A1 www.afro.com November 7, 2015 - November 7, 2015, The Afro-American $1.00 $1.00
Volume Volume 124 123 No. No. 14 20–22
NOVEMBER 7, 2015 - NOVEMBER 13, 2015
Inside
Baltimore
Commentary: Combating Food Deserts with Free Food
A5
• New Baltimore
Mural Seeks to Change Perception of City
Talking with ‘Color Purple’ Author Alice Walker
C1
Prison Reform,Finally
C1
AP Photo
554k
President Barack Obama, center, called for breaking that cycle of incarceration by helping former inmates successfully re-enter society while in New Jersey. See story on A4.
That’s how many people have liked the AFRO Facebook page. Join last week’s 5,200 new fans and become part of the family. INSERTS
afro.com
Your History • Your Community • Your News
• MedStar • Walmart
(R-Wis.) was elected by the House as the new leader of the body on Oct. 29. Norton said immediately after that she “will reach out and look forward to working with our new speaker, Paul Ryan.” “Paul is a friend who I have worked with in the past,” Norton said. “I first got to know him from his relationship with my good friend, the late representative and former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development Jack Kemp, who was Paul’s mentor. I see Jack Kemp’s continuing influence on Paul in his outspoken leadership on a Republican approach to poverty, a subject that other Republicans often neglect.” The delegate said Ryan’s vote on District statehood “in recent years has not been unlike others in his [Republican] caucus,” meaning that he isn’t in favor of statehood. “However, I believe Paul understands the importance of self-
By The Associated Press
Join Host Sean Yoes Monday-Friday 5-7 p.m. on 88.9 WEAA FM, the Voice of the Community. 05
47105 21847
By James Wright Special to the AFRO jwright@afro.com D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton (D) as well as other city leaders, District statehood activists, and members of the Congressional Black Caucus have developed a wait-andsee attitude toward the new speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan
Leader of Civil Rights Movement’s Lobbying Arm to Step Down
Listen to Afro’s “First Edition”
7
D.C. Leaders, Black Caucus Cautious about House Speaker Ryan
2
Join the AFRO on Twitter and Facebook
The longtime head of an organization considered the lobbying arm of the civil rights movement announced on Nov. 4 that he will step down at the end of 2016, citing a generational shift within the movement and saying it’s time for make room for new leaders. Wade Henderson will have been president and CEO for 20 years of what is now known as the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. “What is really driving this effort is my desire to make sure that the institution that I helped build will have the leadership that is suited for the challenges it faces not just today but into the future,” Henderson said in an interview with The Associated Press. There will be a nationwide search for Henderson’s replacement. The Leadership Conference was founded in 1950 by Roy Wilkins of the NAACP, A. Philip Randolph of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and Arnold Aronson of the organization now known as the Jewish Council for Wade Henderson Continued on A3
government, and I do not think he is unreceptive to our demands for home rule,” Norton said. “He has not been tested on the degree to which he would respect the District’s right to selfgovernment.” D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) had a conversation with former House Speaker John Boehner earlier this year and she expects to talk with Ryan, as well. “We will reach out to the new speaker,” Bowser told the AFRO on Nov. 2. “We haven’t made contact with his office yet.” Nevertheless, it is a
Washington • Open Enrollment Begins for D.C. Health Exchange
D1
AFRO File Photo
Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton has adopted a wait and see attitude towards the new speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives. courtesy on Capitol Hill for the speaker and District mayor to meet at least once Continued on A3
Former U.S. Rep. Freddie Gray Gus Savage of Chicago Follow-Up How Black Dies at Age 90 By The Associated Press Gus Savage, a civil rights activist and journalist who represented a South Side Chicago district for 12 years in the U.S. House, died on Oct. 31, a day after celebrating his 90th birthday. His son Thomas Savage told The Associated Press the former Democratic congressman celebrated his birthday on Oct. 30 with family and friends. He went to sleep
Continued on A3
AP Photo/Charles Tasnadi
In this 1990 file photo, Rep. Gus Savage, D-Ill., speaks at a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington.
Copyright © 2015 by the Afro-American Company
and White Millennials Differ By The Associated Press Long before the deaths of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Freddie Gray, more than half of AfricanAmerican millennials indicated they, or someone they knew, had been victimized by violence or harassment from law enforcement, a new report says. The information, from the “Black Millennials in America” report issued by the Black Youth Project at the Study of Race, Politics and Culture at the University of Chicago, reflects starkly different Continued on A3