DMPS to hold them
accountable with Anti-Racism. I think I’ve always
thought about it but have never had the drive that I
have now which I see is paying off it’s just a matter
of what I owe to my people to represent them the
best way I can and none of the work is for me, it’s
for everyone else around me and just finding ways
to get my peers and other people to feel supported
and amplified in order to able to do these leadership
things like I do. It takes initiative and trust in myself
and people to trust in me to do it. Anyone is capable
of this work and I want to be an example of that and
help other people find their voice in that capacity.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 15
,
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It means I get to see that this work is paying off.
It
does get tiring and draining but I get to see that
people are recognizing it. Nothing that I’ve ever
done has been to be recognized but it feels good
to know that work is being acknowledged and not
going unnoticed just the constant support that
I get from my community drives me to keep it
going because at times it gets hard to persist and
ultimately, it’s for my people.
Anyone is capable of
this work and I want to
be an example of that
and help other people
find their voice in that
capacity.
6. What advice do you give to young people who
want to do community work?
Trust yourself and trust your heart it will lead you to
do the right thing and never compromise yourself
because there will be times when people want you
to do that or want you to settle for less but go for
what your goal was when you started and follow
through. You will have the support you will have
the people who will be there for you and one of
those people will always be me. I think something
that made me hesitant is that I would be alone,
or I wouldn’t receive the support I needed It was
a matter or trusting myself and believing that
someone as young as me could accomplish big
things.
Barbershop and Salon
NEW TO THE
NEIGHBORHOOD DISCOUNT
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EXP MARCH 31 2021
4921 DOUGLAS AVENUE,
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DES MOINES, IOWA 50310
MONDAY-SATURDAY
8AM TO 9PM
׉	 7cassandra://3jDfR7wdBOSO2FMYpcQDyktDj28gXK0B0yUjwwg7tuQ`̵ `Bv3~=@)׉EHDear Editor,
The fact that there are now 8 individuals running
for a singular city council seat in District 2 should
clearly speak volumes to Omaha Metro that the
City of North Omaha does not see the situation
as it has been portrayed, nor does it want to
continue the same vein that it has gone in over
the last 50 years.
For five decades North Omaha has been in a
time out. Legislative billing, city ordinances, lack
of funding, historical written, oral, and pictorial
evidence quantifies the intentional neglect,
deprivation, and exclusion of North Omaha and
the citizens of district 2.
Five decades with TIF funding being awarded to
our city, grants, bonds and now with the onset
of a Worldwide Pandemic the Cares Act, yet
North Omaha still does not seem to be significant
enough to draw the full attention of Omaha
Metro. It was the grace of God and the direct
consorted efforts of the grassroots organizations,
individuals, non- profits, and churches in North
Omaha that has kept North Omaha alive not only
in this pandemic, but for the last 50 yrs.
To the astonishment of Omaha Metro, we have
not been utterly broken from this tangled, abusive
relationship we have been cast in with our sister
city.
There have been no major improvements to
its infrastructure (e.g., buildings, roads, power
supplies) needed for the operation of a society
or enterprise. However, viewed as hovel it still
stands. Full of vibrant, beautiful, intellectual,
artistic, athletic, loving, inventive, industrious,
progressive, entrepreneurial, compassionate
people.
A complete opposite of the polarized image of
thugs, gangbanging, multiple babies having, by
multiple baby’s daddy’s, government recipient,
miscreants you see in our local media sources.
However, change no matter how hard, no matter
how long, no matter how wanted by some or
rebuffed by others must come, for there is an
Unapologetically yours.
A little boy who is now a man,
from NORTH OMAHA.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 17
appointed time and season for everything under
the sun thus saith The Lord and regardless of
your belief, disbelief, faith, or lack thereof winter,
spring, summer, and fall are all the undisputable
evidence Gods word is true. The season of
change must come, and that season is NOW!
We are not asking for change, change is coming.
The lack of TRUE diversity and inclusion in this
city is now crippling this city.
The inclusion of North Omaha and its culture,
talent and people are now evident in the C suites
and the rumbling of chamber conversations. The
lack of inclusion, promotion and retention of Black
people is now standing out like a sore thumb.
If this evidence did not exist, we would not be
fighting again in legislation for the reinstitution of
Affirmative Action. I applaud those who seek to
change this narrative and do better, however our
sister city Omaha Metro need to do better.
The blatantly evident gentrification and removal
of the people, history, and culture in North Omaha
must cease. The shifting of poverty must cease.
The overwhelmingly lopsided incarceration
of men, women and children in this district
must cease. The trauma that breaks the family
structure and creates a self-destructive behavior
must cease.
The idea it is okay to overfund the Humane
society, while willfully underfunding a HUMAN
society must cease. District 2 regardless of who
does not want to believe it is the Blueprint.
׉	 7cassandra://cjhmy-dZanfAVJcALZ9YhLN6MY_aOwZUHbX6KMeKdoc&T`̵ `Bv3~=@*`Bv3~=@){בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://k-5udGcZQi7rkLT-SaMaPQ-hb_RbkgbKB_IddW-0hSY `׉	 7cassandra://J2O0HWnDC_BGI8HgJKxt1-T-qu-Dg8eiCd4TkUCJZOgm`S׉	 7cassandra://x9dErNi7IKbZzPPPBgbyQ_2asPwjekaJyDMdAalQt2w)$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://dkgAAy1capKclshw_sxMTYgCh_oGkVF2w4PWJgXR2X0 g͠`Bv7~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://5j2zOcY0Z9SurgKT9K4sHtQCzOlPxQQUrdDdlbyTcmo $`׉	 7cassandra://UEeK1wsA93h0KK8jlZBc3AYkEifKM33aIzeEw43PSQ4n`S׉	 7cassandra://TNhjUOvE6VGAT4WSJOqhO-fsgK6an0MustovrvC5Ff0*I`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://OsrodtYkjIvQ0aqEOo1BElZcOgrFDRQRKUonxoI3cUo ͠`Bv8~=@נ`Bv8~=@ 39ׁHhttp://wdm.iowa.govׁׁЈנ`Bv8~=@ ǁ9ׁHhttp://ww.wdm.iowa.govׁׁЈ׉EEMPLOYEE BENEFITS
Accepting
Make a Difference
PATROL OF
• 5 Day On / 4 Day Off Work
Schedule
• 10—Hour Work Day
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LATERAL TR
ENCOURAGED
West Des Moines P
Apply Online: ww
CALEA Accredited
For questions or more information conta
daniel.jansen@
׉	 7cassandra://x9dErNi7IKbZzPPPBgbyQ_2asPwjekaJyDMdAalQt2w)$`̵ `Bv3~=@+׉Eg
ce
F
R
D
P
w
a
@
g Applications!
ce, APPLY TODAY
2021 PAY SCALE
• Entry Level Salary
FFICERS
$58,718
• Lateral Transfer* Up to $68,370
• Sr. Police Officer*
$83,699
*Depending on Qualifications
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D TO APPLY
PAID LEAVE
• 2-5 Weeks of Vacation Per Year
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• 1 Casual Day Per Year
• 12 Days of Sick Leave per Year
Police Department
ww.wdm.iowa.gov
act Lieutenant Dan Jansen 515-222-3343
@wdm.iowa.gov
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By Terence Haynes
NO MORE clinch fist in protest
Cause of lynched kids and no rest
For the weary Mothers and Fathers.
Fathers angry clinching their fist
While Mothers clinching their chest
Cause they’re heartbeat is beating
erratically under their breast
That they breast fed they baby with that they laying to rest.
׉	 7cassandra://S_XySCg4-ClUz8tWZbnQEOT7S-kKR1W_8E8eZSYmWNw* `̵ `Bv3~=@-׉Emore
NO MORE crying out loud, for crying out loud,
we’re crying out loud, that we dying out loud NO
MORE nationally televised lynching’s where we
crying out loud for our mothers who died from a
broken heart because their child was lynched while
crying out loud. NO MORE stating I can’t breathe,
screaming I can’t breathe, whispering I can’t
breathe, dying because I can’t breathe. With your
knee on my neck. You traded your foot on my neck
for your knee on my neck. Just like Colin traded the
anthem for a knee but you told him get up. Cause
it was disrespect NO MORE you killing us, NO
MORE they killing, NO MORE us killing us, just NO
MORE killing us.
~T.Haynes 2021
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 21
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American Hall of
Fame
by Gary Lawson
Within the purview of the Division of Student
Affairs at Iowa State University exists the Iowa
African American Hall of Fame (IAAHF). The
IAAHF proclaims its purpose as recognizing the
‘outstanding achievement’ of African Americans
who have demonstrated an improved quality of life
for ‘all Iowans’.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 23
׉	 7cassandra://mYxTQlUtiwQRXf3-v-qB3aVQ_9lNs_OYdOIZ4fkI0vo!&`̵ `Bv3~=@0`Bv3~=@/{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://rewIz7udzMA8FgFZ1PFCQMWiImck3LVmIVcQTMXqNIg 4`׉	 7cassandra://wnqyPO4IXVUGmemFOjBE_w2K6F8fU7_Eu2JTdX3_j8km `S׉	 7cassandra://9zSh53D8NcV7mj68ShJG2EAhCnFIYjLsLBCoZWl7_ys!%`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://QQbggw0N3eIBP7-kDmgsMR0M4Yxcw4UW9IJixOdFWLM H(͠`Bv8~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://xbZI92ktQcxq-HZcwXziuCcNL8Tb8goaEuVM8RNv4rE `׉	 7cassandra://fY_2smMC62823nYX6Y-jPhA4-HNqCCo2NwfLYITOKQgͅ2`S׉	 7cassandra://l9nWLx3AL_GWWd6Om4YrEHQu1UxblCl527D4XqapybQ,`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://3aLm7cGfoMf08oUiIID6uhEQojPIwLvZHB-tseCTeJ0 3<͠`Bv9~=@נ`Bv9~=@ 9ׁH )https://iaahf.studentaffairs.iastate.edu/ׁׁЈ׉EThe IAAHF has existed for more than a
quarter-century with the responsibility
for embracing, honoring, magnifying,
and fostering accomplishments by
African Americans and thereby striving
to provide examples of achievement for
the generations of African Americans that
follow. The aim being to honor those having
distinguished reputations in business,
education, government, and other sectors
of public and private service. Among those
thus far inducted into the IAAHF is George
Washington Carver, who was an agricultural
scientist and inventor that graduated and
worked at Iowa State University.
Recent contact with Iowa State University
informs us that inductions into the IAAHF
have been postponed until setbacks, owing
to the current pandemic, are under control.
Until then, it is advised that you think of an
African American, who has made ‘exemplary
contributions’ to the quality of life for all
Iowans and be ready to nominate her or him
for induction into the IAAHF.
For more information on the IAAHF you may
use the following link
https://iaahf.studentaffairs.iastate.edu/ If
you encounter difficulty accessing the site,
contact the office of Kenyatta Shamburger,
Assistant Dean & Director, Multicultural
Student Affairs, Iowa State University, at 515294-6338.
Happy
African American History Month!
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Staff Member Who is Making a Difference
in the Fight to End Alzheimer’s
Sherita Jenkins is the Manager of Community Volunteers
for the Alzheimer’s Association Iowa Chapter, and
she is dedicated to the fight to end Alzheimer’s after
losing her mom Bettye Jones to Alzheimer’s in 2017.
Unfortunately, African Americans are twice as likely to
develop Alzheimer’s disease as older white Americans,
and Sherita says her story is similar to many in the Black
community who are affected by this disease.
There is evidence that missed diagnoses of Alzheimer’s
and other dementias are more common among older
African Americans than among older whites, and this
was the case for Sherita’s mom as well. Sherita said
she noticed something was wrong with her mom starting
in 2006, but she and her family didn’t know it could be
Alzheimer’s.
“In the African American
community, it is common to
care for family members instead
of going to the doctor or be in
denial or not even know about
Alzheimer’s, including the warning
signs. Instead, we would hear
words like “senile” to describe
the behavior,” says Sherita.
“Looking back after working for the
Association I realized my mom had
all the warning signs.”
Since her mom lived in Georgia, Sherita only got to see
her once or twice a year, so she didn’t know how bad
things were getting. When she would visit, she started
noticing her mom was hoarding, spending money
erratically and losing weight, but it wasn’t until 2016
when her mom came to visit her for Mother’s Day that
she really knew something was wrong. Her mom was
acting withdrawn and wasn’t herself at all.
Sherita tried making doctor appointments, but her mom
would get angry and say she didn’t know about the
appointments even though Sherita had told her about
them. Then, her mom started falling a lot. Sherita got her
mom a walker because it was the most help she would
accept, but she ended up falling badly and breaking her
hip. After surgery to fix her hip and throughout rehab,
her mom started getting worse. A month or so after
surgery, Sherita’s mom was diagnosed with dementia.
Though she did start walking again, her dementia had
progressed so much that she didn’t remember anything.
Unfortunately, there is evidence that missed diagnoses
of Alzheimer’s and other dementias are more common
among older
African Americans than among older
whites. Since African Americans may be more likely to
be diagnosed in the later stages of the disease, they are
usually in need of more medical care. Early detection
and diagnosis can allow for earlier use of available
treatments that may provide some relief of symptoms
and help maintain independence longer.
“After my mom’s diagnosis in 2016, the doctor didn’t give
any resources, help or information about the disease.
׉	 7cassandra://CSS_Xb1zPmuBO1F8jog7gFZ9D3tiYFUIskQrKmhER5Y-l`̵ `Bv3~=@3׉E!It would have been great to know about the
Alzheimer’s Association, their Helpline and to
have support,” says Sherita. “When I got the
opportunity to work for the Association, I knew
I wanted to make an impact on the African
American community and help them learn about
the disease and warning signs.”
gO
Sherita lost her mom to Alzheimer’s in 2017,
and looking back she thinks her mom had been
living with the disease for almost 10 years. Now,
Sherita works for the Alzheimer’s Association
working directly with volunteers and helping
to spread awareness about Alzheimer’s in her
community. Last year, she started a Walk to End
Alzheimer’s team in honor of her mom called
Team Bettye Boo’s, and she raised almost
$1,000.
To learn more about the effect of Alzheimer’s and
dementia on the Black community, visit alz.org
or call the free, 24/7 Helpline at 800.272.3900.
You can also learn about the 10 warning signs
of Alzheimer’s or dementia by visiting alz.
org/10signs.
dIGITAL
aDVERTISE
WITH
DISCOVER REAL
POSSIBILITIES IN IOWA
AARP is in Iowa creating real, meaningful change.
We're proud to help all our communities become the
best they can be. Like providing family caregivers with
tips to take care of loved ones, helping to make our
communities more livable and hosting fun, informative
events all across the state.
If you don't think Real Possibilities when you think
AARP, then you don't know “aarp".
Get to know us at aarp.org/ia.
---/aarpiowa
-@aarpiowa
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 27
Real Possibilities is a trademark of AARP.
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The Women In NAACP (WIN) had a very fulfilling and productive year, serving as an advocacy vehicle for
social economic, political education, health, and welfare issues affecting women, girls, and advocate for
the positive development of children.
The COVID-19 Pandemic during the beginning of 2020 and its unprecedented and unpredictable health
challenges for individuals and organizations, resulted in changes in how the WIN Committee proceeded
with bringing members together as well as accomplishing WIN goals while complying with national and
health safety precautions.
The first and remaining meetings of 2020 were held virtually. WIN initiatives primarily focused on
economic development and community engagement targeting Foster Care Awareness and Black families
were either delivered virtually or in an environment following CDC procedures to ensure the safety and
health of all concerned.
As we reflect on the past year, there are many WIN accomplishments to celebrate, in spite of obstacles
presented by the COVID-19 Pandemic.
Throughout the community, Women in NAACP advocated the power of the vote collaborating with Des
Moines Branch Political Action Committee and community partners, Urban Dreams and Creative Visions.
Partnering with the League of Women Voters and their Voter Mobile GOTV and 2020 census campaign
along with the Black Women’s Vote Rally, many first time voters were registered.
A virtual community conversation engaging foster parents, children and family practitioners, educators,
and community members, in a discussion emphasizing the critical need for more Black families for
children who need temporary placement. Much of what was learned will be a part of the content of the
guide being compiled as a resource for foster care families and advocates for foster care children. Four
Oaks Family Connection Outreach staff have been valuable as a resource and assisting with coordinating
family participation.
During November, National Adoption Awareness Month, a Bundle Up Our Children Campaign was
initiated, collecting winter wear (mittens, hats, gloves, scarves) for children in foster care. WIN members
and community volunteers assisted with the collection, Nov. 16-Nov 28. Community Businesses and
organizations volunteered as collection sites, ( Zumi, Children and Families of Iowa, Plymouth
Church, Corinthian Baptist Church, Mickle Center, Oakridge Neighborhood, Temple B’Nai
Jeshrun, and Willkie House) WIN members and volunteers assisted with the collection of the items and
Four Oaks Family Connection Outreach assisted with distribution. There were 556 items collected.
December was the kickoff month for spotlighting local African American owned businesses,
specifically women owned businesses, at each monthly WIN meeting. Chellie’s Sugar Shack owner,
Rachelle Long, was the December spotlight. The January 2021 business spotlight featured Tami Harris
Brantley and her business, Tiger Martin Collection DM.
Women In NAACP joined Iowa Citizens Action Network and several other organizations which included
National Association of Social Workers-Iowa Chapter, Interfaith Alliance, LULAC, Iowa State Education
Association, and Coalition Against Domestic Violence, in sponsoring a webinar to hear what Iowa
׉	 7cassandra://mQtaFSrpQCNqvompsN-A2Q_PlufrvoNncO2QPB_4KtM$X`̵ `Bv3~=@5׉EAdvantages
of Buying
versus Renting
FINANCIAL FACTORS
Build Equity – For most mortgages, monthly payments
include both principal and interest, with principal
representing your actual ownership of the home. Over
time, the principal portion of each monthly payment
increases, helping homeowners build equity faster.
Owners can also build equity by making smart
improvements, especially if the cost of the project boosts
your home’s resale value by more than what you invest in
the improvement.
Tax Benefits – If you itemize your federal income tax
return, you can deduct property taxes and any mortgage
interest paid during the tax year. You may also be able to
take advantage of other local, state or federal incentives,
such as home improvements that qualify for an energy
tax credit.
Potential Rental Income – At some point, you may decide
to convert your home into an investment property by
leasing out some or all of your space. (For example, keep
your first home for rental income when you decide to move
to larger quarters.) Just be sure to investigate local rental
property laws first.
Dawn Campbell is licensed with Platinum Realty 6150 Village
View Drive, Ste. 103 West Des Moines, IA 50266. If you have a
brokerage relationship with another agency, this is not intended as
a solicitation. All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.
Licensed real estate agent in the state of Iowa.
Capmbel l
You r DM I Realto r
P O BO X 2643
D se Moinse , AI 61305
Penoh :
“I’ m you r ARB®
waDn
515-084- 8350
Dawn@DMIeralrot.co m
www.dmieralrot.co m
”
Deciding to buy a home is a highly personal choice that involves weighing numerous financial
factors and individual preferences. While renting may be easier on your budget and provide
more flexibility to relocate for new work opportunities, there are a number of strong reasons to
purchase a home, including:
SUBJECTIVE CONSIDERATIONS
Creative Freedom – Your home is your space, and you can
do whatever you want with it, just be mindful of zoning
violations. Paint the walls, add a deck, create a workshop
for your favorite hobbies, etc. When you own a home,
you’re only limited by your imagination.
Privacy – In contrast to sharing space with roommates
or other family members, owning a home provides a
private “sanctuary.” Even if you’ve been renting your own
apartment space, you may be craving a retreat from noisy
(or nosey) neighbors.
Sense of Belonging – Buying a home involves a larger,
longer-term commitment (than renting) that often extends
beyond a house into a community, opening the door to
participation in local events, meeting and supporting
neighbors, and building deeper friendships.
The Accredited Buyer’s Representative (ABR®
Agent Council (REBAC), a subsidiary of the National Association of REALTORS®
) designation is awarded by the Real Estate Buyer’s
(NAR).
To learn more about REBAC and access various homebuyer resources, please visit REBAC.net.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 29
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vibrancy is founded,
in part, on the breadth
and depth of its arts and
cultural experiences.
More than 70 nonprofit
organizations provide
access to world-class
theatres, galleries,
performance spaces,
dance troupes, choral
ensembles, orchestras
and more. These
organizations are
essential to the region’s
quality of life and to the
economy, driving more
than $185 million in
annual economic impact.
Bravo Greater Des Moines was formed in 2004 ensure arts
and culture remain at the core of the community’s growth.
We leverage community resources to maximize the impact
of arts, culture and heritage to advance regional priorities.
Funded almost entirely through hotel and motel taxes
generously contributed by 17 local government partners,
Bravo makes direct investments to cultural organizations
and programs that make Greater Des Moines an exceptional
place to live, work, play and visit. We also lead efforts to
advance cultural priorities beyond grantmaking and play a
critical role in elevating and enriching a vibrant region.
This mission is even more critical today, as the cultural
sector reels from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Since the pandemic hit the U.S., almost no sector has been
hit harder than the leisure and hospitality industry, which
includes arts and cultural venues and experiences. Sector
employment rates dropped more than 50% in the first
three months of the pandemic and have yet to substantially
recover.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 31
Arts organizations across the country report more than $14
billion in economic losses and organizations in Iowa have
faced a financial impact of nearly $40 million. When leaders
of cultural nonprofits were asked how severe they thought
the financial impact would be on their organizations, 57%
responded extremely severe, and 8% were not confident
their organization would survive.
As our community imagines a better future, arts and culture
must take center stage. Bravo is asking everyone to embrace
“Let’s Hear it for the Arts” as a rallying cry to ensure the arts
are at the heart of reconnecting, reemerging and recovering.
Investing in arts and culture is directly tied to advancing
every regional priority, from economic development to
civic dialogue to education to equity. Arts and culture
are essential, vibrant contributors powering growth,
progress and change. Supporting the sector is everyone’s
responsibility.
Every February, Bravo Greater Des Moines gathers
community leaders together to celebrate arts and culture
at the Bravo Awards Gala. But 2021 isn’t shaping up to be
a normal year. Like so many nonprofits, we were hit hard
by COVID-19. The hotel and motel taxes that fund our
organization were down 20% for FY20 and are budgeted
to be down 50% for FY21. While the Bravo Awards Gala is
most visible thing Bravo does, our most essential role is to
provide funding and support for the cultural sector. To focus
on that work, we made the difficult decision to not host a
Gala in 2021. Despite not having an evening to celebrate
the arts together, more than 60 corporate partners stepped
up with generous contributions to support Bravo’s mission
for 2021. These donations help offset our operational
expenses and will also go directly toward grants to cultural
organizations in our community.
While no one knows what the future will hold, we are
certain that arts, culture and heritage are more essential
than ever as we each seek inspiration, hope and resilience.
Bravo is grateful to the strong community of cultural leaders
we support, and to the public and private investors who
support our work. Let’s Hear it for the Arts!
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Donors Support
Affordable Access
to John Dee Bright
College
John Dee Bright College at Drake University has announced
that gifts and pledges to its student scholarship and access
funds have exceeded $200,000 since the College’s launch in
September 2020.
Combined with state and federal grants and on-campus
work-study opportunities, the outpouring of donor and
alumni support will make it possible for low-income
admitted students from Iowa to graduate from Bright
College’s innovative two-year associate degree programs
with little to no student tuition debt.
One of those donors is Ernest Dippel, a 1955 graduate
of what is now Drake’s College of Business and Public
Administration who played football with Bright at Drake in
the 1951–52 season, the year of the infamous Oklahoma
A&M incident, when Bright withstood a savage raciallymotivated
attack after a play. Bright continued to play that
season with a broken jaw wired shut.
Dippel reflected on Bright’s grit and resilience, two traits
the new college will nurture in its students. “Being John’s
teammate was a major honor and highlight of my life,”
Dippel said.
“Johnny Bright is a true legend, certainly as an athlete; but
more than that, he became a giant as an educator all during
an era when racism was rampant,” Dippel added.
Vinaya Sharma, Chicago-based enterprise risk management
consultant and a 1993 graduate of Drake’s College of
Business and Public Administration spoke of the lasting
“I am extremely grateful to our supporters,” said Craig
N. Owens, professor of English and founding dean of
Bright College. “Affordability and access are two key
goals of Bright College,” Owens added. “Combined with
the College’s promise to ‘do school differently’ and with
Drake’s longstanding reputation for excellence, our donors’
generosity will prove truly life-changing to our students.”
Named for college and professional football legend and
beloved educator John Dee “Johnny” Bright, who graduated
from Drake’s School of Education in 1952, the College is the
first new college or school founded at Drake in over 60 years.
Several donors have cited Bright’s example as a resilient and
committed sportsman, on the one hand, and as a celebrated
public school principal, on the other, as the inspiration for
their giving.
impact of Bright’s legacy decades after his 1952 graduation.
“As someone affected by Johnny Bright’s story, I felt it
appropriate to honor Bright and Drake with a donation,”
Sharma remarked. “Bright’s impact at Drake as a student and
alum was groundbreaking. His legacy as a champion will live
on with the students in the College that bears his name.”
Louis Carr, a 1978 graduate of Drake’s School of Journalism
and Mass Communication, current president of media sales
at Black Entertainment Television (BET) Networks, and a
member of Drake’s Board of Trustees, attributes his own
opportunity to study at Drake to Bright’s trailblazing. “Johnny
Bright’s participation and success in sports paved the way
for me to have an athletic scholarship at Drake,” Carr said,
adding that “Bright’s legacy is something that I wanted to
financially support as a signal of gratitude.”
“These gifts go beyond helping with tuition,” Owens
explained. “They’ll also fund an exciting summer orientation
program, ensure attentive student support and tutoring,
and defray some of the ordinary, day-to-day costs of simply
attending college.”
׉	 7cassandra://0VHuRpkerr1KN1Nspg3Y5l9ZAnF0h-ZVwiXg52B2Xyg"`̵ `Bv3~=@9׉EBright College offers two interdisciplinary, cohort-based
associate degrees: One in Business, Organizational, and
Professional Studies, and the other in the Integrated Arts,
Sciences, and Humanities. Both degrees are designed
to allow graduates to enter into rewarding professional
careers or to continue into bachelor degree programs at
Drake and elsewhere—or both.
Owens agrees, explaining that “Bright College is one more
way Drake is reclaiming higher education’s role as an
engine for social and financial mobility in our community.”
The College offers a unique learning environment that
combines access and affordability; innovative, high-impact
learning opportunities; wrap-around student support; and
a vibrant sense of community and belonging.
Drake’s president, Marty Martin, includes Bright College
among recent initiatives that build on Drake’s position
as Des Moines’ hometown university. “We owe our
supporters a debt of gratitude for enabling Drake
University to live up to its inspiration of transforming lives
and strengthening communities,” Martin said. “Along
with the Boys and Girls Club, the Harkin Institute, and our
partnerships to revitalize the Drake neighborhood, Bright
College will continue our commitment to the educational,
social, and financial well-being of those who live and work
in central Iowa.”
The College continues to welcome applications and
referrals. More information about Bright College, its
programs, and the application process is available at www.
drake.edu/bright, by emailing bright.college@drake.edu,
or by calling (515) 271-2107.
Inspired by
a great leader,
Bright College
is taking
a new approach
to education.
Want to do school differently?
So do we. Our two-year
associate degrees are
designed to accelerate
your career.
drake.edu/bright
׉	 7cassandra://jCxYGEqNZ8cmAa3hmZiCCZRw-RT2zfB6Ieb9QJ258WI&`̵ `Bv3~=@:`Bv3~=@9{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://kVxGT-clgLEcMg3po6obvHhZ1Gj76GjzBxZDHg3yNVM \`׉	 7cassandra://D_NvKHD_7f3b427ZNPC78D8nFdjAwsci4OtDEAtnaBgc`S׉	 7cassandra://TANyimQy7jycT1AY96XqTyB9MSDa3Hknr92yXykhjQI`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://XX5x4wQOIvoKPL4p6Ksciq4a8tVGpSwPAf3xSD-Crq4 BU͠`Bv=~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://9GAJFlv2OtvouIxcvA10ljI31dvFz7mvCC0UM4FoLZk `׉	 7cassandra://4qWijywhkyXvFmF3Zu0LKSpwgp-QjQPZ8vLCyw3UbgodX`S׉	 7cassandra://875J5Kqua201KiIcsl7zEXFoqW3cALl8miDwf4I0jqY`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://9ZorPqFVaIGG4lVDKyVALOyVcCNn9lfnVLNADomrNfg 
͠`Bv=~=@נ`Bv=~=@ 9ׁHmailto:kelly.c.king@mwarep.orgׁׁЈ׉EFor the love
of the team
South Carolina father scores one final
win with life insurance
COACH TERRANCE FORD was a Michael Jordan fan and a
shoe fanatic. When heart failure claimed his life May 1, 2013,
he had about 200 pairs.
Terrance’s wife, Modern Woodmen member Angel Ford,
Cheraw, South Carolina, lined the shoes up in her kitchen after
his death. She invited the players Terrance had coached over
the years to come pick out a pair. She wanted them to have a
tangible reminder of the man they respected so much.
More than 1,500 people attended Coach Ford’s funeral,
which was held in the Cheraw High School gym. They had to
set up monitors in the cafeteria to accommodate the overflow
of people coming to pay their last respects.
“That’s just the kind of man he was,” remembers Angel.
“He was always right there to help people out, to give kids a
boost or to get them on the right track.”
Terrance Ford’s dad died of heart disease at age 26. Terrance was
always paranoid about his own heart, so he kept in good shape and
visited his doctor regularly. His death shocked his family and the
community.
Time out
Once the initial shock of her husband’s death had passed,
Angel’s new reality started to sink in. She was a 34-year-old
cheerleading coach and attendance clerk whose husband had
always taken care of things. She didn’t even know what bills
had to be paid, much less how she was going to pay them.
“I was so spoiled by my husband,” Angel says. “I knew he was
making payments for things, but I honestly didn’t know what
they were all for. I was like, ‘Oh my God. How am I going to
take care of three kids by myself?’”
Then a phone call from Modern Woodmen representative
Jamont McRae changed everything. Jamont hadn’t heard
about Terrance’s death. He was just calling to schedule an
annual financial review with the family. Like everyone else, he
was shocked when Angel told him the news.
“I had helped Terrance put a plan together to protect his
family just two years before that,” says Jamont. “Now it was
time to help fulfill his desire … and the promises Modern
Woodmen had made.”
Angel knew Terrance had met with Jamont. She was pregnant
with her youngest daughter at the time and wasn’t sure
they should be taking on another payment.
׉	 7cassandra://TANyimQy7jycT1AY96XqTyB9MSDa3Hknr92yXykhjQI`̵ `Bv3~=@;׉EModern Woodmen
representative
Jamont McRae
(pictured here) first
met with Terrance
Ford nearly two
years to the day
before his death.
Terrance worked
with Jamont to protect
the entire family
with life insurance.
Once hesitant, now
Angel leans on
Jamont for financial
guidance too.
Questions?
Contact your local Modern Woodmen
of America representative:
“To be honest, I didn’t know why we had to have life insurance and car
insurance and this insurance and that insurance,” Angel remembers. “I’m
so glad Terrance didn’t listen to me.”
Time in
If not for the generous support of her community and the protection her
husband left in the form of life insurance, Angel’s not sure where her
family would be right now.
“Actually, I could tell you where we’d be, but I wouldn’t want to be
there,” she says. “I’d be living with my parents. I’d be struggling and living
paycheck to paycheck. Or I’d be on some kind of public assistance.”
But she’s not. She doesn’t have to ask anyone for anything.
“No, I’m not riding around in a Mercedes, but I’m comfortable and my
kids are comfortable,” she says.
Angel used a portion of the life insurance proceeds to pay off her
house. She later added on to the house – something she and Terrance had
been planning to do. She told Jamont to invest the rest of the money back
with Modern Woodmen. She did the same thing with the life insurance
Terrance had had through work.
Angel also worked with Jamont to make sure she has enough life
insurance coverage for herself and her children.
“Not just enough to cover a funeral, because that’s never enough,” she
says. “I want to have enough life insurance that if something happened to
me, my kids wouldn’t have to struggle or worry about anything in life.
“You never know what the future might bring,” she says. “Listen
to your representative. Take advice you can trust and make good
investments.”
Rebounding
Today, when you drive to Cheraw High, you could be travelling along
Coach Ford Road. If you’re a Cheraw athlete who maintains a good
grade-point average and stays out of trouble, you could earn the coveted
Coach Terrance Ford Award. Or you could be one of many students to
play in the annual Terrance Ford Basketball Tournament.
“It’s a blessing to my kids … especially the youngest one,” says Angel.
Unlike her older siblings, Heavenly and T.J., little Torrance Ford has no
memory of the man everyone loved. She was only 7 months old when her
daddy died, but these tributes will someday help her understand what
Terrance meant to the community.
And the life insurance, well, that’s a reminder of the love Terrance had
for his family. He made sure his favorite team could make a comeback …
even after his game had ended.
P 8953-52-C
Kelly C. King, FIC
Suite 305
4150 Westown Parkway
Des Moines, IA 50266
B 515-238-3208
kelly.c.king@mwarep.org
Registered representative. Securities offered through MWA Financial Services
Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Modern Woodmen of America. Member:
FINRA, SIPC.
Founded in 1883 as a fraternal benefit society, Modern
Woodmen of America offers financial services and
fraternal member benefits to individuals and families
throughout the United States.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 35
׉	 7cassandra://875J5Kqua201KiIcsl7zEXFoqW3cALl8miDwf4I0jqY`̵ `Bv3~=@<`Bv3~=@;{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://cLUixjkWn_iFmKTqsbvJn4aM9v74m8ZEqPLIyeo9qX4 `׉	 7cassandra://X7l7H3of8VgOJrm1VVVOj2AwOcWR_LLVBAq2UVdsHMUͅX`S׉	 7cassandra://YnNUmP8veGZ6d7emNuLdcg5Vld0zjW4bv0YLw9UZkdM.`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://kM9v8sM80RMqxIx5GMkafX54er68-fGJLh9Bgky0VLk jJwp͠`Bv>~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://f34izlu7lv0WTimu2Xt9zlG_OATZYLPJWAN52pb9jpY ` ׉	 7cassandra://skqa7RtoecvGsTO4fI4wd_LXK7WQYm0nNqoeO4dFBf8|f`S׉	 7cassandra://XsMOhC1e-FpnDaJPFYTdDc1qlbzAUOnsRCNB_eGYoyY$P`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://Nb8eu_MLsuZNli-Z5EF-ZgEchccysOEtYBfIvT45_X4u0͠`Bv>~=@׉ERINGING IN THE NEW YEAR
WI TH A THANK YOU FROM:
From the members of Women In NAACP (WIN) and the
Des Moines Branch NAACP, We would like to thank you
for supporting the Bundle Up Our Children Campaign.
There were over 550 items collected to keep our children
in the foster care system warm, and a generous donation
to purchase additional scarves, hats, gloves, and mittens.
A special heartfelt thank you to the volunteers and
the partnering organizations:
• Children & Families of Iowa $CFI)
• Corinthian Baptist Church • Mickle Center •
Oakridge Main office • Plymouth Church • Temple
B’nai Jeshrun • Willkie House Inc, • Zumi
May every day of the New Year (2021) be filled with Love, Peace, and Joy!
׉	 7cassandra://YnNUmP8veGZ6d7emNuLdcg5Vld0zjW4bv0YLw9UZkdM.`̵ `Bv3~=@=׉EDO YOU NEED
AN ENT?
By: Matthew Brown, MD, FACS | Broadlawns ENT Section Chief
Does your nose seem to never stop running? Is your
television becoming harder to hear? Are you experiencing
pain or discomfort when you speak?
These ear, nose and throat (ENT) symptoms may commonly
accompany a cold or flu in the winter months. However, if
these symptoms persist, get worse, or start to affect your
quality of life, you should see an ENT specialist to get to the
root of your issue.
Nose and Sinus
If you are constantly sniffling, sneezing and coughing without
knowing why, you may have allergies. More than half of all
Americans test positive for at least one allergen, according to
the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology.
Allergies are common and easily controlled with an accurate
diagnosis.
The first step to diagnosis involves visiting a specialist for
an exam to determine if your symptoms are caused by an
allergy and, if so, to determine what triggers the allergy.
From there, an appropriate treatment or clinical intervention
will be recommended so you can avoid the allergic trigger
which will help to eliminate or minimize symptoms.
Treatments for allergies can include: controlling symptoms
through over the counter medications or prescriptions,
simply avoiding allergens, or immunotherapy to reintroduce
your immunological tolerance (the antibodies launched by
your immune system which cause a reaction) to a particular
allergen.
Ear
When people think of hearing loss, they often believe it
only affects seniors. But did you know that approximately
26 million Americans between the ages of 20 and 69 suffer
from some form of Noise-Induced Hearing Loss? This can
occur if you are exposed to a very high level of sound, such
an explosion, or can occur over time if you are frequently
exposed to loud music, power tools, or even car horns.
Other risk factors that impact hearing loss include: sleep
apnea, diabetes, tobacco products, use of ibuprofen and
acetaminophen, and popping your ears.
If you notice that your hearing isn’t quite what it used to
be, don’t delay in getting it tested to determine the cause
of the issue. Your hearing loss could be being impacted by
something as small as ear wax build-up or an ear infection.
If it is determined that hearing loss has occurred, this can be
treated for the long-term through the prescription of hearing
aids and steps can be taken to prevent future loss.
Throat
Voice problems usually include pain or discomfort when you
speak or difficulty controlling the pitch, loudness, or quality
of your voice. Anyone can develop a voice problem, but your
risk is greatest if you are constantly putting a high demand
on your vocal cords. Generally a voice problem is diagnosed
through medical history and a physical exam.
For many voice problems, resting your vocal cords is all that
is needed. However, if you are finding that these common
symptoms are persistent, it may be a sign of something more
serious such as throat cancer.
Throat cancer is a general term that applies to cancer that
develops in the throat (pharyngeal cancer) or in the voice
box (laryngeal cancer). More than 30,000 people in the US
were diagnosed with throat cancer in 2018. Risk factors
include: tobacco products, alcohol consumption, the sexually
transmitted human papillomavirus (HPV), a diet lacking in
fruits and vegetables, and gastroesophageal reflux disease
(GERD). While experts are seeing a decline in throat cancer
related to tobacco use, they are seeing a dramatic increase in
throat cancers associated with HPV.
If you are experiencing any issues with your ears, nose or
throat, the experts at the Broadlawns ENT Clinic are here
to help. From newborns to 100 year olds, our team is fully
equipped to provide treatment and improve your quality of
life.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 37
׉	 7cassandra://XsMOhC1e-FpnDaJPFYTdDc1qlbzAUOnsRCNB_eGYoyY$P`̵ `Bv3~=@>`Bv3~=@={בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://-jnbiFYPgQUvWXvBD8TC0pf-cOiUImmj4omrcB_7qWk `׉	 7cassandra://FguX3pWbqHFY43A0scbu1_uyqxa7UVYkjO8EHsefX1om`S׉	 7cassandra://jc2nD6eflfICNGj-hwbmtfTwEFPqCKlQrXW0S-ams5s&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://3_5UHh76bCkJHaT_-TZhHpq5b4jBOlG-hkOvgaMGdwU 74͠`Bv>~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://cKXURIS1c7tAZoNzgfQJcebHySrpY29e5Mxs38XhE-U k`׉	 7cassandra://c0GU_dzyap-vOu3WKKO0IlYd-iZ1_qOj7-9xmwIIApgQY`S׉	 7cassandra://E7gJLYs_lo-Z_QlNZRQF33bPIImDnR91K4bkokCCBaI&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://v7aReFbVrJW9iuX_mxLYjI3vezwhPW4by2vQ3tBm2oU͛ $͠`Bv>~=@׉E&Located on the Broadlawns Main Campus, the Ear, Nose and
Throat Clinic is open Monday through Friday from 7:30 am
to 4:00 pm. Appointments may be scheduled by calling (515)
-282-7750. All forms of insurance, including Medicaid and
Medicare, are accepted.
Dr. Matthew Brown is American Board of Otolaryngology
certified and specializes in medical and surgical treatment of
ear, nose and throat disorders. He provides care in all areas of
general otolaryngology which includes pediatric, sinus, allergy,
head and neck surgery and advanced training in allergic
ear, nose and throat disorders. Dr. Brown closed his private
practice; Iowa Head & Neck, PC, at the end of 2020, and he,
William Fanter, PA-C, Aaron Hahn, AuD and Courtney Thayer,
AuD have all joined the medical staff at Broadlawns Medical
Center.
׉	 7cassandra://jc2nD6eflfICNGj-hwbmtfTwEFPqCKlQrXW0S-ams5s&`̵ `Bv3~=@?׉EThe URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 39
׉	 7cassandra://E7gJLYs_lo-Z_QlNZRQF33bPIImDnR91K4bkokCCBaI&`̵ `Bv3~=@@`Bv3~=@?{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://KuZOlAhPvWTPhTLxVVXF6RIY7zGNJmdNhsH8b5fb-yw d`׉	 7cassandra://yg8BH9W37OSLiLRs2xShP46qFyo5C7hV2c_01eTW63k?Z`S׉	 7cassandra://r89hxBPmoPBb5iujpkqucCQsaKFjSVgVz7t5A9T007AZ`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://8GFqwN2xrdlYqbW-bY3LEPyxRexZlLCyahaeoTkkR_4B$͠`Bv?~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://mVTulcPBdBIltXaINCL5DUdp5Xs4VrO5mcbdYfP1u6M Z`׉	 7cassandra://ghB95Lov8f5g1DNnyQxDAdBQYFlCoDWZg-4ztEVRoSc͛`S׉	 7cassandra://T8q0sJu1UFpi7VmV29nwwk2SyRth27n7qEg7Jr4a3Cc(q`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://ZASkxoWOe3c6ZqxfYXV_8QgPQB7AeDji9yVfTnEl73A ,͠`Bv?~=@׉E 8A National
Historic Landmark
by Celeste and Gary Lawson
׉	 7cassandra://r89hxBPmoPBb5iujpkqucCQsaKFjSVgVz7t5A9T007AZ`̵ `Bv3~=@A׉EXThis article on military
history is presented in
honor of African American
History Month (February)
and Women’s History
Month (March). The
purpose is to educate
Iowans and others on the
vast national historic value
of the Fort Des Moines
Museum and Education
Center.
The Fort Des Moines Provisional
Army Officer Training School was
a military base and training facility
located in Des Moines and was
established in 1901. The base is
noteworthy as the location where
African Americans were trained
to be United States Army officers
during World War l. Additionally,
it is also where women first began
training for service during World
War ll, in 1942, as part of the
Women’s Army Corps. A portion of
the military base was declared a
National Historic Landmark in 1974.
The Fort Des Moines Museum and
Education Center is located on this
historic site.
Matthew Harvey serves as the
President of the Board for the Fort
Des Moines Museum and Education
Center. He is honored and humbled
to serve with an extraordinary
group of volunteers that have
kept the museum operating in the
face of many challenges. Matthew
served as a Lieutenant Colonel in
the Army Reserve, and at one time
was assigned to a Fort Des Moines
unit. He also completed a combat
tour in Afghanistan that lasted over
a year. During that tour, he was
awarded the Bronze Star Medal,
Combat Infantryman Badge, and the
Joint Meritorious Unit Award. He
is committed to sharing the history
of Fort Des Moines and what we
all can learn from those who have
served at this National Historic
in the middle of the country where
nothing was really going on. They
ended up picking Fort Des Moines
because it was far enough from
Washington that people wouldn’t
really know what was going on.
Then some say that there was also
concern about having the Black
officers’ training close to the Capitol.
Part 1: African American Men
Making History
by Gary Lawson
Gary: What is the history behind
the first Provisional Army Officer
Training School that was provided to
African American males?
Matthew: Well...what happened...
in response to the first...well...at the
time...it was the great war...World
War I as we know it now...and there
was just a need for personnel. It
became apparent that there was
a great need for personnel. There
had never been a question about
African Americans participating in
the military, but there had always
been a question about African
Americans participating as leaders...
or officers...in the United States
Army.
It was decided, during World
War l, that there would be a
segregated division...a couple of
them, actually...that would have
Black officers as leaders. Well, to
do that...there were not very many
Black officers in the Army...so they
decided to run the very first Officer
Training Camp. When they decided
to do it...the decision was made to
do it at the Fort Des Moines.
Other places that were under
consideration had included Howard
University and other historically
Black locations on the East Coast,
but it was decided that it would be
So, Fort Des Moines was picked
as the location for the first Black
Officers’ Training School. They
trained officers primarily for the
infantry, but at the same time they
also trained Medical Corps officers
and Dental Corps officers to function
in those segregated divisions to
treat the soldiers.
Gary: In what ways do you believe
that history is relevant during 2021
and beyond?
Matthew: What happened in
1917 is that African American men
answered the call to serve the
United States of America...their
country...inspired by what was
going on socially, which included
segregation and Jim Crow. These
kinds of things were going on,
so these men came to Fort Des
Moines...and many served overseas
and came back to face the same
social situation that had existed
before they had left. Yet...before,
during and after...they were always
committed to a higher ideal based
on service to their country, service
to their community and service
with each other in a way that is
instructive for us today...being that
anyone who is a part of any group
within the United States can draw
from the lessons of those who faced
challenges...yet they made the
commitment to serve their country
and the larger community. Then
after they served...they went back
to their local communities and took
that same attitude of service back
into their local communities.
An example would be Charles
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 41
׉	 7cassandra://T8q0sJu1UFpi7VmV29nwwk2SyRth27n7qEg7Jr4a3Cc(q`̵ `Bv3~=@B`Bv3~=@A{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://h0levhlksI1eyvKYBpyxvkGecTeSaOrduGz6a2ng_Rk `׉	 7cassandra://Sh8e0elcVZf46icU8YSZpKuaS4Plj9yImTFt3WNg2ZI͘c`S׉	 7cassandra://wqNgmNFF17WVm8bbwGsI3dpU8PL-6VLsD7lYBOU-RPo(Y`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://zAkpUSdm_FyVRYswjFMPqWUl63eC3BoYo6PBXAZmZOI͐$͠`Bv?~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://UKB3V1M7JLmUk7WewcDW-JadZPvgUfkU9Wyquw_3XXA j`׉	 7cassandra://QmegW51q3C3IcY88Um-u5W1yhVJm9zqBaKuvGfM7M80u `S׉	 7cassandra://bEFer_8eUWF_ATQxxFu9U2voP9CRlo-5o-5cr_YqQwY!I`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://UhjMzE_LEzoDPQV2YAGTXnuX9-0Cx0YII34qXHZwtbs $͠`Bv?~=@׉EHamilton Houston, who as a lawyer,
after serving in the army during
World War I, had a wonderful career
as a lawyer championing civil rights.
Many thought that he would have
been the first African American to
have served on the United States
Supreme Court... unfortunately,
he died suddenly, but his protégé,
and the person that he mentored,
Thurgood Marshall, went on to
serve as the first African American
Supreme Court Justice.
There were a lot of African American
men who...after their experience in
the military...went on to contribute
significant service to their country
and community. There were people
who may not have been nationally
recognized, but in their local
community they were extremely
significant and also helped raise the
next generation to go on and do
great things. Many of those people
can point back to the experiences of
their father at the Fort Des Moines.
Gary: How is this history made
available to Iowans and others?
It is also relevant, that in a state
that is...and always has been...
predominately white...this is
where the first Black officers were
trained. They were accepted by
the community. When Fort Des
Moines opened during 1903, the
first significant Calvary unit to
show up was the African American
25th Infantry...referred to then as
the Colored Troops. From the very
beginning there has been a rich
history of African American soldiers
serving at Fort Des Moines, which
continued in 1917 when the Fort
Des Moines was selected to be the
first training site for Black officers.
So, local history is important. We
can draw on the fact that in 2021,
over 100 years ago, there was a
facility for the aforementioned
things to happen in a way where
everyone benefited. That is a
wonderful lesson for us to learn...
whereby people have served
Matthew: Currently, the Fort Des
Moines Museum and Education
Center is the place where we work
to preserve, protect and promote
this rich history in Des Moines,
Iowa. We have more than a 10,000
square foot museum on a fiveacre
piece of property where we
house a collection and interpret the
history of what occurred at Fort Des
Moines. There is also a chapel on
the same museum ground.
We have a physical location that
we encourage people to visit.
However... currently during this
pandemic we aren’t open to the
public because of the concern about
not just the safety of the public,
but also the safety of the many
dedicated volunteers who work with
the museum, because we are an allvolunteer
organization.
their country...even in the face of
discrimination and segregation...
and we are all better off for it. We
have made great strides because
before where there were no officers
or leaders in the army...after the
first class graduated from Fort Des
Moines...there were many African
American leaders in the army.
So currently...people can make an
appointment and we will work to
accommodate them in making plans
to visit the museum. We are looking
forward to reopening the museum
after the pandemic is over.
We also are developing an online
presence for the museum. Soon,
we hope to start putting many of
the museum exhibits online thereby
creating a way for people to interact
with the museum virtually. Also,
having pieces of the museum’s
collection photographed and made
available online. We actually just
received several of our first lesson
plans developed for teachers...and
we are going to place them online.
Right now...the history is being
made available through the physical
museum, but very soon we are
going to have a robust online
presence so that people across the
state...and across the country...
will be able to experience and
learn about the history at Fort Des
Moines.
Part 2: Women Making
History
by Celeste Lawson
Celeste: Why was the Women’s
Army Auxiliary Corps established,
and why was it changed to the
Women’s Army Corps?
Matthew: The Women’s Army
Auxiliary Corps was established to
support the war effort during World
War ll. What was going on was that
the effort was so big...there was
a realization that more men were
needed in the theatre (area in which
the war was taking place) to do
combat jobs and support combat
missions. So...at that time...the idea
was to raise and train a group of
women who could serve in the army
in certain jobs that were currently
being done by men...freeing those
׉	 7cassandra://wqNgmNFF17WVm8bbwGsI3dpU8PL-6VLsD7lYBOU-RPo(Y`̵ `Bv3~=@C׉E	men to move forward to the front
lines of the war effort. So...the
Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps
was created in 1942 and was an
auxiliary unit because it was an
addition to the normal army. About
a year later...it was elevated to a
full active status and became the
Women’s Army Corps (WAC).
The Women’s Army Corps...
during 1978...was integrated into
the regular army...and within
specialty-specific branches that had
previously existed for men only.
Prior to this...the only capacity
that women ever served in the
army was as nurses, but after the
Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps
and the Women’s Army Corps
were established...women started
serving in many more positions and
functions within the United States
Army.
Celeste: What role do women
presently play in military service?
Matthew: So...during 1942 there
were only certain roles that women
played...that were considered as
being very traditional. Often times
you will see old films from World
War ll where only women were
operating telephone switchboards.
One of the significant individuals...
Charity Adams (aka Charity Adams
Earley)...graduated from Fort Des
Moines and lead the all-African
American 6888th Central Postal
Directory Battalion. There were
select jobs in which women served.
Since 1942...more and more
opportunities were opened up to
women in terms of how they could
serve in the military, which for
many years were all in non-combat
roles. Recently, (as an example)
things have changed to the point
that women have the ability to
serve in any branch of the United
States Army without restriction
because of their gender. They just
have to qualify to serve in the
Infantry or Special Forces.
They now can serve in all branches
of military service.
So...women play a significant and
pivotal role in today’s military
service. We focus on the United
States Army, but similar strides have
also been made in both the United
States Navy and Air Force...you have
women who are Air Force combat
pilots now...Navy combat pilots...
so we have all made great strides in
recognizing that woman can serve
in any role within the United States
military.
That is significant because when
you consider that every position
in the military is now available to
women...and the fact that women
can even serve in the military...it all
first started at Fort Des Moines. The
army led with the establishment of
a women’s auxiliary...so all women
who served in the military...in many
ways...their history can be tied back
to Fort Des Moines.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 43
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Officers’ Training School was at
the Fort Des Monies during 1917...
was the first training of African
American officers for any of the
military services. So...all African
American officers... their history or
their lineage...reaches back to Fort
Des Moines.
Celeste: Likewise, how may Iowans
and others access this history?
Matthew: We very much want to
significantly increase the number
of Iowans who are accessing this
history. We aspire to make sure
that there is no Iowa high school
graduate who...when they are
studying about World War l and
World War ll in history...knows that
significant things happened at Fort
Des Moines...here in the center of
Iowa...to support the war effort
during World War l by the training
of the Black (male) officers... and
during World War ll by the training
of women.
We want to increase that access.
Like I said before, right now we have
tour groups...school groups that
visit the museum...and we want to
do more of that in the future...we
have community groups that have
toured the museum, and we want
to do more of that...and of course
we want to create that virtual
presence so that anybody...not just
in Iowa...but anybody in the country
can learn about the significance of
both the ethnic and gender diversity
and inclusion activity that occurred
at Fort Des Moines.
Closing:
Gary: Would you like to make
a closing statement that you
feel is relevant to the preceding
questions?
Matthew: The history of Fort Des
Moines is important and interwoven
into our country’s history because
when you are talking about the
integration of the military...that
started because of what happened
here at the Fort Des Moines...when
you talk about allowing women to
serve in the military... that started
here at the Fort Des Moines...those
are important things and significant
issues for our country...that all
started here at the Fort Des Moines.
I think that we cannot only learn
from that, but we can also be proud
of that..for those of us who are
Iowans...that these historical things
happened here...and we should
work to educate people about it
and celebrate that history more
because it made our country better.
The sacrifice and service of those
who were trained and/or stationed
at the Fort Des Moines have
permeated our country’s history...
and in many ways outside of it...way
beyond the wars...to include what
they did in their everyday lives. We
should celebrate that and honor
them.
׉	 7cassandra://JeJ3ypAYrzPBGhOfcDKpqQ-Q4cxb0ndPOit-TO67las$>`̵ `Bv3~=@E׉E 4Interview with
Ms. Courageous Fire
By Dwana Bradley
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conversation with my dear sister
Ms. Courageous Fire. What you
are about to read is something we
as women, but especially Black
women don’t talk about…. domestic
violence. In this interview you will
hear Courageous story and why
Black women don’t tell or talk
about their abuse, and how you
can get help if you read something
that you have been through. I hope
whoever reads this article knows
it’s challenging to say what you’re
going through, but there are people
like Courageous who makes it clear
she isn’t a crisis advocate. She refers
women who are still in an abusive
relationship to Amani Community
Services. Courageous helps women
understand what lesser=known
forms look like so those she helps
can self-identify and then she guides
them to appropriate resources.
When Courageous programming
kicks in for the victim is when
she has turned survivor, and she
teaches her how to avoid future
predatory relationships through
Empowerment through the Arts.
Courageous Story
My life in 2012-2013 started
gravitating me toward being
drawn to the needs of women. I
began to zone in and notice when
women were hurting. They were
hurting and couldn’t express it and
they didn’t recognize their own
greatness. This is where I began to
seek out meaningful interactions
with women. I remember working in
corporate America and a lady asked
me, “How is it your able to have
these conversations all the time?”
This lady noticed I would see people
in the cafeteria, the breakroom,
or the bathroom. This is because I
would look for opportunities and I
didn’t let them pass me by.
This is my story. I got married
to my abuser in 2004 and it’s
the typical fairy tale story. I was
married to this great guy. We hit
it off and I was intellectually and
spiritually stimulated by him. We
sang together for our wedding, it
was lovely. He had children from a
previous marriage, and they seemed
to adore him, so I believed he was
a great father and man of God.
We connected in every way and
talked for hours. I thought this was
fantastic. Looking back, I realized all
of this was grooming because none
of it was genuine.
There were people who thought I
should have seen the signs.
I watched a documentary titled
#whyIstayed and I listened to these
women who talked about the
things they saw, and it didn’t match
the person they knew. For myself,
I kept looking for the husband I
knew thinking he would reemerge,
but that person never existed. In
a marriage or partnership your
job is to trust the person because
that’s what makes relationships
work and when you trust you are
communicating to your partner; I
am supposed believe the best in
you.
After thirteen years of marriage, I
became aware of religious abuse
which means the person takes
the scripture and twist it around
their own agenda. I found myself
questioning if I was pleasing God
because I was made to feel like I
wasn’t. I began to examine my own
Christianity.
I experienced financial abuse. My
husband could work, but he chose
not to work a 9-5. He wanted us to
be in a certain place financially and
I committed to the union for us not
to fail so the finances became a way
for me to not leave.
I was doing the work and I was
committed to us surviving. I was
going to stay until we got on track,
but we never were going to make
that happen because he never
intended to. That’s what financial
abuse looks like.
I’m an intelligent woman, but I
would feel stupid whenever I was
talking with my husband and that
was intentional. That’s one of the
ways emotional abuse shows up;
the abuser consistently puts you
down and elevates himself. I also
found myself experiencing sexual
abuse. Sexual abuse can happen in
marriage. There are times a woman
can be asked to do things her mate
knows makes her uncomfortable in
the bedroom and feel obligated to
do so or will punish her is she does
not comply.
My actual escape took place like
this: I had done my safety planning
but was not comfortable with
doing a restraining order. I prayed
to the Lord to allow me to become
comfortable enough to file it if it
was indeed a good idea, or for God
to move on the abuser to just get
up and leave on his own. He got up
two or three weeks later and said, “I
feel like I should remove myself.” He
had gotten a bus ticket to leave and
my daughters and I took him to the
bus station on New Year’s Eve. Once
he left, I began to see all the signs
and realized there were people who
came alongside me to make me
aware of those signs. They never
made me feel bad for not leaving
but looking back I realized they
were saying things to me to help me
come to my own revelation.
׉	 7cassandra://Y5duN4TFrExdQI4eVY3vG62_bB1Uabo3AET8Q-S-tvI%`̵ `Bv3~=@G׉E'The statistics say that 40% of Black
women will experience domestic
violence in their lifetime and 58%
of Black women will experience
Psychological abuse, this whole
thing of Black women and these
types of things not happening to us,
or we don’t play that is a misnomer
because so often, many don’t know
what they are in the middle of, many
don’t know what it looks like, and I
want them to be aware.
Courageous Fire LLC was founded
in June of 2019. I was still working
for a non-profit and was unable to
do much, but I did an enormous
amount of research and while
researching, I found all this
information not just about women,
but Black women and this is the
number one health issue for us. That
was staggering for me to learn. It’s
not diabetes or heart disease for us,
it’s abuse. Here are three reasons
why this is happening so much for
Black women.
1. The strong Black woman
stereotype. There is no
reason for me to talk about
a struggle or a challenge
or a problem because I’m
strong and I can handle it.
The flip side of that is we are
viewed that way also, it’s not
just the self-perception we
aren’t viewed as victims so
if a black woman says this
is what happened to me,
immediately or if she tries to
resist, we become the violent
aggressor. I read Marissa
Alexanders story and it
infuriated me. She had been
abused physically by her
partner for years the man
was in the process of trying
to be abusive in that very
moment. She purposefully
fired a warning shot next to
him at the wall to make him
back away from her.
She received a sentence of
twenty years in prison for
a warning shot. When we
talk about Lorena Bobbitt,
we all thought back in the
day that case was funny.
She mutilated a man and
what happened? Nothing
because she is a real
victim, and a black woman
is angry, aggressive,
and upset. I looked in
the comments in one of
Marissa Alexanders TEDx
videos there was comment
after comment stating,
“yeah, they both were
aggressive,” “she is leaving
out parts of the story those
are the parts that got her
convicted,” “let’s just say
what it really is, she is just
violent.” That’s the number
one reason we don’t say
anything.
2. We are afraid of backlash
from 911. Jacob Blake, it
happened just last year from
all and everything I read
about that story it was a
domestic violence situation
and she did call the police,
but she was not looking for
them to shoot him seven
times. She simply wanted
to be safe; wasn’t trying to
give him a death sentence.
People act as though it’s
ok to overlook the fact that
at one point you were in a
relationship with this person
at some point you loved
them, and you thought
they loved you. This was my
struggle with the whole no
contact order because no
one could give me a clear
answer on whether or not
at that time was going to
have some sort of record
that people would see and
even though he tortured our
entire family for thirteen
years I still didn’t want him
to struggle as a black man
with trying to get himself
together if he was ever
going to do it. Having a
restraining order strapped
to his back, I didn’t want
that to happen. More than
once I’ve had people over
the course of my adult life
talk to me all of them black
women about different types
of domestic violence and I
will never forget one of my
dearest friends telling me
how she and her husband
spent the night in jail when
she was pregnant. If he
beats on me and I try to
defend myself and I wear
nails he’s probably going to
get scratched so now I can’t
defend myself or my unborn
child. I’m supposed to get
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 47
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had marks they both went
to jail. We are afraid of the
backlash from 911.
3. This last one breaks my heart
the most because it comes
from us. We’re afraid of
how we will be treated by
our own community. Look
at the backlash that the
victims and their parents,
of R Kelly received. Many
accused them of trying to
keep a black man down,
people always want to
report the black man. The
black man this, black man
that, but if the black man
committed a crime against
a Black woman how come
she can’t say anything? Why
can’t she say something? We
know one or both things are
going to happen. We will be
looked at as a traitor of our
community for airing our
dirty laundry in public and
making a black man look
bad or our community look
bad. Families are going to
distance themselves from
us and make the comment,
“you know that was a family
matter, you didn’t have to
involve everyone like that
you didn’t have to put him
out there like that.” Where
can I go if I’m at church and
I’m a victim of domestic
violence. Can I talk to my
Pastor or is he going to tell
me God hates divorce and
stay married? In the same
documentary #WhyIstayed
one of the women said
something that blew my
mind. “I stayed because
my Pastor said God hates
divorce it never occurred to
me that God hates abuse
too. I was messed up by that
statement because the very
book that truly helped me
walk out of my relationship
this was shown to me by my
twelve-year-old daughter
at the time. We were in a
bookstore and my husband
at the time wanted to look
religious and spiritual. We
were making a purchase
for a family member. My
daughter kept spinning
around this turnstile and she
kept trying to take this book
out. Every time I looked
at her, she acted as if she
wasn’t trying to take the
book out the book was titled
Domestic Violence: A Sexual
Assault on the Women’s
Worth and it was written
by a Christian woman she
had scripture after scripture
that talked about why God
hates violence and why God
hates when a man takes his
׉	 7cassandra://I4upNDaz6B6t7W4HQOavAUrRIoogTejbnUeLvZyk2uY(*`̵ `Bv3~=@I׉Eleadership and uses it to harm his wife, his family,
why God hates that. There were scriptures and
along those scriptures she gave definitions and
check boxes for if he is doing this it is a part of
this and I kept looking at all the check boxes I had
experienced, that my kids had experienced but
if it had not been for this book by the Christian
woman talking about why God hates abuse and
not divorce it would have been longer for me. I
needed permission that God wouldn’t be angry
with me for keeping myself safe.
The work done by Courageous Fire LLC is
powerful and will make an impact on our
community. In the March edition of the Urban
Experience Magazine, we will discuss more of the
work Courageous Fire LLC does and what stories
you will see in the future.
“If you have read anything in this article that
makes you believe you may be a victim of
domestic violence (DV), click here: CFire Get
Help”
If you need to talk to someone and you believe
you are experiencing abuse in your relationship
here are some places you can reach out to:
Courageous Fire’s Get Help page https://
cfire2019.wixsite.com/move/gethelp
Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233
Amani Community Services. They now have a Des
Moines advocate! You can email her at jemella@
amani-cs.org
To support the work of Courageous Fire LLC:
Cash App - $courageousfirellc
Pay Pal – https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/
akhcourageiousfire?locale.x=US
׉	 7cassandra://vpWrpdzNctDmc1dkhbACcuMcOPJ_D-MLMITMm8xB3l0`̵ `Bv3~=@J`Bv3~=@I{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://pnHZ1ihbk5tjTJNfcMl3K4ePP3Sd6bqW459BxMvWwpQ ` ׉	 7cassandra://-9cCkAndTkiS3do21UWCiOg5mc6QDas_QPj9W-e5EB4v5`S׉	 7cassandra://jvwhX8dWElvD99yrcc8TItTWjFJ9NjdgGC5Oe1covKM8`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://miQ15SSjh7mghk_DhnZ7sXFu736jrYfjdj-2urdAVLE,͠`BvB~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://EfBKeLV2A-p1YkK8bu_eBmm4Lr9WSphbHWnv3XlBZqI `׉	 7cassandra://DYWGaI9tLpvfsSWHUqlwdJFb7LdVpe2vU5Mzrlfz2bk͆4`S׉	 7cassandra://1HaZESN-9wr9ntNLVHVSk6a6V8QmRaZ_j3BG9iwCAvM$`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://itv96WbVLaseCc_DaTMJpF7WZAoy8Ss23btYIDdYu04͆q4͠`BvB~=@Ȓנ`BvB~=@΁ :ہ̹9ׁHhttp://www.aka1908.comׁׁЈנ`BvB~=@́ I/9ׁHhttps://fullcart.org/akaׁׁЈ׉E	PRESS RELEASES
For Immediate Release: February, 16, 2021
For more information contact: Rhonda Harris: Publicity Chairman
Rhonda.harris56@yahoo.com (816) 352-4615
Jacquie Easley McGhee: Publicity Co-Chairman jacquieeasley@aol.com
Kelly Loeb: Publicity Co-Chairman kglaka@gmail.com
Members of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated, Mid-Western Region,
To Hold Virtual Conference through Host City Des Moines, Iowa
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated®, one of the nation’s oldest African American
Greek Letter organizations, and the sorority of Vice President Kamala Harris, will host its
91st Mid-Western Regional Conference virtually on March 19-21, 2021. Over 1.000 diverse
college-age and professional women from the States of Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma,
Nebraska, Colorado, Montana, Wyoming, and Iowa will arrive virtually on the North
Bound Express and will be welcomed by the host chapters of Cluster C which includes
Graduate Chapters, Alpha Iota Omega, Topeka, Ks.; Beta Kappa Omega, Wichita, Ks.; Iota
Zeta Omega, Des Moines, Iowa; Mu Eta Omega, Junction City, Ks.; Mu Omega, Kansas
City, Ks.; Tau Psi Omega, Iowa City, Iowa; Upsilon Rho Omega, Overland Park, Ks.; and
Undergraduate Chapters, Delta, University of Kansas; Epsilon Alpha, Wichita State
University; Epsilon Theta, University of Iowa; Eta Tau, Drake University/Iowa State
University; Kappa Pi, Kansas State University; Upsilon, Washburn University. Mary
Chapman will serve as conference chairman, Mildred Edwards and Tonia Blue will serve as
co-chairmen.
The conference theme “Northbound Express: Celebrating Our Spirit of Excellence” will
capture the mission this organization has continued to achieve in service to communities
across
the country and abroad for 113 years. The Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority,
Incorporated program platform, under the leadership of Dr. Glenda Glover, International
President and CEO, “Exemplifying Excellence Through Sustainable Service” ℠., focuses
on five target areas which aim to address critical issues that impact the quality of lives
throughout the world .
Target 1: Historically Black Colleges & Universities (HBCU) for Life: A Call to Action
Target 2: Women’s Healthcare and Wellness
Target 3: Building Your Economic Legacy
Target 4: The Arts!
Target 5: Global Impact
Former Iowa native, Mrs. Twyla Woods-Buford, Mid-Western Regional Director, will
preside over the 3 day virtual conference. Woods-Buford is a retired educator who spent
40 years in the Des Moines Iowa Public School System where she served as an Elementary
׉	 7cassandra://jvwhX8dWElvD99yrcc8TItTWjFJ9NjdgGC5Oe1covKM8`̵ `Bv3~=@K׉ESchool Principal, Assistant Director of Elementary Education, Associate Superintendent of
Human Resources and Chief of Staff. “Although we cannot meet in person, we are excited
to bring our conference to the Iowa communities and across the other states in the MidWestern
Region. We will be conducting service projects online that will benefit the Des
Moines and Iowa City communities, in addition to taking care of the business of the
Region.” says Woods-Buford.
The conference’s major service projects consist of members donating new and gently worn
shoes to support the international service project Soles4Souls and collecting eye glasses
that will be distributed to the area Lions Club. Members of the community will be able to
take part and help families in need during this pandemic, by making monetary donations
to the COVID-19 Relief Full Cart online virtual food bank project. Access the Mid-Western
donation link at https://fullcart.org/aka-donate.
There will be a number of online events that are open to the public. Friday, March 19th
from 8 a.m. – 9 a.m. there will be a online EAF auction, and from 6 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., the
organization will host a public program where local leaders and organizations that have
significantly impacted their communities with outstanding community service, will be
honored. There will be greetings by legislative officials and the Divine Nine. Music will be
rendered by the Roosevelt High School Bridges 2 Harmony Choir. Remarks will be given
by the AKA International President and CEO, Dr. Glenda Glover. A closing Gala will be
held on Saturday, March 20th from 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Sunday, March 21st, the sorority will
conclude the conference with an Ecumenical Service from 9:30 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.. All
public programs will be
able
to be accessed
via www.Facebook/MidWesternRegionofAlphaKappaAlphaSorority
and the AKA Mid-Western Region YouTube
Channel.
############
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Incorporated (AKA) is an international service organization
that was founded on the campus of Howard University in Washington, D.C. in 1908. It is
the oldest Greek-letter organization established by African-American college-educated
women. Alpha Kappa Alpha is comprised of over 300,000 members in approximately
1,018 graduate and undergraduate chapters
in the United States, the U.S. Virgin
Islands, the Bahamas, Bermuda, Canada, Dubai, Germany, Japan, Liberia, and South
Korea. Led by International President & CEO, Dr. Glenda Baskin Glover, Alpha Kappa
Alpha is often hailed as “America’s premier Greek-letter organization for African American
women.” For more information on Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority and its programs, log
onto www.aka1908.com.
Mrs. Twyla Woods Buford,
Mid-Western Regional Director
Mrs. Twyla Woods Buford,
Mid-Western Regional Director
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 51
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Host Chapter Iota Zeta Omega and Mid-Western
Regional Director, Twyla Woods-Buford
dIGITAL
aDVERTISE
WITH
Iota Zeta Omega making an impact in the Des Moines
Community
׉	 7cassandra://W5eipMGu9dm9V4FUpEEces6F8q79L5-3LLn_PLIW2EA(`̵ `Bv3~=@M׉E^Des Moines Playhouse Press Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
nature of the dream, Black Iowan Stories, Premieres
Feb.25, 2021
Photos available online at https://www.dmplayhouse.
com/events/nature-of-the-dream/
Contact: Lee Ann Bakros, Playhouse Marketing
Associate, 515.974.5358
nature of the dream, a devised film exploring Black
identity in Iowa, will debut at 7:00 PM, Thursday,
Feb. 25, 2021. It will be available for viewing
through Sunday, Mar. 7, 2021. Directed by Miriam
Randolph and produced by Two Steps to the Left
Productions with assistance from The Des Moines
Playhouse, the film is an exploration of maintaining
Black identity in predominantly white spaces. nature
of the dream video-on-demand will be available at
dmplayhouse.com. In order to make nature of the
dream accessible to as many as possible, viewers
can choose from a variety of ticket prices ranging
from $5 to $100. The full ticket price will be shared
by Urban Dreams and nature artists.
Immediately following the film’s Feb. 25 premiere,
there will be a live conversation with the creators
on The Playhouse’s Facebook page. A Facebook
account is not needed to view this conversation,
nor do individuals need to purchase the film to
participate. The conversation will be recorded and
posted on The Playhouse’s website and YouTube
channel and on Two Steps to the Left Productions’
website for future viewing.
nature of the dream has its origins in devised
theatre. Devised theatre is a freeform style in which
all members of the creative group work collectively
and collaboratively to create a performance
completely from scratch. There is no script involved
prior to the devising process, but rather the script
gets written along the way. Due to COVID-19, this
finished product is a film rather than theatre.
Randolph said, “We wanted to give Black actors
and creatives a safe space to express themselves
in ways they may not have had in Iowa prior to this
project. Too often Black creatives are ignored or
silenced and having a place for us to be artistically
free is therapeutic and it enlightens us.”
The title nature of the dream is a double entendre
of sorts, referring to both how the American dream
applies, or does not apply, to Black citizens in
America and also to personal dreams that Black
Americans have. Using the latter helped form
a narrative explanation for how each ensemble
member would be able to portray multiple characters
in the film. Randolph explained, “There’s a theory
that when we sleep, we may all be interconnected
in a dream world. In the devising process, one of my
actors brought that up and I loved that idea. We all
have multiple dreams in our lives, and each plays a
different role in each other’s. I wanted to embrace
this theory through set design, lighting, and music.”
Once the script was developed, Two Steps to the
Left Productions filmed in The Playhouse’s Kate
Goldman Theatre and at locations around Des
Moines including the Des Moines Art Center.
Katy Merriman, artistic director of The Playhouse,
said working and sharing resources with Two Steps
to the Left Productions fit perfectly with the theatre’s
mission. “Theatre is storytelling. The Playhouse
wants to share more of our community’s stories.”
The nature of the dream creative team is led by an
ensemble of actors featuring Clifton Antoine, Darrick
Burrage, Colo Chanel, Mar Feitelson, Alexandra
Gray, Kiera McGregor, Miriam Randolph, Donna
Scarfe, and Antonesia Williams. nature of the
dream’s production team includes Miriam Randolph
(director, producer), Micah Ariel James (dramaturg,
co-producer), Kierra Lewis (producer, assistant
director), Henry Parizek (producer, music, sound),
Ethan Seiser (production manager, lighting), Chase
Stine (director of photography), and Alex Wortherly
(production manager, lighting). Playhouse staff
members Katy Merriman (artistic director), Angela
Lampe (costumer, associate artistic director), Tim
Harris (technical director), and Virgil Kleinhesselink
(master electrician) also provided assistance.
In support of the film, Raygun has produced, in
collaboration with the nature team, a promotional
tee shirt, UPLIFT BLACK VOICES IN ALL SPACES:
NATURE OF THE DREAM. A portion of these
proceeds will also be donated to Urban Dreams and
nature of the dream artists.
nature of the dream artists chose to share proceeds
from the film and merchandise with Urban Dreams
because this film is about uplifting underrepresented
voices in Iowa. The team said, “This film comes
from the community. It would be wrong to not give
back in every way that we can. Urban Dreams
advocates for all members of the community,
breaking down barriers to success and collaborating
with area organizations to overcome obstacles and
uplift underserved and underrepresented people.”
Founded in 1985, the Urban Dreams vision is to
create equal opportunity and access for all to pursue
their dreams.
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 53
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Iowa Juneteenth Observance
A Program of The Des Moines Urban Experience
“Marking 31 Years of Service to the Iowa Community”
2021 Iowa Juneteenth Observance Essay Contest
Sponsored by Drake University
Juneteenth is an international observance marking the end to slavery on June 19, 1865. Juneteenth will celebrate 156
years of celebration during 2021. The Iowa Juneteenth Observance will mark its 31st anniversary as well. On April 11,
2002, Governor Tom Vilsack signed legislation establishing Juneteenth as an official day of recognition in Iowa that
is observed annually on the third Saturday in June. This year’s theme for Iowa Juneteenth 2021 is “A Family Affair.”
ELIGIBILITY: The essay contest is statewide and open to “all students” enrolled in grades 9 through 11. We encourage
essayists to enlist the guidance of a teacher or other adult when completing the essay. The essay contest serves
as an inspirational vehicle for youth to strengthen appreciation for: 1) scholarship, 2) cultural diversity; and 3) the
enhancement of community relations.
ESSAY QUESTION: “How have the events in 2020/2021 impacted you and/or your community and how would you
mend the cultural divide in this country.”
CONTEST RULES
REQUIREMENTS: 1) Essays must be a minimum of 500 words and not exceed 700 words; 2) Essays may be typed
or word-processed (double spaced); 3) Essayists must use at least 5 sources of information from books, newspapers,
magazines, or websites which must be listed (cited) on a separate page and submitted with the essay; 4) Submit a
color photo (portrait style – headshot), and 5) Complete the Student Information Form provided with this application
which can be accessed at www.iowajuneteenth.com
TOP HONORS: Each of the three winning essayists will receive a trophy. In addition, the first-place winner will receive
a $1,000.00 cash prize, the second-place winner will receive a $500.00 cash prize, and the third-place winner will
receive a $250.00 cash prize. The trophies and cash prizes are scheduled to be presented at an Iowa Juneteenth
Observance awards ceremony in Des Moines (TBA) and winning essayists must be present to receive their trophies/
cash prizes.
DEADLINE: Submit your essay, along with the Student Information Form, your photo, and your list of reading
sources, by email, on or before Friday April 30th, 2021, to Nakia Ewing at nakiae78@gmail.com or send the original
essay by regular mail (postmarked by April 30th, 2021) to:
The Des Moines Urban Experience
Iowa Juneteenth Essay Contest
PO Box 3092, Des Moines, Iowa 50316
׉	 7cassandra://T39dgJafGBv-IpW5Yxdzc0egtwoSiXBJKliSACxrI5k`̵ `Bv3~=@O׉ELet’s Support
our Black
Owned
Businesses
Bottle and Bottega
James and Bridget Neely
Wine & Painting
https://www.bottleandbottega.com/des-moines/
This
year The Urban Experience
Magazine celebrates 5 years.
This isn’t a list of all the Black
owned businesses in our city.
The businesses listed below
have been either featured or
supported the Urban Experience
Magazine in the last five year. Put
your business card in the Urban
Experience Magazine for $25 a
month for the first year. Reach
out to us at:
contactdsmurban@gmail.com for
more details.
Urban City Magazine
Howell Dixon
Magazine/Podcast
https://urbancitymag.co/
Ruby B’s Catering
Bradley Family
Restaurant
515) 681-4028
https://www.facebook.com/
rubybskitchen/
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 55
׉	 7cassandra://O7VOGzb6jh7eVh43k4_k5tjnJGhdB7QYSuYoQ2TESmk"V`̵ `Bv3~=@P`Bv3~=@O{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://i8mzTg6p14OrxlBqZFFjdFnSmnkRaGc3j_tx7KwwtUg `׉	 7cassandra://0DgNUd2xQcNURbmJMwgpF0IMv5C1_bEf6vxHrGtwYfgjD`S׉	 7cassandra://YzUgqGbej1R4CcoEAgEGuuUB679w6TsuKFPRPEmRvIY#`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://t7WNsE_qXTNsCjRCDncfBC_QVdouvpCAFIeMvKM8AMc @͠`BvC~=@ט  {u׉׉	 7cassandra://Gzz_AIk4vvDg-zYe83jUtUD2TDY3M_tAObjjXgDrftI 0`׉	 7cassandra://iP8PMbEC4g08xXCjn9S3_jFK-KjOl9zzJOFH_6xuCJky4`S׉	 7cassandra://IuPdCTF46H_M5axAY3fpDeBE2rkIRlO_8bydI9SVMhY&`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://pqkLPgZmD2j0ZyX5JkgRC-wtgh2HrdKibEHlH4oqr1k `͠`BvC~=@ߜנ`BvC~=@ ̹1̞9ׁH  http://www.imagezphotostudio.comׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ G19ׁHhttps://www.facebook.com/DsmSoׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ 9ׁH  http://www.iowanebraskanaacp.orgׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ ,9ׁHhttps://www.naacpdesmoines.org/ׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ 9ׁH $http://www.asheasley.myportfolio.comׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ ̴9ׁHhttp://www.vanesther.comׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ k9ׁHhttp://www.iowajuneteenth.comׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ &E@9ׁH !https://www.facebook.com/ma.vs.73ׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ &Á29ׁH  https://www.facebook.com/groups/ׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ &W9ׁH )https://www.rootstobranchesgenealogy.com/ׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ &Ձ9ׁH ,https://www.facebook.com/TranZitionsBeautySaׁׁЈנ`BvC~=@ &bq9ׁH )https://hiphopeinc.wixsite.com/hiphopeincׁׁЈ׉E9Hip Hope, Inc
Bo James
https://hiphopeinc.wixsite.com/hiphopeinc
Tranzitions Salon & Beauty Bar
Ty Daye & Courtney
Beauty Salon
https://www.facebook.com/TranZitionsBeautySalon/
Roots
to Branches
Ricki King
https://www.rootstobranchesgenealogy.com/
Black Women 4 Healthy Living
Brandi Miller
Health
https://www.facebook.com/groups/
bw4hl/?ref=share
MAV Nu Direction
Calvetta Berry
https://www.facebook.com/ma.vs.73
Iowa Juneteenth Observance
Dwana Bradley
www.iowajuneteenth.com
Van Esther
Vanessa Lewis
www.vanesther.com
Made Easley Advertising
Ash Easley
www.asheasley.myportfolio.com
NAACP Des Moines Branch
Kameron Middlebrooks
https://www.naacpdesmoines.org/
NAACP Iowa/Nebraska Branch
Betty Andrews
www.iowanebraskanaacp.org
SoulFit
Zakiya English
https://www.facebook.com/DsmSo
www.imagezphotostudio.com
(515) 223-6122
׉	 7cassandra://YzUgqGbej1R4CcoEAgEGuuUB679w6TsuKFPRPEmRvIY#`̵ `Bv3~=@Q׉E	dAngela Jackson’s bio
Angela Jackson, Esq. is an
Entrepreneur and owner of The
Great Frame Up which is an Art
Gallery and Custom Framing
Business located in West Des
Moines. She also is Senior Vice
President of Diversity, Equity
and Inclusion at Athene USA
Corporation. Angela serves her
community as Board Member of
The West Des Moines Chamber,
Des Moines Arts Festival,
Cornerstone Family Church and
an Honorary Board Member for
Des Moines Performing Arts.
She is a member of Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority, Inc. and The Des
Moines Chapter of the Links,
Incorporated. Angela is a Thought
Leader and alumni of Washington
University School of Law and
Duke University.
Gary Lawson’s Bio
Debra Carr Bio
Debra Carr serves
professionally and personally
as a champion for diversity,
inclusion, and equity. Uplifting
women and girls to become
the best version of themselves
is foundational. Debra is
Principal Consultant and
owner of Carr and Associates
and works full-time for Des
Moines Public Schools
consulting for building level
administrators, faculty,
and staff to achieve school
improvement goals. Debra
has received numerous
awards and is a champion for
her community in which she
has served for many years.
Gary Lawson is a freelance writer
who focuses on various aspects
of business and government.
He earned a graduate degree
in Government Administration,
and an undergraduate degree in
Business Administration with a
duel concentration in Management
and Marketing. He is a VietnamEra
veteran who has served as
a Commissioned Officer in the
United States Army. In addition,
he has taught business courses at
Drake University and Des Moines
Area Community College.
Celeste Lawson’s bio
Celeste Lawson is a freelance writer
who focuses on various aspects
of education and cultural diversity.
She earned a graduate degree in
Curriculum and Instruction, and an
undergraduate degree in Elementary
Education, with concentrations in
English and Language Arts. In addition,
she has more than 20 years of
classroom experience with teaching
students at the primary, secondary,
and post-secondary levels.
DeMarcus Hamilton bio
Marc Supreme is the program
director for the urban a/c radio
station, Strictly Hip Hop 90.7FM, in
Peoria, IL. He is also a freelance
journalist and commentator,
covering politics and entertainment.
Twitter & IG: @marc_supreme
Clubhouse: @marcsupreme
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 57
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Neo Renaissance Artisan, writer,
30-year career Chef and currently
running for Omaha Nebraska City
Council District 2 North Omaha.
Lori A. Young Bio
He is a community advocate and
bridge builder, a motivational
strategist/coach with a passion for
people development and Diversity
and inclusion champion.
A strong faith and belief base
in Christ that furnishes a wellgrounded
ethical foundation. He
has a team building approach to
empowering individuals to believe in
and think for themselves.
He is a multi-faceted communicator,
dedicated to making a positive
difference in every life he touches.
Bert Moody is a Photographer, an IT
Consultant, and Web Designer for
the Urban Experience Magazine. He
has been with the magazine from
its inception.
He has been a Freelance
Photographer in the Des Moines
area since 1985, first with Esquire
Photo Agency and now with
Imagez Photo Studio (www.
imagezphotostudio.com). He
also is a longtime associate at
Nationwide Insurance as is a part
of their National Network of Black
Associates. Bert volunteers for
many activities in the community
and is a Board member with The
Des Moines Urban Experience.
Bert is married with three grown
children.
Lori A. Young is a native of Des
Moines and a graduate of Tech High
School and Grand View University.
Her professional experience lies in
corporate internal and marketing
communications. Currently she is
self-employed on assignment with
the non-profit organization, Just
Voices Iowa, as a Communications
Director and Project Manager. In
her spare time, she’s a feature
writer, artist, and community
organizer/social activist fighting
on issues such as racial,
environmental, and economic
justice for over 10 years.
׉	 7cassandra://USeb9Kol7I1mf1EwV3pHudkubSX5JxhS58JWv17T4OE`̵ `Bv3~=@S׉ECalling for
Submissions
The Urban
Experience
Magazine
Negus Sankofa Imhotep’s Bio
Negus Sankofa Imhotep is the
Academic & Workforce Coordinator
at Urban Dreams and the Deferred
Expulsion Case Manager for Des
Moines Public Schools. In these
roles, he has connected several
of Central Iowa’s top employers
with highly skilled untapped talent,
assisted hundreds of marginalized
central Iowans in securing gainful
employment, and successfully
advocated on behalf of more than
50 students who faced expulsion
from the Des Moines Public School
district.
Negus is also a sought-after orator
and community ally, having served
as an Executive Board Member
for the Iowa Human Rights Board,
a past Chair and Commissioner
of the Iowa Commission on the
Status of African Americans. In
2015, Negus launched Rudison
Consultancy Group, LLC to offer
cultural community network advising
and cultural competency training
to agencies and organizations
across the region. His commitment
to educating emerging leaders is
what led him to teaching positions at
Hawkeye Community College and
Joshua Christian Academy in 2013.
Negus holds a Bachelor’s degree
in Liberal Arts with a concentration
in Political Science from Excelsior
College, a Master’s degree in
Public Administration from Norwich
University, and is currently writing
his dissertation for a Doctorate
in Business Administration with a
concentration in Human Resource
Management from Northcentral
University.
What are we looking for?
Poetry, Interviews, Short Stories, Comics,
Photography, Music & Performance Reviews, Opinion
pieces or whatever you are thinking!
When do we want it?
The deadline for all content is the 15th of each month.
What kind of writers do we like?
Experienced creative writers and those who have never
written before.
So what do YOU do?
Checkout the website at www.theurbanexp.com
Email your submissions to contactdsmurban@gmail.com,
and help us make each edition of the magazine great!
The URBAN EXPERIENCE | 2021 59
׉	 7cassandra://Z5FMcagVymRc6vRe0gFDTI75SiImjLZhU6UWIPmTsGM!`̵ `Bv3~=@T`Bv3~=@S{בCט   {u׉׉	 7cassandra://l2RCPES783zVzfIUG_HVVyhBK-aKBnQwYdgFrvOd3S4 D`׉	 7cassandra://XOuhGjVFy0c_wZLJlomuy-AqrIqPK9B5rhxhKZ0rZCYb1`S׉	 7cassandra://fVjvEFKnaOjdnkA4RLGVhOFXWF92LSTyL6yCBK26o4w#`̵ ׉	 7cassandra://11rlO0bq2YXZh-Zk6l_UNR72Ew9y56ws2cFUYq_XyVo a͠`BvD~=@נ`BvD~=@ "߁9ׁHhttp://www.broadlawns.orgׁׁЈ׉EY• Care for low & high risk
pregnancies, deliveries, and
postpartum
• Brand new single-room
maternity suites
• Exceptional birthing staff
• Secure newborn nursery
• Pregnancy & postpartum
support groups/classes
• Lactation and breastfeeding
consultation and support
(515) 282-2340
1801 Hickman Road, Des Moines, IA
www.broadlawns.org
׉	 7cassandra://fVjvEFKnaOjdnkA4RLGVhOFXWF92LSTyL6yCBK26o4w#`̵ `Bv3~=@U׈E`Bv3~=@V`Bv3~=@U{, ,Corrected February Urban Experience Magazine#The Urban Experience Magazine needed to make a correction to the interview conducted with Ms. Courageous Fire. We believe in making sure we fix our articles as soon as possible. Please use this link to see the updated magazine. We will update this on our website and our email club as well. `Bv-+E
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