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Insight News November 7 - November 13, 2016
Vol. 43 No. 45• The Journal For Community News, Business & The Arts • insightnews.com
A look inside Paisley Park Fans looking to tour Paisley Park – Prince’s Chanhassen home, studio, nightclub and concert venue – should be warned … the tour starts off on a quite somber note. Walking into the main atrium of Paisley, eyes are first drawn to the walls that are adorned with gold and platinum albums and wallpapered in clouds similar to those in the “Raspberry Beret” video. There’s the immediate recognition that this is sacred space. Then, past the first hallway; lights from the heavens shine through the pyramid shaped glass ceiling and focus on the marble floor designed with Prince’s iconic symbol. And just off the marble sits a
replica of Paisley and on the second level of the replica rests a shiny deep purple encasement. About this time during the tour – just a minute or two in – the guide lets everyone know that encasement is an urn … an urn filled with Prince’s remains. And that’s when it hits. The artist who gave us 39 studio albums and three movies; the artist who sold more than 100 million records; the artist who in many ways put Minnesota on the map and who meant so much to so many … that artist is gone. With the April 21 passing of the legend, there was a bit of back and forth as to what would become
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Harry Colbert, Jr.
Black Jo Ann Jenkins: Age disruptor Greek social media Items such as Prince’s motorcycle from “Graffiti Bridge” and outfit from “Under the Cherry Moon” are on display at Paisley Park. The Chanhassen compound will operate as a fulltime museum, with plans for future concerts and recording to take place at the former residence of Prince.
Jo Ann Jenkins Jo Ann Jenkins, AARP CEO, writes in her new book, “Disrupt Aging: A Bold New Path to Living Your Best Life at Every Age” that despite all those ads
on television that tell us 50 is the new 30 or 60 is the new 40, “Fifty is the new 50 – and I, for one, like the looks of it.”
Insight News last month interviewed Jenkins as part of AARP Minnesota’s Community Conversation at Sabathani Community Center. By disrupting aging, she says, we each create our own path to living our best life at every age. Jenkins joined AARP in 2010 as president of AARP Foundation – AARP’s affiliated charity – where she led farreaching development and social impact initiatives including the Drive to End Hunger, a national effort by AARP and AARP Foundation to help millions of older Americans who struggle with hunger every day. In 2013, she was named AARP’s chief operating officer, and in September 2014, was named CEO. Jenkins joined AARP following a 25-year career in government service, most recently serving as chief operating officer at the Library of Congress. While there, she developed and directed the Library’s most high profile
projects, including the renowned National Book Festival and the Library of Congress Experience. In addition to her duties at AARP, Jenkins serves as a member of the National Advisory Board of Caring for Military Families and earlier this year, was named to the Board of Trustees of the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. She has received numerous awards including two honorary doctorates in Humane Letters from Washington College (Chestertown, Md.) in May 2014 and Spring Hill College (Mobile, Ala.) in 2016, the 2014 Peace Corps Director’s Award, the 2015 SmartCEO’s BRAVA award honoring top female CEOs, the Rosalynn Carter Leadership in Caregiving Award and one of the Non-Profit Times Power and Influence Top 50 for 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2016. In 2015, she was also named NonProfit Influencer of the Year,and
Community Development, Minneapolis Community and Technical College (MCTC), Hennepin County Workforce Development, the Hennepin County Library and the city of Minneapolis. Library programming in the center will include a Teen Tech Squad, which will lead technology-based workshops designed to develop creative problem solving skills, an overview of library resources that can assist with building job skills and employment-focused learning circles with tips on preparing for job interviews.
Timberwolves
When Donald Trump attacked U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel for his Mexican heritage it set off a firestorm of controversy and it angered many of one organization in particular. Members of Kappa
Johnathan Rabb Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. immediately jumped to Curiel’s defense once it became widely known that the judge is also a Kappa. The fraternity’s grand polemarch (president) even is-
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Groundbreaking for new Cedar Riverside Opportunity Center Community leaders and residents celebrated a groundbreaking last week for the Cedar Riverside Opportunity Center — a onestop shop for education and job training resources. The center, scheduled to open spring 2017, will be located in the first floor of the new Five15 on the Park building, 515 15th Ave. S. It will serve as a pipeline to job opportunities with the public and private sector with a special focus on the neighborhood’s East African community. Anchor partners include nonprofit Emerge
By Harry Colbert, Jr. Managing Editor
Watch the Yard is the online media space of Black Greeks and those interested in Black Greek culture. In this photo, members of the Alpha Kappa Alpha (AKA), Delta Sigma Theta (DST), Zeta Phi Beta (ZPB) and Sigma Gamma Rho sororities.
Remembering Jamar Clark Minneapolis City Council Member Abdi Warsame
Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges
Employers with a recruiting presence at the center will include Hennepin County, Fairview Health Services, Hennepin County Medical Center, the city of Minneapolis, the University of Minnesota, Augsburg College and St. Catherine University. Key goals of the center include tackling the neighborhood’s high unemployment rate, which is around 17 percent, and increasing
access to educational programs. Hennepin County has contributed $250,000 for the center and the City of Minneapolis has pledged $100,000. The Cedar Riverside Partnership has raised additional funding from local charitable foundations. City Council Member
Fall Foods
win home opener in a rout
Fall in love with pumpkin soup and roasted beet salad
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Jamar Clark
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Insight-2-Health Particpants encouraged to push through to the end
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Black Lives Matter Minneapolis is planning to hold a protest and demand justice for Jamar Clark. The event takes place Nov. 19 from 2 p.m. – 4 p.m. in Elliot Park, Minneapolis, 1000 E. 14th St. Clark was an unarmed 24-year old AfricanAmerican man who was killed by two Minneapolis police officers on Nov. 15 of last year. The shooting kicked off more than a month of continual protests including around-
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SnapShots
Halloween done right with Thee Urbane Life
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