1-8-2015

Page 1

January 8 - 14, 2015

Falls Church, Vi r g i n i a • w w w . fc n p . c o m • Free

Founded 1991 • Vo l . XXI V N o . 46

Falls Church • Tysons Corner • Merrifield • McLean • North Arlington • Bailey’s Crossroads

Inside This Week New Library Expansion Plan Raises Doubts The latest plan devised by the consultants retained by the Mary Riley Styles Public Library Board of Trustees to provide a renovation and expansion of the library continued to raise questions from members of the City Council and Planning Commission. See News Briefs, page 9

Murphy Wins Special Election, Dems Hope Harbinger of Better Days Ahead 34th District Seat Switches From GOP To Democratic

Kearney Stepping Down As School’s Chair

by Nicholas F. Benton

Falls Church News-Press

Susan Kearney notified the NewsPress this week that she’ll be “stepping down” as chair of the Falls Church School Board as of next Tuesday’s School Board meeting, when the board will vote to replace her. See News Briefs, page 9

David Brooks: The Problem With Meaning

Not long ago, a friend sent me a speech that the great civic leader John Gardner gave to the Stanford Alumni Association 61 years after he graduated from that college. The speech is chockfull of practical wisdom. See page 12

17th Annual ‘Watch Night’ in Pictures

People came from around the region to downtown Falls Church last Wednesday to ring in the new year at the 17th annual Watch Night Celebration. See photos, page 8

ED AND NIKKI HENDERSON have organized a sold-out gala and ribbon cutting for this weekend to celebrate the 100th anniversary of an historic meeting in Falls Church that led to the establishment of the rural chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. (Photo: News-Press)

100th Anniversary F.C. Civil Rights Gala & Ceremony This Weekend by Drew Costley

Falls Church News-Press

Index

Editorial..................6 Letters....................6 News & Notes.10-11 Comment........12-15 Calendar.........16-17 Food & Dining ......18

Sports .................20 Press Pass..........21 Classified Ads . ...24 Comics, Sudoku & Crossword...........25 Critter Corner.......26

Exactly 100 years ago today, Edwin B. Henderson and Joseph Tinner, two black leaders and residents of Falls Church, called a meeting at the home of Tinner. The Falls Church Town Council proposed an ordinance that would have separated the Falls Church into four districts, three of which would have been desig-

nated for only the town’s White residents and one for “colored.” Nine men met at Tinner’s house to establish a strategy for defeating this measure – they ended up organizing a letterwriting campaign to town councilmen, business owners and church leaders – and those men went on to form the Colored Citizens Protective League. During this campaign to defeat the segregation ordinance,

the Colored Citizens Protective League reached out to W.E.B. DuBois to ask for help in establishing a branch of the then sixyear-old National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. At the time, there was no rural branch established, but the NAACP’s national and Washington branches agreed to support the campaign to defeat

Continued on Page 5

It was by a slim margin of 324 votes, but in a district that has been Republican for all but one two-year hiatus in decades, a win is a win for a Democrat there. That’s what Kathleen Murphy laid claim to Tuesday night, turning one Virginia State Delegate district “blue.” It happened in the 34th, which abuts the City of Falls Church in McLean and runs all the way deep into Loudoun County. Combined with an easy win in the 63rd District in Petersburg, Democrats are taking Tuesday’s two electoral victories (Murphy’s qualifying as an upset) as a sign, a harbinger of good things to come in 2015 and beyond. After last November’s thumping, Democrats were looking for any indicators that they could be on their way back, and nothing was better balm for them than Murphy’s hard-fought victory on Tuesday to fill the seat vacated by new U.S. Rep. Barbara Comstock after her win in November. “These two important wins are signs that voters in Virginia are ready for real change in Richmond. They’re ready to move Virginia forward,” crowed Del. David Toscano, the State House Democratic leader, in a statement he released late Tuesday. Area Democratic leaders who were able to negotiate the season’s first real snow, piled into the McLean Community Center Tuesday night to celebrate Murphy’s victory. The outcome was sealed just over an hour after the polls closed when results from the State Board of Elections

Continued on Page 4


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1-8-2015 by Falls Church News-Press - Issuu