November 14, 2015 - November 14, 2015, The Afro-American A1 www.afro.com $1.00 $1.00
Volume Volume 124 123 No. No. 15 20–22
NOVEMBER 14, 2015 - NOVEMBER 20, 2015
We Are United
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Robberies Hit D.C.
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Concerned Student 1950, led by University of Missouri graduate student Jonathan Butler, second from right, speaks following the announcement that University of Missouri System President Tim Wolfe would resign. Wolfe resigned Nov. 9 with the football team and others on campus in open revolt over his handling of racial tensions at the school. See story on A2.
Prison Reform
State Prison Populations Declining
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As the Earth’s most prolific jailer, America faces a thorny question: What do you do with millions of inmates when they return home? That challenge is at the heart of many bipartisan prison reforms that are sweeping the nation. Georgia recently tackled this issue. The staunchly Republican state has become a widely recognized national leader in prison reform, creating a network of programs to help inmates when they are behind bars and after they are released. Georgia’s efforts were spurred by a sober realization: If the Peach State didn’t curtail its convict population, it would have to spend an additional $264 million in the next five years just to house inmates. This amounted to more than the state spends each year on any category other than education and health care. Facing such formidable costs, Georgia — led by Republican Gov. Nathan Deal — began implementing an array of reforms that helped it begin
Black Males in London Also Face Police Profiling By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com Racial profiling, it would appear, has a passport. Youth throughout the United Kingdom say that they are often stopped, searched, and interrogated by police officers similar to their U.S. counterparts. While they report far fewer incidents of actual deathrelated altercations with law enforcement, Black and Asian youth in London said they
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By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com Researchers and physicians from around the world met in Los Angeles this weekend to discuss new findings in the fight against obesity – particularly the increased rates of obesity among Black and Latino populations. National Obesity Week (November 2-6) saw the release of new data suggesting that Latino and Black parents’ stress levels contribute to them producing obese children as well. Researchers, led by Carmen Isasi from Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, found that obesity and chronic stress were prevalent among Latino and Black populations, with 28 percent of obese children, ages 8-16, and 29 percent of their parents reporting high levels of stress. Further, researchers found that parents who experienced three or more chronic stressors were twice as likely to produce obese children, than parents who experienced no stress. Stress and weight gain were initially linked culturally among Black women in 2014 by researchers studying their rapid increase in weight. Some 59,000 Black Continued on A3
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New Orleans Musical Legend, Allen Toussaint, Remembered By The Associated Press New Orleans musician Allen Toussaint easily adopted multiple musical roles during a legendary career that took him from the Crescent City to the world stage, writing or producing hits such as “Southern Nights,” and “Ruler of My Heart,” or performing at his beloved piano, often stylishly dressed in colorful suits. Toussaint died Nov. 10 in Spain of a heart attack, Madrid emergency services Continued on A6
AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster
Research Finds Racism a Factor in Childhood Obesity
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Met with Barbarism
By Nick Chiles Urban News Service
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President Barack Obama welcomes Allen Toussaint to award him the 2012 National Medal of Arts for his contributions as a composer, producer, and performer, during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington.
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