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Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority to host Founders Day Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc.®, Alpha Rho Omega Chapter, Detroit, will host its 107th Founders Day observance on Saturday, Jan. 24 at noon. It will be held at the Detroit Marriott at the ReDr. Baskin naissance Glover Center Tickets are $60 by phone at (313) 341-8520. For further information, visit the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority-Alpha Rho Omega Chapter page on Facebook.
January 21-27, 2015
michiganchronicle.com
Volume 78 – Number 19
Revenue, family, dominate council choice By Bankole Thompson
es city government has. The mistakes of the past cannot be allowed to happen again. If we handle this right we will have turned a deficit into a great recovery and a model for America’s urban centers.”
CHRONICLE SENIOR EDITOR
Former State Representative Fred Durhal is vying to become the next member of the Detroit City Council to fill the vacancy created by the departure of Saunteel Jenkins. But Durhal is only one of 17 contenders for a seat on the most talked about legislative body in the state. The likely winner will have to garner support from a majority of the council members, each of whom have their own choice of who should succeed Jenkins, who left council to head a nonprofit group. Durhal, like the other candidates, including John Bennett, Adam Hollier, David Nathan, David Bullock, Paula Humphries Janee Ayers, Dustin Campbell,
Hollier, former chief of staff to State Senator Bert Johnson, said he will bring a fresh perspective to the council.
Fred Durhal
Adam Hollier
Tyrone Carter, Kenneth Donaldson, Frazier Kimpson, Paula Humphries, Roy McCalister, Bernard Parker, Wanda Redmond, Robert Thomas, Beverly Kindle Walker and Debra Walker brings different credentials to the position. “Detroit is at a critical financial juncture. Its city government
Beverly Kindle Walker
has to tread very carefully as it develops and implements its first post-bankruptcy budget. Although there is a slight surplus, council and the mayor must adhere to the Plan of Adjustment while it recovers from insolvency,” Durhal said. “We must also create new revenue sources that can augment what few resourc-
“The most important thing is that I am young resident of Detroit and I am planning on raising my family in the city,” Hollier said. “You don’t see that as a narrative right now. I hear people talk about young Whites who are moving in but no one is talking young Blacks who want to raise families in the city.”
Hollier said being on the coun-
See COUNCIL page A-3
WHAT’S INSIDE Comerica Cares volunteers (Page B-1) The people who comprise Comerica Cares know the true meaning of giving back. They logged in more than 46,000 hours in Michigan alone. The company is “committed to making a tangible difference in the community.”
Two inspiring stories of triumph (Page B-2) Chad Audi, chief executive officer of Detroit Rescue Mission Ministries, gives two examples of what can be accomplished with hard work, focus and determination — and the help of God.
Every child deserves a fair chance (Page B-4) Marian Wright Edelman, a tireless crusader for children, states, “As a nation, it’s time to close our hypocrisy gap in the treatment of our children, and value and protect our children — all of them.”
THAW radiothon to air soon (Page C-3) The Heat And Warmth Fund (THAW) has again teamed up with WWJ Newsradio 950 to produce the 12th Annual Winter Survival Radiothon. It will take place on Feb. 6 from 5 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saunteel Jenkins is CEO of THAW.
Things you may not have known (Page D-1)
This week the entertainment editor has assembled a lengthy number of facts — some serious, some not so much — most pertaining to the music industry.
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Rev. Nicholas Hood Sr.
Rabbi Daniel Syme
Rep. John Conyers
Why These King-like Giants? By Bankole Thompson CHRONICLE SENIOR EDITOR
T
he Biblical inference that “a prophet is without honor except in his own hometown” has long been used to measure the kind of reception that is given to our own giants of history. That sometimes the quality of their Bankole work goes unThompson recognized, their achievements minimized and treated as if it is normal and their contributions to society underestimated and undervalued because we see them squarely from the lens of the past instead of looking at them as having informed the present which in turn informs the future for all of us.
That sentiment of deliberately or unconsciously failing to spotlight the contributions of what the men and women who shaped history in terms of civil and equal rights that produced an Obama era was evident when I spoke last Tuesday at the Fannie Lou Hammer Political Action Committee first meeting of the year. I was invited to give an overview of 2014 and to say what my expectations are for 2015. In the midst of my presentation, questions started coming in about the state of the economy in Detroit and what role African-American businesses will play in them, the future of the Michigan Democratic Party, Gov. Rick Snyder and media coverage of Detroit’s affairs in the past year. One particular question pointedly focused on Detroit’s own Congressman John Con yers because he recently became the first African-Amer-
President Obama to travel to Selma President Obama will travel to Selma, Alabama to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Selma to Montgomery March led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. which resulted in key legislative victories for the rights of Blacks. White House Senior Advisor Valerie Jarrett confirmed on her Twitter account that Obama will be in Selma on March 7 to join the celebration and remembrance of one of the pivotal moments in the Civil Rights Movement.
ican dean of Congress. That seminal moment in American history took place in the first week of January and it means that Conyers is now the longest serving member of Congress. That distinction places him in a special place among the political greats of all time. His portrait is now on the walls of Congress where generations to come will look and realize that he is the only African-American whose face graces the same wall that features the photos of all the other past deans of Congress. The question was why there hasn’t been more extensive media coverage around Con yers’ ascension to the highest level of American legislative power. One person in the audience observed there has been no real media coverage at all and wondered if the skin color of the congressman had anything to do with it. Was the media ignoring an important aspect of political history? The conversation briefly turned to what the media considers a priority and what it sees as important for a ratings bonanza. I quickly informed the audience that the front page of the Michigan Chronicle’s Jan. 14 edition was in fact leading with Con yers’ newest ranking in the world’s most powerful legislative body.
I consider it an important story because it is part of the African-American experience, which is an intricate part of the American experience. No matter how Conyers is viewed in the press and whether he is favored in certain quarters or not, it has nothing to do with his ascendance to a new place in history. The man who authored the Martin Luther King Jr., federal holiday before Stevie Wonder turned it into a cultural campaign, hired civil rights matriarch Rosa Parks to work in his office, strongly defended former President Bill Clinton during his near political death impeachment trial is an American icon. The man who introduced the Violence Against Women Act, Fair Sentencing Act, Hate Crimes Act, Emmet Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act, Help America Vote Act and Racial Justice/Innocence Protection Act, National Voter Registration Act, Sexual Abuse Act, Court Security Improvement Act, Church Arson Prevention Act and the Pigford Claims Remedy Act which ensured that Black farmers could challenge discrimination in the U.S. Department of Agriculture farm loan programs is a giant of history. Conyers,
who
introduced
See GIANTS page A-3